Chicken Symptom

Chicken Limping — Online Vet for Foot & Leg Pain

Limping is often bumblefoot or a roost injury. Early treatment prevents deep infection. Show your hen's foot to an avian-experienced vet on video today.

Licensed Vets
$65 Flat Fee
Same-Day Rx
24/7 Access
Chicken Limping — backyard chicken online vet care from TelaVets
Moderate urgency — consult a vet within 24–48 hours
Chicken Limping — TelaVets avian online vet consultation

Backyard chicken symptom help

Expert online help when your chicken is limping

  • Avian-experienced vet reviews your chicken's limping on video

  • Same-day appointments — most flock owners seen within 1–3 hours

  • Flock-safe treatment plans and egg withdrawal guidance when needed

  • $65 flat fee — no memberships or hidden charges

  • Clear urgency guidance for backyard hens

  • Practical coop and isolation steps you can start today

Limping in backyard chickens commonly comes from bumblefoot (plantar infection), cuts, sprains, vitamin deficiencies, or joint infections. Heavy breeds and wire flooring increase risk. Untreated foot infections can reach bone.

TelaVets connects backyard flock owners with licensed veterinarians experienced in chicken care. Via secure video, we assess your hen's limping, discuss coop conditions, and create a treatment plan — often the same day — for a flat $65.

Signs to watch for when your chicken is limping

  • Favoring one leg
  • Swelling or scab on the foot pad
  • Reluctance to jump onto roosts
  • Sitting more than usual
  • Heat or redness in the foot
  • Limping after a fall or predator scare

Common causes of limping in chickens

  • Bumblefoot
  • Cuts and puncture wounds
  • Sprain or fracture
  • Vitamin deficiency
  • Joint infection
  • Marek's disease (less common in backyard adults)

Why is my chicken limping?

Understanding why a chicken becomes limping helps you act fast and protect the rest of the flock.

Bumblefoot infection

Pressure sores and small wounds on the foot pad allow Staph bacteria in — a leading cause of chronic chicken limping.

Trauma

Hard landings from high roosts, wire floors, and predator chases sprain legs and bruise feet.

Nutritional and systemic disease

Imbalanced diets and some infections weaken bones and joints, showing up as an uneven gait.

How our vets assess this online

Our avian-experienced vets combine live video exams with flock history to narrow causes of limping and decide what can be managed online versus in person.

  • Foot pad and leg examined on video
  • Roost height and flooring reviewed
  • Onset after injury vs gradual discussed
  • Weight-bearing and swelling assessed
  • Guidance on when X-rays are needed

Treatments we may recommend

Treatment for a chicken that is limping depends on the cause — environmental fixes, supportive care, and prescription therapy when appropriate, with egg withdrawal discussed for laying hens.

  • Wound cleaning and bandage guidance

  • Antibiotics when infection is present

  • Pain and anti-inflammatory support when appropriate

  • Roost and litter modifications

  • Surgery referral discussion for deep abscesses

  • Recheck plan to confirm healing

All medications are prescribed only when clinically appropriate by a licensed veterinarian and dispensed through our FDA-compliant pharmacy.

Reducing limping risk in your flock

  • Use rounded roosts of proper diameter

  • Keep litter clean and dry

  • Avoid sharp wire flooring

  • Maintain healthy body weight

  • Inspect feet during weekly health checks

Why pet parents choose TelaVets

  • Licensed DVMs Only

    Every consultation is with a licensed Doctor of Veterinary Medicine — not a chatbot or technician.

  • $65 Flat Fee

    One transparent price covers your full video consultation and treatment plan. No facility fees or surprise charges.

  • Same-Day Appointments

    Most flock owners are connected with a vet within 1–3 hours of booking, 7 days a week.

  • Next-Day Prescriptions

    When medication is appropriate, prescriptions are issued same-day and delivered to your door next business day.

  • Avian-Experienced Vets

    Our vets have experience with backyard chickens and flock health — rare among telemedicine platforms.

  • Secure & Private

    Encrypted video calls and HIPAA-compliant records keep your pet's health information protected.

How TelaVets works

  1. Book your consultation

    Pick a same-day or upcoming slot — appointments available 7 days a week.

  2. Connect with a licensed vet

    Your vet assesses your pet via secure video, asks detailed questions, and reviews their history.

  3. Get your treatment plan

    Receive a diagnosis, personalised care plan, and same-day prescriptions delivered next-day.

What Our Pet Parents Say

Join thousands of happy pet parents who trust TelaVets for their furry family members care

"Fantastic service! My dog gets extremely anxious at the vet, so having a virtual appointment from home was a game-changer. The vet was kind and helpful, and getting his medication delivered the next day made the whole process stress-free and more affordable than going to the clinic."

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David Long

Verified Pet Parent

"The vet I spoke with Dr. Ricksaw was very knowledgeable and nice. He took the time to go through all of my options and ideas with me. Reassured me that all we were doing for my dog's anxiety was good and gave me a couple of new ideas as well."

CH

Courtney Hughes

Verified Pet Parent

"I would definitely use them again. I'm cat sitting for 2 weeks and needed to see a vet. I was so worried about the kitten. I used Televets the cat got his prescription and all is good. Excellent service!"

M

Maria

Verified Pet Parent

"Dr Corey was amazing, helpful, compassionate and well versed. I would highly recommend using this. It is so much easier than trying to get a 3 legged cat into a carrier, take him to a doctor's office and stress him out, love it!!!"

JG

Jackie Gardner

Verified Pet Parent

"I had a TelaVets Zoom appointment and couldn't be more impressed. They spent a lot of time with me, walking through every option to help my cat recover from her skin issues. I've also reached out about getting her medication through Chewy.com, and they've been extremely helpful every step of the way."

LD

Lara Durand

Verified Pet Parent

"Dr. Moppin is a dedicated professional who truly cares about his furry patients and their humans, too! It's such a relief that Dr. Cole took the time to listen and address my concerns thoughtfully. Thank you for taking care of our cats 🐈"

WW

Wanida Walker

Verified Pet Parent

"This service was amazing! My dog ran out of his medication before we were able to get in with a new vet and they were able to help get him a short term supply quickly. I would definitely use them again!"

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Amanda Tobias

Verified Pet Parent

"Knowledgeable, professional caring provider! Needed urgent Vet care on a weekend and TeleVet kept me from having to miss a day of work, as well as half the price of local weekend options. Thank you!"

JH

Jana Humble

Verified Pet Parent

"Dr. McGinnis was very knowledgeable and listened to my cat's issues. She addressed the problem and may have come up with an answer after 5 years of trying with local vet practices."

MK

Marilyn Kerr

Verified Pet Parent

Frequently asked questions about limping in chickens

limping in chickens can have many causes. Our licensed vets use your flock's history, symptom pattern, and a visual assessment via video to narrow down the most likely cause and recommend appropriate treatment.

If your chicken's limping has lasted more than 24–48 hours, is severe, or is accompanied by other concerning signs (lethargy, loss of appetite, labored breathing), book a consultation immediately.

Yes. Our avian-experienced vets can assess your chicken's symptoms via secure video, ask detailed diagnostic questions, and prescribe appropriate treatment — all without a clinic visit.

If medication is clinically appropriate, our licensed vets can issue prescriptions same-day with next-day delivery. For laying hens, we also discuss egg withdrawal when relevant.

Mild limping often isn't an emergency, but if your chicken shows severe distress, open-mouth breathing, collapse, or other alarming signs, seek emergency in-person care immediately. When in doubt, book a consultation — our vets will help you assess the urgency.

Get help for your chicken's limping today

Avian-experienced vets — $65 flat fee — same-day video visits