News
Get the latest news and updates from Animal Equality

British Chicken: The Truth

12/05/2019 Updated: 06/02/2025
British Chicken Farm - Animal Equality
British Chicken Farm - Animal Equality

Extreme suffering, abuse and cannibalism has been revealed on British chicken farms supplying Nando’s, Lidl and Asda.The harrowing footage, which was filmed on three Red Tractor-certified chicken farms in Northamptonshire, shows:

  • Dozens of chickens collapsed under the weight of their unnaturally large bodies and unable to stand, many flapping frantically in a desperate attempt to lift themselves up
  • Dead birds left to rot among the living, leading to cannibalism on at least one farm
  • Workers callously breaking birds’ necks and leaving them to convulse amidst the flock
  • Dying birds thrown onto a pile and left to suffer for hours as workers cleared the shed for slaughter
  • Workers purposefully stepping on and kicking birds

Animal Equality investigators visited Evenley Farm, Helmdon Farm and Pimlico Farm multiple times between January and March 2019, after receiving a tip-off from a whistleblower concerned about poor conditions. On every single visit they found lame chickens who were unable to stand and dead birds left to rot inside the overcrowded sheds. All three farms produce chickens for Faccenda, which is one of the UK’s largest chicken companies. Faccenda supplies major UK supermarkets and popular high-street restaurant chains including Nando’s, Lidl and Asda.After discovering bin bags full of rotting dead chickens inside one shed at Evenley Farm, our investigators installed a hidden camera to record how long the carcasses were left among living birds. It filmed workers deliberately kicking and stepping on birds, as well as callously breaking chickens’ necks and leaving them to convulse amongst their flockmates. Multiple dying birds, clearly in pain, were carelessly thrown onto a pile and left to suffer there for hours.British Chicken Farm - Animal EqualityAnimal Equality has passed all of the footage to the RSPCA, Red Tractor and Defra’s Animal and Plant Health Agency. Sensationalist headlines about American chlorinated chickens may lead consumers to believe that British birds live a life of luxury, but this is far from the truth. In reality, chickens on British factory farms are tightly packed inside crowded sheds and grow to such an unnaturally large size that their joints and hearts can’t cope with the strain. They suffer every minute of their lives.Labels and certification schemes like Red Tractor don’t prevent animals from suffering in the meat industry, but consumers can. Delicious, plant-based alternatives to meat are now widely available in shops and restaurants across the UK. It’s never been easier to choose compassionate options and leave chickens off your plate!


Latest News
09/02/2026

Last year the Scottish salmon industry reported over one thousand weekly lice counts exceeding the industry’s own Code of Good Practice (CoGP) lice guidelines. This revelation comes in sharp contrast to industry claims and just days after a spokesperson for Salmon Scotland boasted to the Press and Journal that sea lice levels are “among the lowest on record”.
06/02/2026

Despite the Scottish Government stating that unannounced inspections of salmon farms are a ‘legislative requirement’, a key regulator carried out none in 2023 or 2025, and just two in 2024; the other regulator does not track unannounced inspections at all. The revelations have prompted accusations that oversight of Scotland’s salmon farming industry is ‘not fit for purpose’.
30/01/2026

Piglets scream as their teeth are painfully ground down. Mother pigs slam their heads against metal bars. Dead bodies rot inside cages. Investigators filmed these scenes at two pig farms in Buenos Aires Province. The footage comes just months after Animal Equality released its first investigation in…