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APDOE Egg Incubators for Hatching Eggs, Temperature and Humidity Control, Automatic Egg Turning, Egg Candler, External Water Bottle, Air Vent, for Chicken, Duck & Quail Eggs, 12 Eggs

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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Thursday, Jun 4
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Size: 12 Eggs


Features

  • Apdoe 2026 Upgraded HatchPro 12 Precision Temperature & Humidity ControlEquipped with an advanced digital control system, the HatchPro 12 features real-time temperature and humidity display for at-a-glance monitoring. Precise controls help maintain the optimal environment for successful hatching.
  • Automatic Egg Turning Every 2 HoursGentle horizontal rotation mimics a hens natural turning behavior, supporting healthy and even embryo development. Eliminates the need for manual turning and frequent lid opening. The egg tray can be easily removed during the final 3 days.
  • Innovative 2-in-1 Humidity Control System & Adjustable Air VentThe AB humidity control tray with automatic dual external water bottles supports multi-stage humidity management, requiring only 12 bottle refills for the entire incubation period and eliminating daily water checks. This design, with an adjustable air vent, provides flexible and precise humidity control for hassle-free incubation.
  • 360 Transparent Dome & Built-in Egg CandlerFully transparent 360 dome lets you monitor eggs from every angle without opening the lid, while the built-in egg candler makes it easy to track embryo development. Watch the journey from egg to chickeducational and fascinating!
  • Easy to Detach & CleanThe incubator features a removable tray that makes cleaning quick and simple. Simply rinse the trays in the sinkno hard-to-reach corners! Do not put any parts in the dishwasher, as high heat may cause deformation.
  • User-Friendly Interface Easy Operation for EveryoneWith a simple, intuitive interface, incubation is easy for all userseven children can successfully hatch eggsperfect for home, classrooms, and farms, and ideal for educational and hands-on learning experiences.
  • Advanced 360 Airflow CirculationOur innovative airflow system ensures even temperature and humidity throughout incubation, creating the ideal environment for your eggs. It prevents hotspots or cold spots that could affect embryo development.
  • Reliable Warranty & Expert SupportComes with a 30-day money-back guarantee, a 3-year limited warranty, and lifetime expert support for all your incubation questions. Includes all accessories, an egg development chart, and a hatching guide for hassle-free operation.

Product Dimensions: ‎10 x 10 x 5.5 inches


Item Weight: ‎3.5 pounds


Manufacturer: ‎Apdoe


Item model number: ‎EGG INCUBATOR


Date First Available: ‎November 22, 2023


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Thursday, Jun 4

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Easy to use, Economical, Perfect Function
Size: 12 Eggs
I agree with all the other positive reviews so I'll keep this one short. This is a great incubator (our first) and it has performed flawlessly. We are due our first hatchlings in a day or two. I read at least one reviewer who stated that the humidity fluctuates significantly and is difficult to control. We found that the humidity fluctuates in sync with ambient humidity levels which has nothing to do with the incubator itself. Our incubator's humidity shot up quite a few percentage points during a rainy spell that we had and then dropped back down afterward. The instructions offer effective solutions for adjusting the humidity. We are very happy with this incubator in all respects. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2026 by FeWorker

  • Good value
Size: 12 Eggs
Holds temp and humidity sufficiently but you do need to run it a bit to stabilize like the directions say. The candling light on top is not strong enough to see thru brown or darker colored shells. You'll need a separate and stronger light for those. Very easy to use, set up, and clean. The directions are detailed and it's a very good value for the price. Have 2 chicks hatched no problems and 4 more eggs pipping right now. So if you have fertile eggs then this incubator is very good, very easy to use and the price is very good value. The insert with instructions includes all you need to know if you're hatching eggs for the first time. Overall very happy with my purchase. Additional note: the incubator did run a little warm, even though it said it was 100 F, it was a slightly warmer so recommend checking with a separate thermometer inside before setting eggs. There have been some studies that show a slightly higher mortality in male chicken eggs when the temp runs high and a higher mortality in female chicken eggs when the temp runs low, but also lower hatch rate overall if the temps are off. That seems to hold true as I got 75% female to 25% male out of my hatch. I didn't realize this machine I got runs a little hot and didn't check the temps independent from the thermometer on the machine before setting eggs, my mistake. The eggs also hatched 2 days earlier because it ran warmer and I only had 6 eggs out of 12 that hatched. Out of the 12, 6 hatched, 3 were very well developed but died before hatch (probably males), one was barely developed and 2 never developed. If you have a rooster and hens and have eggs to spare this could possibly be a way to get more hens and less roosters but it was only one study I read and only one hatch experience so far by me so try this at your own risk. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 22, 2026 by debbie a

  • I’m so impressed! I’m so impressed!
Size: 18 Eggs
My experience with home incubators has been less than thrilling. Big foam boxes with fans, messy trays for humidity, thermometers and hygrometers, condensation, air vents - this changed all that! We have geese that are not great natural incubators. After losing two goslings to nature, I thought I’d see what I could find. This unit (18 size) comes with egg ‘racks’ for 18 chicken/duck eggs and 8 goose/turkey eggs. It also came ready to go into service! I only needed half an hour to set it up and it heated promptly and humidity was ready in less than an hour. Easy set up and operation, it came with clear instructions, and the digital controls are easy to set and adjust manually. I have five goose eggs. All were at different stages, so I placed a small square of 1/2 inch mesh under the one egg that did not need turning. The turner is strong and moved 5 goose eggs gently. I set it for every 3 hours, but it can be set to 1 or 2 hours. It is a little shallow for geese and turkeys once they hatch and try to stand. Other than that minor inconvenience I wish I’d had this years ago. Trouble free, adjustable everything, not too loud. I’m very happy with it and don’t hesitate to recommend it! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 28, 2026 Reviewed in the United States on April 28, 2026 by H S Rivney

  • Great Incubator Great Incubator
Size: 12 Eggs
Awesome incubator! Did the job! Easy to work and is very quiet. My only complaint is how hard the lid is to close sometimes.
Reviewed in the United States on May 9, 2026 Reviewed in the United States on May 9, 2026 by Tonie

  • Buyer Beware: Product died during crucial incubation window and nearly killed our ducklings.
Size: 12 Eggs
This product can not score anything higher than a one due to a failure that could have killed my pipping ducklings. I will talk about what the product can do, what we used it for, and everything else, but a random failure like this is inexcusable. So please when you read this review, keep what I say in mind. But before I even begin: ALWAYS, ALWAYS, ALWAYS have a backup incubator! You will see why. Also, this will be a long review, but it can't be helped. I don't want anything bad to happen to anyone else's eggs. If it means I have to be longwinded, so be it. Please be careful. Alright. Currently, we had a batch of about 16 duck eggs, at various weeks and levels of readiness. Because of this, we have two incubators: One set up for embryo development and turning (the nurture right 360 incubator), and this one, for hatching. We went with the 12 egg capacity one, which comes in a pretty small profile and nestled quite nicely next to our main unit. Since this incubator was primarily for hatching, we didn't use the turning feature since you do not turn eggs in lockdown and leave them be. Thus, I can't critique the turner since it was not utilized. The main features that were utilized were the water reservoir bottles, the heater, and we did test the Candler. The vents...well, they were left open, kind of hard to review a vent. It does what a vent does. The Candler was fine. Did well. If you own a nurture right 360 incubator, you will notice some pretty strong similarities between this product and that one. You have two little trays on the outside of the unit that you feed water into, and it effectively trickles into these recessed trays at the base, and the heating element of the incubator causes the water at the bottom to heat up and create a humid environment. The difference is that although both incubators have this feature, this one opts to create a closed reservoir system using bottles and a finnicky plastic "lid" that goes over the hole of the tray and trickles the water in that way. This was a neat feature that I wished the other incubator had because it is much easier in my opinion to remove a bottle and adjust as necessary (in theory) then slowly injecting water into the tray via syringe. I say in theory, because in a situation where you have to remove a bottle either to refill or to simply remove to alter the humidity environment, you have to effectively wrestle it out of the tray, which will jostle the eggs inside. The plastic lids just end up being TOO snug. ....but that's it. That's all the nice things I can say about it. The adjustable water bottle feature that is neat... ...but this product failed at a very critical moment, and now we could potentially lose a duckling or two over it, and possibly over seven embryos are going to be impacted as well. I am trying not to be so upset over it, but here's what happened. Over all, we had put at least seven eggs through the hatching process in this incubator. The very first egg hatched pretty much text book perfect. The zip line was perfect, the membrane was moist, and the temperature and humidity just seemed to be highly accurate to what the readings said. The egg that we hatched first was a lone survivor from her week, so she would have hatched with others but life had different plans. So fast forward to now, we had six eggs from the same week all scheduled for lock down. We put them in there, and noticed that the 12 egg capacity of the unit must be referring to naturally smaller eggs, not average sized duck eggs, so it was a bit snug in there and this is WITHOUT the turner. That was fine, and in any other incubator the more that's in there, the more stable things tend to be. But that was NOT the case with this one. So, right from the jump, the textbook duck hatching process did not happen as cleanly for these. They all had some manner of issue with their hatch save for one. The first two to hatch from the six were more allocated towards the outer right side of the incubator, they hatched together, but they weren't able to get a clean zip. They came out ok, reallocated to the brooder, no problems. The next one to hatch, was actually hatching earlier than their siblings by an entire day. This usually indicates a fluctuation from the temperature (which was not the case) or they simply were further along, much more likely the case. The duckling was not shrink wrapped, but you could tell with the coloration of the inner egg shell something was off. It was not behaving as it should with 70% humidity. It was acting like it was on the low end of 60%. But that shouldn't be since the inner humidity would be stable with both water bottles being used. I ended up removing one, and tested the inner humidity through another tool and noticed with OUT the second bottle, it was climbing to the proper humidity level (and with both, the humidity was off about 5%). The duckling hatched, clean bill of health, no harm no foul. Into the brooder. Three eggs left. This is where the nonsense reaches a critical point. So this whole time, one of the eggs was positioned on the opposite side of the brooder where the others were tending to hatch. They hadn't pipped yet, while their siblings were. That's not too weird on its own, but it was of note, because once the three other ducklings hatched and moved on, the three remaining eggs were left over, but the temperature was struggling to maintain it's programmed point, swinging a degree off wildly but not in a normal manner. ON TOP OF THIS. ON TOP. OF THIS. One of the three started hatching, but was showing signs of the membrane being too tough to get out of, again. So I checked the humidity, and it wasn't reading at 75%, it was reading at 62%. That's a 13% swing in the opposite direction. We had to intervene to get the duckling out of the rest of it's shell. Clean bill of health, into the brooder. Two eggs left. Remember, all same week, one of the eggs on the opposite end wasn't showing signs of pip, despite the others. Well I was getting really exhausted from how inconsistent it was being, and was starting to concoct something else to try but I wanted them to at least get through this hatch since it would be too risky this late to switch them over. Well, the egg on the far end finally did pip, in the wrong direction. The pointed end. When this happens, you usually have to intervene at this point since something clearly went wrong and ducklings from wrong end pips don't tend to have great success rates on self hatch. It wasn't just this though. As we noticed this, the entire unit. THE ENTIRE UNIT. completely shorts out. Dies. It fricking dies. Heater is gone. Humidity is whatever the hell is going on in there. So we had to immediately relocate the two remaining eggs into the embryo one, remove the turner, all this stuff. On top of this, now we have to triage and try to save the wrong pipped duckling only to learn the poor baby is shrink wrapped, which is a tell tale sign of inadequate humidity. Poor darling is rough, but breathing, alive. Yolk not absorbed, it's a whole thing. We can't even process that this incubator just absolutely shorted out and broke for no discernable reason. The second egg seems to be ok for now, but because of this emergency, and the FAILURE of this unit, we had to adjust everything in the embryo incubator to accommodate these two, so the embryos are not in ideal conditions as a result of this. So not only could I lose this duckling we are trying to save from this unit's absolutely deplorable humidity conditions, we could lose embryos too. This is unacceptable. This is completely, and utterly unacceptable. I understand freak things can happen, I am willing to give the benefit of the doubt, but it just died for no reason. It was struggling to even maintain humidity despite ideal circumstances that the unit even calls for (use both bottles for higher humidity, only for that to NOT be true) and I could lose some ducklings over this. So forgive me if I seem a bit heated, but seriously, this is why you need to have two incubators. If I lose some embryos, so be it, but these two ducks have a chance now because of the backup. As for this unit? Does it work? I hatched some ducklings in it. It "can" work, but you really have to baby this thing and it isn't something I don't think most people could dedicate to doing since it fluctuates so wildly. Especially if you work a job outside of the home. MAYBE it's just my unit since it just died, but we are talking about living creatures here that require so much particular settings to work as described, and this failed the test in a critical way. Yes, the nurture right incubator is pricier. But it WORKS. IT WORKS AS DESCRIBED. I would highly encourage you to consider paying the extra, or if you are going to buy one of these cheap incubators you need to make sure you have a backup. That is all. 1 stars. This product failed and my ducklings almost died as a result. I do not recommend. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 2, 2026 by Looloo

  • This is great for beginners! This is great for beginners!
Size: 18 Eggs
Used this twice now. For the price it’s amazing! Out of 12 silkie eggs I incubated one wasn’t fertile and I only had one quitter. I hatched 10 beautiful silkie chicks for the first time reading instructions and all I could about the breed I have. Very easy to set up and follow instructions. The only issue would be the humidity stability could use improvement other wise it’s durable and the temperature is great! A strong brooder for chicks to hatch and even run around. Out of all ten that hatched only one with a splayed leg so it’s stabile, temperature stayed stable, just watch the humidity. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 29, 2026 Reviewed in the United States on March 29, 2026 by Thomas Moore

  • 100% hatch rate on first use 100% hatch rate on first use
Size: 18 Eggs
We incubated 18 eggs, and we now have 18 chicks! Im so impressed with how well this worked! Very easy to use. We have high humidity where I live so we had to put a tiny crack in the lid for the whole incubation time.
Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2026 Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2026 by Kelsey O'Brien

  • Best One Yet Best One Yet
Size: 12 Eggs
I've used a few different incubators, and this one is my favorite by far. I love that its clear. I could watch the eggs wabble once they were starting to hatch. The heat and humidity is way easier to regulate that any other incubator I've used. Anyone that's been hatching eggs knows that regulating the humidity is the hardest part. It can be really tricky but after tweaking it for a week I got it to stick. Start your incubator well before adding the eggs. The directions say to only use one bottle at a time but I used both and was able to leave the air valve wide open the whole time. Then during lockdown, I poured water in the remainder of the bottom of the tray. It stayed a steady 67% for the last 3 days. Its a bit small for turkeys but it did fine for a small run. It held 6 eggs comfortably, which was fine because I only have 2 laying hens. I wouldn't have had more collected in a week's time. Out of the 6, 1 didn't appear fertile but the rest of the 5 all hatched and are healthy. I've never had such a high hatch rate(no, I'm not a bot). I think the clear plastic helps the poults come out more socialized. They didn't scatter when I opened it to put them in my brooder box. They don't run when I go to pick them up. Its so easy to clean too. Way easier than my large styrofoam one. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 27, 2026 Reviewed in the United States on April 27, 2026 by Corey Snyder

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