---
product_id: 757093360
title: "Incubators for Hatching Eggs 18 Chicken Egg Incubators with Automatic Egg Turning and Humidity Control - Chicken Incubators, Temperature & Humidity Display, for Chicken, Hatch Quail, Duck and Goose"
brand: "tviewsmart"
price: "SAR 301"
currency: SAR
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 5
url: https://www.desertcart.com.sa/products/757093360-incubators-for-hatching-eggs-18-chicken-egg-incubators-with-automatic
store_origin: SA
region: Saudi Arabia
---

# 360° transparent lid for full egg viewing Automatic egg turning every few hours Precise digital temperature & humidity control Incubators for Hatching Eggs 18 Chicken Egg Incubators with Automatic Egg Turning and Humidity Control - Chicken Incubators, Temperature & Humidity Display, for Chicken, Hatch Quail, Duck and Goose

**Brand:** tviewsmart
**Price:** SAR 301
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> 🐣 Hatch like a pro—effortless, precise, and mesmerizing!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Incubators for Hatching Eggs 18 Chicken Egg Incubators with Automatic Egg Turning and Humidity Control - Chicken Incubators, Temperature & Humidity Display, for Chicken, Hatch Quail, Duck and Goose by tviewsmart
- **How much does it cost?** SAR 301 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.com.sa](https://www.desertcart.com.sa/products/757093360-incubators-for-hatching-eggs-18-chicken-egg-incubators-with-automatic)

## Best For

- tviewsmart enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted tviewsmart brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Live Hatch Theater:** Transparent lid offers 360° viewing—experience the miracle of life unfolding in real time.
- • **Multi-Species Ready:** Dual trays accommodate 18 chicken eggs or larger eggs like duck, goose, and peacock.
- • **Plug & Play Simplicity:** Intuitive display and durable ABS design make incubation stress-free for beginners and pros alike.
- • **Precision Climate Control:** Digital sensors maintain perfect temperature & humidity—no guesswork, just results.
- • **Effortless Hatching Mastery:** Automatic egg turning mimics nature, boosting hatch rates while freeing your time.

## Overview

This 18-egg incubator features automatic egg turning with a 4-day pre-hatch stop, precise digital temperature and humidity controls with external watering, and versatile dual trays for various egg sizes. Its transparent lid offers 360° viewing, while an intuitive display ensures easy monitoring. Designed for hobbyists and small farms, it delivers reliable, hands-free incubation for chickens, ducks, geese, and more.

## Description

incubators for hatching eggs egg incubator with automatic egg turning and humidity control egg incubators for hatching eggs incubator for chicken eggs chicken incubators for hatching eggs

Review: We have had multiple different types of incubators, for chickens, quails, guineas and even turkeys and this one is, by far, our favorite for our small batch hatching of our chickens. The auto turn is incredible, always spot on for timing, the humidity control is a little tricky to get the hang of so I would make sure you practice with it prior to putting eggs in and the candling light is really good! Its very easy to use as long as you follow the instructions, about average on asking price, the trays can adjust for different egg sizes and seems to be well made for what you are getting. I definitely think this is a great choice for anyone looking to hatch their own eggs, regardless if its chickens or quails. Highly recommend.
Review: When I got pullets or chicks in the past, I paid the mark-up price at our local farm and feed store. It really adds up, and the birds available there are limited to certain breeds, and to whatever is left that someone else didn't snatch up before I got there. That meant that I could only get a couple of layers that produced blue/green (and only what they call the Ameracauna, not "undiluted" Aracauna) or chocolate brown speckled (only Copper Marans) in early spring. Adding more chicks or pullets later, if a new delivery came, was always a fiasco involving anti-pecking products and a largely less-healthy younger group of hens due to the obvious problems inherent to the pecking order and the fear factor for the smaller birds. Isolating the flocks wasn't possible for me at our old place, as there wasn't enough land to allow two houses to fully free-range, uncontainer, without contact. This will be my first time hatching a whole new flock of chicks, and I'm really excited for every bit of it except for a couple of the steps after identifying roos and before preparing to can up some chicken meat. Honestly, I might hire that out to spare myself the recurring intrusive visuals. Back to the point, though, I'll be able to order all the eggs needed to fill this incubator from one supplier, receive the exact breed or breeds I want on the exact early spring day I choose in one order, and I'll be off to a great start with plenty for the first year to work out and streamline the care, feeding, egg gathering, and then the safe overwintering of the birds in a place that, unlike my old place, had several feet of snow dump on it in half as many days, and stays tail-feather-biting cold for, roughly, too many months. I'm looking forward to getting only the two breeds: Marans (unsure which, yet) and (real) Aracauna (true to the breed originating in Mexico). Maybe I'll just get one breed. I really love the Marans eggs most. The yolks were always more firm, orange, and eggy tasting in a good way. I love that this incubator takes care of the rotating, the temperature, and has a candling light right on it, so even that little important detail just became one less thing to devise and get set up without it being another thing. Anyone new to chickens? Learn from my mistake here: Don't go thinking you can keep your chicks in your house while you show the kids how to build a mobile chicken tractor with all kinds of nifty added features. Kids have busy school and after school activity and private lesson schedules, unreasonably behemoth mountains and daily hours of homework, friends, holidays, parties, and somewhere in there they need to be fed with healthy home-grown food and get lots of love and some guaranteed actual time off to just be. Chicks are adorable, but they grow VERY fast. So does their poop. And the bigger their poop gets, the uglier the birds get as their down goes away and gets haphazardly replaced with random, weird-looking feathers. In a few very short weeks, those 16 tiny fluffy darlings that made the kids all squeel softly with delight as you took pictures of them holding them against their faces...? Yeah, those are just gone. They are now 16 ugly, stenching, loud, obnoxious, messy, violent mini T-Rex descendents that keep everyone awake half the night and you're afraid to put them outside because it's still too cold, there are predators, and you haven't finished that fancy structure you've been adding more and more ideas to your quite-nicely-drawn plans for since last November. In short, build the coop before you get the eggs, chicks, or pullets. Get the incubator, the automatic waterer, the feed and automatic feeder, the oyster shell, the electrolytes, wormer, straw, wood chips, automatic solar powered chicken coop door and the fans to make the air in there slightly less unbreathable, the red heat lamp, and get absolutely everything you think you need, because there will be more, but don't get the meal worms until your chicks can eat them and don't start to count your eggs until you know, at least roughly, how many half gallon jars of coque au vin (etc.) you'll be putting up on your pantry shelves. I know I said that I wasn't looking forward to the task of dispatching roos, but now that I think on it, I won't find it so hard to do when it's the only way to shut them up, will I? Enjoy the process by being prepared for it. Enjoy the learning, the eggs, candling, hatching, fluffy cuteness, and the coos of delight from your family, but have that heat lamp and coop ready. Aww... they're so cute...when they're little. So, you see, that's the stage I missed before. I went straight to "fast growing chick" and never got the joy of fussing over eggs and seeing them struggle out of their shells all skinny and stringy-wet-down-clad. I may even carefully and painstakingly sew a whole flock of teensy weensy plaid bow ties and matching vests for them, because I'm old, and the kids are all grown up and have long since gone their own ways to soak up higher and ever higher education, and built lives of their own, and because winter is very long here in this new place. Don't put off making these kinds of memories. I just wish I'd started that first year off with eggs in the incubator, and with the coop already built. Blessings on your journey. How many "stars" do I give to something capable of producing happy memories that last a lifetime? They only allow me five stars. So, I guess it's only five stars, but really, from where I am, looking back on all the fun that, if you're a young family, is still a promise, still in front of you, I think it deserves a whole lot more.

## Features

- Automatic Egg Turning – Save Time, Improve Success Rate - Experience the ease of automatic egg turning with our state-of-the-art incubator. This feature mimics natural incubation by turning eggs at regular intervals, ensuring even heat distribution without the need for manual intervention. Plus, Egg incubator stops turning the eggs 4 days before hatching, perfect for first-time users or anyone looking to save time and effort while boosting hatching success.
- Precise Temperature and Humidity Control for Perfect Hatching Conditions - Incubators for hatching eggs uses a digital control system to monitor and adjust temperature, humidity, and ventilation. You can rely on its precise settings to maintain stable conditions. With 2 external automatic watering devices, there’s no need to open the chicken incubator—reducing heat loss and boosting your hatching success. It's never been easier to get your eggs to hatch successfully!
- Versatile Egg Compatibility – Incubator for chicken eggs are designed with versatility in mind, featuring two egg trays: one for 18 chicken eggs and another for 8 large eggs, such as duck, goose, and peacock eggs. Whether you're running a farm or just hatching as a hobby, this egg incubator with automatic egg turning and humidity control is the perfect choice to handle all your egg-hatching needs.
- Egg Candler and 360° Viewing – Watch the Miracle of Hatching Unfold - There’s nothing quite like seeing life begin! Our egg incubator's transparent lid gives you a full 360° view of the hatching process, making it an exciting experience for families or educational purposes. Watch the journey from fertilization to hatching and share the joy of life with your loved ones. It’s the perfect blend of function and fun!
- User-Friendly Design – Our incubator is designed for ease of use, with an intuitive display screen showing real-time data on temperature, humidity, incubation days, and egg turning time. Made with durable ABS material, it’s simple to clean and built to last. No complicated instructions—just plug it in, set your parameters, and watch the magic happen. It's the perfect solution for anyone looking to get into hatching eggs without the stress!

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN | B0F8VL6SWX |
| Batteries Required? | No |
| Best Sellers Rank | 292,044 in Business, Industry & Science ( See Top 100 in Business, Industry & Science ) 55 in Lab Incubators & Accessories |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (11) |
| Date First Available | 29 Jun. 2025 |
| Included components | incubator |
| Item Weight | 2.51 kg |
| Item model number | incubator-18-eggs |
| Manufacturer | TviewSmart |
| Package Dimensions | 34.7 x 34.19 x 19.89 cm; 2.51 kg |
| Part number | I-b-18 |

## Images

![Incubators for Hatching Eggs 18 Chicken Egg Incubators with Automatic Egg Turning and Humidity Control - Chicken Incubators, Temperature & Humidity Display, for Chicken, Hatch Quail, Duck and Goose - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61umMsiRLpL.jpg)
![Incubators for Hatching Eggs 18 Chicken Egg Incubators with Automatic Egg Turning and Humidity Control - Chicken Incubators, Temperature & Humidity Display, for Chicken, Hatch Quail, Duck and Goose - Image 2](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/612hBecklRL.jpg)
![Incubators for Hatching Eggs 18 Chicken Egg Incubators with Automatic Egg Turning and Humidity Control - Chicken Incubators, Temperature & Humidity Display, for Chicken, Hatch Quail, Duck and Goose - Image 3](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71YlJK2M-zL.jpg)
![Incubators for Hatching Eggs 18 Chicken Egg Incubators with Automatic Egg Turning and Humidity Control - Chicken Incubators, Temperature & Humidity Display, for Chicken, Hatch Quail, Duck and Goose - Image 4](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61th3EOgSLL.jpg)
![Incubators for Hatching Eggs 18 Chicken Egg Incubators with Automatic Egg Turning and Humidity Control - Chicken Incubators, Temperature & Humidity Display, for Chicken, Hatch Quail, Duck and Goose - Image 5](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61RC6UlCSkL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Review
*by B***0 on 17 November 2025*

We have had multiple different types of incubators, for chickens, quails, guineas and even turkeys and this one is, by far, our favorite for our small batch hatching of our chickens. The auto turn is incredible, always spot on for timing, the humidity control is a little tricky to get the hang of so I would make sure you practice with it prior to putting eggs in and the candling light is really good! Its very easy to use as long as you follow the instructions, about average on asking price, the trays can adjust for different egg sizes and seems to be well made for what you are getting. I definitely think this is a great choice for anyone looking to hatch their own eggs, regardless if its chickens or quails. Highly recommend.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Review
*by I***T on 13 July 2025*

When I got pullets or chicks in the past, I paid the mark-up price at our local farm and feed store. It really adds up, and the birds available there are limited to certain breeds, and to whatever is left that someone else didn't snatch up before I got there. That meant that I could only get a couple of layers that produced blue/green (and only what they call the Ameracauna, not "undiluted" Aracauna) or chocolate brown speckled (only Copper Marans) in early spring. Adding more chicks or pullets later, if a new delivery came, was always a fiasco involving anti-pecking products and a largely less-healthy younger group of hens due to the obvious problems inherent to the pecking order and the fear factor for the smaller birds. Isolating the flocks wasn't possible for me at our old place, as there wasn't enough land to allow two houses to fully free-range, uncontainer, without contact. This will be my first time hatching a whole new flock of chicks, and I'm really excited for every bit of it except for a couple of the steps after identifying roos and before preparing to can up some chicken meat. Honestly, I might hire that out to spare myself the recurring intrusive visuals. Back to the point, though, I'll be able to order all the eggs needed to fill this incubator from one supplier, receive the exact breed or breeds I want on the exact early spring day I choose in one order, and I'll be off to a great start with plenty for the first year to work out and streamline the care, feeding, egg gathering, and then the safe overwintering of the birds in a place that, unlike my old place, had several feet of snow dump on it in half as many days, and stays tail-feather-biting cold for, roughly, too many months. I'm looking forward to getting only the two breeds: Marans (unsure which, yet) and (real) Aracauna (true to the breed originating in Mexico). Maybe I'll just get one breed. I really love the Marans eggs most. The yolks were always more firm, orange, and eggy tasting in a good way. I love that this incubator takes care of the rotating, the temperature, and has a candling light right on it, so even that little important detail just became one less thing to devise and get set up without it being another thing. Anyone new to chickens? Learn from my mistake here: Don't go thinking you can keep your chicks in your house while you show the kids how to build a mobile chicken tractor with all kinds of nifty added features. Kids have busy school and after school activity and private lesson schedules, unreasonably behemoth mountains and daily hours of homework, friends, holidays, parties, and somewhere in there they need to be fed with healthy home-grown food and get lots of love and some guaranteed actual time off to just be. Chicks are adorable, but they grow VERY fast. So does their poop. And the bigger their poop gets, the uglier the birds get as their down goes away and gets haphazardly replaced with random, weird-looking feathers. In a few very short weeks, those 16 tiny fluffy darlings that made the kids all squeel softly with delight as you took pictures of them holding them against their faces...? Yeah, those are just gone. They are now 16 ugly, stenching, loud, obnoxious, messy, violent mini T-Rex descendents that keep everyone awake half the night and you're afraid to put them outside because it's still too cold, there are predators, and you haven't finished that fancy structure you've been adding more and more ideas to your quite-nicely-drawn plans for since last November. In short, build the coop before you get the eggs, chicks, or pullets. Get the incubator, the automatic waterer, the feed and automatic feeder, the oyster shell, the electrolytes, wormer, straw, wood chips, automatic solar powered chicken coop door and the fans to make the air in there slightly less unbreathable, the red heat lamp, and get absolutely everything you think you need, because there will be more, but don't get the meal worms until your chicks can eat them and don't start to count your eggs until you know, at least roughly, how many half gallon jars of coque au vin (etc.) you'll be putting up on your pantry shelves. I know I said that I wasn't looking forward to the task of dispatching roos, but now that I think on it, I won't find it so hard to do when it's the only way to shut them up, will I? Enjoy the process by being prepared for it. Enjoy the learning, the eggs, candling, hatching, fluffy cuteness, and the coos of delight from your family, but have that heat lamp and coop ready. Aww... they're so cute...when they're little. So, you see, that's the stage I missed before. I went straight to "fast growing chick" and never got the joy of fussing over eggs and seeing them struggle out of their shells all skinny and stringy-wet-down-clad. I may even carefully and painstakingly sew a whole flock of teensy weensy plaid bow ties and matching vests for them, because I'm old, and the kids are all grown up and have long since gone their own ways to soak up higher and ever higher education, and built lives of their own, and because winter is very long here in this new place. Don't put off making these kinds of memories. I just wish I'd started that first year off with eggs in the incubator, and with the coop already built. Blessings on your journey. How many "stars" do I give to something capable of producing happy memories that last a lifetime? They only allow me five stars. So, I guess it's only five stars, but really, from where I am, looking back on all the fun that, if you're a young family, is still a promise, still in front of you, I think it deserves a whole lot more.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Review
*by V***N on 10 August 2025*

This is a nice incubator I hatched both chicken chicks (8) and Quail chicks (6) in this incubator. This does have an automatic humidity control however I was not able to use this feature as the humidity was too high. I ran the incubator a few days and added water until I was able to get the humidity where I needed it. But using the 1 bottle made the humidity too high for the first 18 days. The automatic turner worked great turning off 3 days before the end of hatch so I did not have to worry about the chicks when they came out. I did a hatching video but I was unable to get it to upload. Overall this was a easy incubator to use and I am happy with it.

---

## Why Shop on Desertcart?

- 🛒 **Trusted by 1.3+ Million Shoppers** — Serving international shoppers since 2016
- 🌍 **Shop Globally** — Access 737+ million products across 21 categories
- 💰 **No Hidden Fees** — All customs, duties, and taxes included in the price
- 🔄 **15-Day Free Returns** — Hassle-free returns (30 days for PRO members)
- 🔒 **Secure Payments** — Trusted payment options with buyer protection
- ⭐ **TrustPilot Rated 4.5/5** — Based on 8,000+ happy customer reviews

**Shop now:** [https://www.desertcart.com.sa/products/757093360-incubators-for-hatching-eggs-18-chicken-egg-incubators-with-automatic](https://www.desertcart.com.sa/products/757093360-incubators-for-hatching-eggs-18-chicken-egg-incubators-with-automatic)

---

*Product available on Desertcart Saudi Arabia*
*Store origin: SA*
*Last updated: 2026-04-23*