The most yolks ever found in one chicken egg was nine.
The Chicken Egg with Nine Yolks: A Record That Defies Belief
When Diane Hainsworth cracked open a chicken egg at her poultry farm in Mount Morris, New York in July 1971, she discovered something extraordinary: nine yolks in a single shell. More than fifty years later, this Guinness World Record still stands as the most yolks ever found in one hen egg.
To understand just how rare this is, consider that double-yolk eggs occur in roughly 1 out of every 1,000 eggs. Already uncommon enough that finding one feels like a small lottery win. But the odds get exponentially more extreme from there.
The Mathematics of Egg Anomalies
Triple-yolk eggs appear in approximately 1 in 25 million eggs. At that rate, you'd need to crack open every egg produced by a commercial farm for months before finding one. An egg with nine yolks? The statistical probability is so astronomically low that Hainsworth's discovery remains unmatched after more than half a century.
Multi-yolk eggs occur when a hen's ovulation cycle goes haywire. Normally, a hen releases one yolk into the oviduct every 24-26 hours, where it gets wrapped in albumen (egg white) and enclosed in a shell. But young hens still calibrating their reproductive systems—or older hens with hormonal irregularities—sometimes release multiple yolks in rapid succession. The oviduct treats this yolk cluster as a single unit, packaging all of them together.
Why We Don't See These in Stores
Commercial egg operations use a process called candling, where eggs pass over bright lights that reveal their contents. Multi-yolk eggs are typically larger and heavier, making them easy to spot. Most get sorted out and sold separately as "jumbo" eggs or directed to food processing.
This means the nine-yolk egg likely came from a farm where such rigorous sorting didn't occur, allowing the anomaly to make it intact to the point of cracking. Modern industrial farming practices make such discoveries even less likely today than in 1971.
Other Egg Oddities
While nine yolks holds the record, eggs can produce other strange variations:
- Yolkless eggs (called fairy eggs or wind eggs) occur when the hen's reproductive system triggers shell formation without releasing a yolk
- Eggs within eggs happen when a nearly-complete egg reverses course in the oviduct and gets encased in another layer of albumen and shell
- Soft-shelled eggs result from calcium deficiencies or stress, producing eggs with rubbery, membrane-only exteriors
- Eggs with double shells form when an egg gets held up in the shell gland and receives a second calcium coating
Despite decades of industrial chicken farming producing billions of eggs annually, Hainsworth's nine-yolk discovery remains unbeaten. It stands as a reminder that even in our age of standardized food production, nature still occasionally produces something that defies the odds.
