Cereals having a waxy (high amylopectin) starch type may offer advantages for animal feed associated with heat processing characteristics and/or starch digestibility. Nutritional and physical characteristics of starch were evaluated in hull-less barley cultivars having a normal or waxy starch type (228 and 55gkg - 1 amylose, respectively). Broiler chicks (192) were fed one of eight diets in a 2x2x2 factorial arrangement from 3 to 21 days of age. The dietary factors included: (1) normal or waxy starch type barley; (2) pelleted (75 o C, 160gkg - 1 total moisture) or meal form; and (3) with or without addition of β-glucanase. The pelleted diets were reground to remove any physical aspect of feeding pellets. There were no differences in body weight gain (BWG), feed intake (FI), feed-to-gain ratio (F/G) or intestinal starch digestibility due to starch type, nor were treatment interactions significant (p>0.05). Feeding waxy starch barley resulted in higher digesta viscosity than normal starch barley, which was attributed to its higher β-glucan content. Fecal digestibility of waxy starch was 10% higher (p<0.05) than that of normal starch. Pelleting did not affect BWG, FI, or F/G, but reduced (p<0.05) digesta viscosity by 45% and increased starch digestibility by 17% in non-enzyme supplemented diets. β-Glucanase addition improved BWG, FI, F/G, and starch digestibility (p<0.01), and eliminated the high digesta viscosity otherwise associated with feeding the waxy starch diets in meal form.Starch characteristics during heating were examined with 11 hull-less barley samples (5 waxy and 6 normal starch types) using a Brabender Viscoamylograph. Waxy starch hull-less barley exhibited peak viscosity ~10 o C lower than did normal starch, exhibited a higher peak viscosity, paste instability and a lower cold-paste viscosity (negative set-back). Waxy barley may offer advantages in feed processing associated with lower gelatinization temperature, as indicated by superior pellet hardness in a model pelleting system over a range of added moisture levels and temperatures. The waxy trait did not compromise chick performance when diets were supplemented with β-glucanase.