Micronutrients as trace minerals play an important role in various metabolic, enzymatic, and biochemical reactions ultimately leading to better growth rate, egg production, and feed efficiency of poultry (Kheiri & Toghyani, 2009). Chromium (Cr) is generally recognized to be the active component in glucose tolerance factor (GTF), which increases the sensitivity of tissue receptors to insulin, resulting in increased glucose uptake by cells (Mertz, 1993). The insulin hormone increases the glucose and amino acid uptake into muscle cells that regulate protein, energy and fat metabolism, deposition of muscle tissue, and cholesterol utilization (Moeini, Bahrami, Ghazi, & Targhibi, 2011). Poultry commercial diets are conventionally composed of plant origin ingredients (basically corn-soya diets) which are unlikely to meet the Cr requirements of growing broilers (Spears, 1999), so available source of Cr with an adequate level should be supplemented in poultry diets. Therefore, there is a need to evaluate the bioavailability of different chromium forms (organic vs. inorganic form) for broiler chickens. Trivalent Cr (+3) is found either in inorganic form of the element (chromium oxide, chromium chloride) or in organic compounds such as chromium methionine, chromium picolinate, nicotinate, and high-Cr yeast (Sahin et al., 2017). Although the mineral form (chromium chloride) is the most important form commercially