Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCS) from chicken fetal liver are multipotent stem cells that can differentiate in vitro into various terminally differentiated cells. The majority of studies have focused on rats and mice now. Reports from other animals are less and analyses on domestic animals are few. In this study, chicken liver-derived MSCs were isolated from 7-day-old embryo of Beijing fatty chickens. Primary liver-derived MSCs were subcultured to passage 15. The surface markers of liver-derived MSCs, CD29, and CD44 were detected by immunofluorescence and the surface markers CD34 and CK19 of hematopoietic progenitor cells/hepatic oval cells were not detected. RT-PCR analysis detected positive expression of CD29, CD44, CD71, and CD73. The growth curves were typically sigmoidal. Liver-derived MSCs of different passages were successfully induced and differentiated into neuronal and osteoblast cells. The results suggest that the MSCs isolated from chicken fetal liver possess similar biological characteristics with those derived from mice, and their multilineage differentiation provides many potential applications.