Quick Answer
No dog is truly hypoallergenic — the allergen is dander (skin cells) and saliva, not just hair. But several breeds shed minimally and produce less dander, which makes them substantially more tolerable for many allergy sufferers. The strongest options are Poodles (all sizes), Bichon Frises, Portuguese Water Dogs, Maltese, and Schnauzers. Always spend extended time with a specific dog before committing — individual variation matters as much as breed.
What "hypoallergenic" really means
Allergens come from three sources, in roughly this order of importance:
- Dander — microscopic flakes of dead skin
- Saliva — when dogs groom themselves, saliva proteins dry into the coat
- Hair — carries dander and saliva around the home
A truly "hypoallergenic" dog would be one that produces no dander, saliva proteins, or hair. That dog doesn't exist. What "hypoallergenic breeds" share is:
- Minimal shedding (less hair distributing allergens)
- Single-coat structure (no undercoat to release allergens)
- Slower dander turnover
For most allergy sufferers, low-allergy breeds are dramatically more tolerable than typical shedding breeds — but not problem-free. Spend extended time with a specific dog before adopting or buying.
Our picks
1. Standard / Miniature / Toy Poodle
The gold standard for allergy sufferers. Single coat, minimal shedding, low dander. All three sizes available, so suitable across lifestyles.
2. Bichon Frise
Small, cheerful, very low-shedding. A common allergy-friendly recommendation. Insurance reality: dental and allergy costs are the main ongoing items.
3. Portuguese Water Dog
Medium-sized, athletic, very low-shedding. Famous as Bo Obama's breed.
4. Maltese
Tiny, silky-coated, minimal shedding. Good apartment fit.
5. Miniature / Standard Schnauzer
Low-shedding wire coat. Sturdy temperament. Schnauzers exist in three sizes (Miniature, Standard, Giant) for different households.
6. Doodles (Goldendoodle, Labradoodle, Bernedoodle)
Crosses with Poodle ancestry that can be low-shedding — but coat type varies enormously between individual puppies. Some doodles shed like the non-Poodle parent. Spend time with the specific dog before assuming.
7. Soft Coated Wheaten Terrier
Single-coat terrier with low shedding. Sturdy mid-size dog.
8. Yorkshire Terrier
Tiny, silky-coated, minimal shedding. Common allergy-friendly small dog choice.
9. Coton de Tuléar
Small, cotton-soft coat, very low-shedding. Less common but well-regarded for allergy households.
10. Hairless breeds (Chinese Crested, Xoloitzcuintli)
Less dander surface area. Some allergy sufferers respond well; others find the exposed skin produces more saliva-on-skin contact. Try before committing.
Important caveats
Allergy response is individual. Some people are allergic specifically to Poodle dander. Some people are fine with shedding breeds and reactive to "hypoallergenic" ones. Test before committing to a specific dog.
Grooming matters more than breed. Frequent bathing, brushing, and professional grooming dramatically reduce allergen load for any breed.
Doodles are unpredictable. First-generation crosses (F1) often shed; later generations with more Poodle ancestry shed less. If a doodle puppy clearly takes after the non-Poodle parent's coat, expect shedding.
Insurance reality for these breeds
Hypoallergenic breeds tend to be in the low-to-moderate insurance cost range:
- Poodles, Bichons, Schnauzers — generally moderate premiums, predictable health
- Doodles — depends heavily on parent breeds (Bernedoodles inherit Bernese health concerns)
- Hairless breeds — niche, get specific quotes
Comprehensive coverage is still the right call for the same reason it is with any dog — to convert unpredictable catastrophic events into a predictable monthly cost.