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How to Choose a Dog Breed for an Apartment

Bestie Paws, July 9, 2026July 9, 2026
🏢🐕
Apartment Dog Breeds · Size vs. Temperament · Breed Restrictions · Cost Guide · Exercise Tips

Small doesn’t mean easy. Calm doesn’t mean boring. The best apartment dog isn’t determined by how many square feet you have — it’s determined by what your daily life actually looks like, what your building allows, and which dog’s personality genuinely matches yours.

📰
Trending Now — 63% of Renters Put Pet-Friendliness Above Budget When Choosing an Apartment

A PetScreening report released in March 2026 — based on feedback from 673 property managers — found that 81% of rental operators now report growing pet ownership at their properties, yet 66.7% still enforce breed restrictions and 59.8% impose weight limits. That gap between demand and access is widening: while 71% of U.S. households own a pet, only 43% of renters report owning one — a 28-point gap that experts attribute largely to unauthorized pets and renters who gave up pets to secure housing. The National Apartment Association’s research found renters are more likely to compromise on location and budget than on their pet. Choosing the right breed from the start — one that passes most restriction lists — is now one of the most practical housing decisions a new dog owner can make.

🏢 The Biggest Myth About Apartment Dogs — Size Is Not the Main Factor

Most people searching for an apartment dog start by filtering for “small breeds” — and then end up with a Jack Russell Terrier who bounces off the walls or a miniature Schnauzer who barks every time someone walks down the hall. Size is relevant, but it’s not the variable that determines whether a dog will thrive in 700 square feet. Energy level, noise tendency, and tolerance for alone time are what actually determine whether apartment life works for a particular dog and its owner. A retired Greyhound who sleeps 18 hours a day will be a calmer neighbor than most small dogs ever manage. A 12-pound Chihuahua with high anxiety and a loud voice will cause more friction than a 50-pound Basset Hound who barely stirs until dinnertime. This guide ranks breeds on the four factors that actually matter in an apartment: energy load, noise level, alone tolerance, and landlord acceptance.

📋 What People Are Really Asking — Answered Without the Runaround

These are the most-searched questions about dogs and apartments — answered with the specificity most guides skip over entirely.

  • 1
    What is the single best dog breed for an apartment? French Bulldog for most people · Cavalier King Charles Spaniel for seniors or those wanting a lap dog · Greyhound (retired racing) for surprisingly calm large-breed companionship · Basenji for the person who needs genuine quiet
    The French Bulldog lands at the top of nearly every credible apartment breed ranking for consistent reasons: low exercise needs (two short daily walks suffice), naturally quiet temperament, zero desire to run or herd, and a compact build that fits any floor plan. They tolerate alone time better than most small breeds and don’t escalate into barking spirals at hallway sounds. The trade-off is a compressed airway that makes them sensitive to heat and exercise intensity — and a veterinary bill profile that runs higher than most breeds due to brachycephalic (flat-face) health issues. If that’s a concern, the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel delivers the same calm indoor energy with fewer health complications and a longer average lifespan.
  • 2
    Can a large dog live in an apartment? Yes — several large breeds are better apartment dogs than many small ones · Retired Greyhounds, Great Danes, and Basset Hounds all sleep most of the day · The key is daily exercise commitment and a landlord weight policy that allows them
    This surprises people every time and remains one of the most well-documented contrarian facts in dog behavior. A Greyhound’s entire biological drive is to sprint in short explosive bursts and then rest for hours — exactly the cycle that works in a small apartment with two daily walks and a weekend park visit. Great Danes are sometimes called “apartment-sized” by experienced owners because, despite weighing 140 lbs, they spend most of their hours completely still. The practical obstacle isn’t their behavior — it’s building weight limits. Most apartment policies cap dogs at 25–50 lbs, and even “pet-friendly” communities enforce this. Before falling in love with a large calm breed, call the building and get the weight policy in writing.
  • 3
    What are the calmest dog breeds for apartments? Top five for genuine indoor calm: Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, Shih Tzu, Basset Hound, Bichon Frisé, and the retired Greyhound · Calm indoors does not mean low maintenance — all still need daily walks and mental stimulation
    Calm and low-maintenance are different things — a distinction worth holding onto before choosing. The Cavalier King Charles Spaniel is consistently ranked by veterinary behaviorists as the most reliably calm companion dog for indoor settings: adaptable, rarely vocal, content to follow you from room to room without demanding constant stimulation. The Shih Tzu runs a close second for apartments specifically because its moderate exercise needs can be fully met with two short daily walks, it’s non-territorial about shared spaces like lobbies and elevators, and it produces minimal noise. The Bichon Frisé earns its place for being nearly hypoallergenic (a practical advantage in shared buildings), non-shedding, and emotionally steady across different noise environments.
  • 4
    What breed of dog can be left alone during the day? Best for solo working households: Basset Hound, Shih Tzu, Chow Chow, Greyhound, and Maltese · Breeds to avoid if you work full time: any terrier, Beagle, Husky, or high-drive herding breed · No dog should be alone more than 6–8 hours without arrangement for a midday break
    Alone tolerance varies more by individual dog than by breed, but certain breed profiles make better candidates for working owners. The Basset Hound is the archetype: a dog that exists in a state of near-perpetual repose and doesn’t build up enough anxious energy during the day to become destructive or vocal. The Maltese is a smaller option with a notably calm indoor temperament that manages solitude better than other toy breeds. The practical floor, regardless of breed: no dog should be alone for more than 6–8 hours without some form of midday interaction — either a dog walker, a neighbor visit, or doggy daycare on high-demand work days. An apartment dog who gets the enrichment it needs is content; the same dog left alone too long will find a way to make the building aware of its opinion.
  • 5
    What dog breeds are usually allowed in apartments with breed restrictions? Nearly always allowed: French Bulldog, Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, Shih Tzu, Bichon Frisé, Poodle (Miniature), Maltese, Pug, Dachshund, and Boston Terrier · Nearly always restricted: Pit Bull types, Rottweiler, Doberman, German Shepherd, Akita, and any mix of those breeds
    Apartment breed restrictions exist primarily for two reasons: insurance liability (which targets breeds statistically over-represented in bite claims) and weight limits (which target any dog over 25–50 lbs). Knowing this, the safest strategy is to choose a breed that falls outside both categories — small enough to pass weight limits and from a breed not on any standard restricted list. The French Bulldog, Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, and Bichon Frisé appear on no standard restriction lists and rarely exceed 25 lbs. If you have a restricted breed, your options include providing obedience certification, offering additional pet liability insurance, or requesting accommodation under the Fair Housing Act if the dog qualifies as a service animal or ESA — though ESA documentation must be legitimate and from a healthcare provider with whom you have an established relationship.
  • 6
    What is the best dog for a single woman in an apartment? For companionship and emotional connection: Cavalier King Charles Spaniel · For those who want a gentle alert dog too: Miniature Schnauzer (with training for bark control) · For someone very active: Whippet · For someone who travels occasionally: Bichon Frisé (adapts well to pet sitters)
    The search term “best dog for a single woman in an apartment” points at a specific cluster of real desires: genuine companionship, manageable size, some degree of alertness to strangers, and a dog that doesn’t require a second person to manage. The Cavalier King Charles Spaniel leads for this profile because it shadows its person naturally, connects deeply without demanding constant entertainment, and has a temperament that makes it comfortable in social settings — coffee shops, parks, visiting friends — which matters for someone whose social life is not organized around a family unit. The Whippet is worth considering for the more active version of this lifestyle: lean, quiet, affectionate, and entirely content to match your pace whether that’s an 8-mile Saturday run or a quiet week of desk work.
  • 7
    How much exercise does an apartment dog actually need each day? Low-energy breeds (Basset Hound, Shih Tzu, English Bulldog): 20–30 minutes across 2 walks · Medium-energy breeds (Cavalier, French Bulldog, Pug): 30–45 minutes total · High-energy breeds suitable for apartments with commitment (Whippet, Miniature Poodle): 45–60 minutes · Mental stimulation counts — a 20-minute sniff walk tires a dog as much as 40 minutes of brisk walking
    The most useful reframe for apartment dog owners is that backyard access is a convenience, not a training plan. Dogs who get intentional exercise — varied walking routes with real sniffing time, short training sessions, puzzle feeders, and indoor enrichment games — are often calmer and better-adjusted than suburban dogs who simply wander a fenced yard for 15 minutes before coming back inside. Two or three structured daily walks, with one being the longer “sniff walk” where the dog sets the pace rather than you, meets the needs of most apartment breeds. The other key is mental enrichment when you’re home: 10 minutes of trick training or a stuffed Kong burns more energy than you’d expect.
  • 8
    What dog breeds should you avoid in an apartment? Avoid: Siberian Husky (howling, high exercise need), Jack Russell Terrier (relentless energy in a small body), Beagle (scent-driven howling), Dalmatian (requires hours of daily exercise), Border Collie (mentally underchallengeable in confined spaces), and any high-drive herding or working breed
    The dogs that struggle most in apartments are not the large ones — they’re the small, high-drive ones that people choose because they fit through the door. A Jack Russell Terrier is 12–15 lbs of focused, often obsessive energy that needs significantly more stimulation than most apartment owners can sustainably provide. Beagles are scent-hounds bred to howl during the hunt — a sound that carries through walls with impressive clarity. Siberian Huskies are vocal enough to generate formal noise complaints in buildings with standard walls, and their exercise needs are genuinely extreme. The rule of thumb: any breed developed for sustained working tasks (herding, hunting, pulling sleds) carries behavioral needs that can’t be met within apartment life without extraordinary daily commitment.
🏆 The 20 Best Dog Breeds for Apartments — Ranked on What Actually Matters

Ranked by the four factors that determine real apartment success: indoor energy level, noise tendency, alone tolerance, and how commonly they pass standard breed restriction policies. All breed profiles are independent of size alone.

1
French Bulldog
🏆 #1 Apartment Dog 🔇 Quiet Indoors ⚡ Low Exercise Need ✅ No Breed Restrictions
The most reliably successful apartment dog in the U.S., and it’s not particularly close. French Bulldogs don’t bark at hallway sounds the way most small breeds do, they’re satisfied with two 15–20 minute walks daily, and their natural disposition is to find the most comfortable surface in the room and stay on it. They connect warmly with people without demanding constant entertainment, and their compact 20–28 lb build slides under almost every weight limit. The practical trade-off: their compressed airway (brachycephalic anatomy) makes them prone to breathing difficulties, overheating in warm climates, and higher-than-average lifetime vet costs. Pet insurance is advisable from day one.
✅ Best for: Any apartment size · Any owner lifestyle from active to sedentary · First-time owners
⚠️ Not for: Owners without pet insurance · Hot climates without air conditioning
📏 20–28 lbs 🔇 Rarely barks ⚡ 30 min/day exercise ✅ Passes most restriction lists 💰 Higher vet costs
2
Cavalier King Charles Spaniel
🩺 Vet Recommended 🔇 Quiet ❤️ Deep Companion Bond ✅ No Restrictions
The Cavalier is what you get when a breed is developed for one purpose across centuries: being a deeply connected human companion. They adapt to any activity level — equally content on a weekend hike or a quiet week of working from home. They don’t bark at elevator sounds, they integrate into new social settings calmly, and their indoor energy is genuinely low unless you initiate play. Veterinary behaviorists consistently name them among the most stable temperaments of any dog breed. Their coat requires regular brushing and occasional grooming, and like all Spaniels, they don’t like being left alone for extended periods — plan for midday check-ins on long work days.
✅ Best for: Seniors · Single owners · Remote workers · Anyone who wants a true companion dog
⚠️ Doesn’t thrive alone for 8+ hours · Needs regular coat maintenance
📏 12–18 lbs 🔇 Minimal barking ⚡ 30–45 min/day ✅ Never restricted
3
Bichon Frisé
🌿 Non-Shedding 🤧 Allergy-Friendly 😊 Adaptable Temperament ✅ No Restrictions
The Bichon is the answer for apartment dwellers who need an allergy-friendly, non-shedding dog that’s also genuinely happy in a small space. They’re sociable enough to integrate smoothly into elevator rides, lobby greetings, and building dog parks, but not so dependent that they fall apart when you close the bathroom door. Their coat doesn’t shed — it grows continuously, so professional grooming every 6–8 weeks is a firm requirement. They respond well to training, which means bark control is achievable. In buildings where you share walls with neighbors, a trained Bichon is one of the most considerate canine neighbors you can have.
✅ Best for: Allergy-prone households · Buildings with shared walls · Social owners with varied schedules
⚠️ Grooming cost adds up — budget $60–$100 every 6–8 weeks
📏 12–18 lbs 🌿 Non-shedding ⚡ 30 min/day ✅ Always allowed 💰 Grooming: $60–100/visit
4
Shih Tzu
😌 Calm & Trusting 🔇 Low Barking 🏠 Indoor-Oriented ✅ No Restrictions
Originally bred as a Chinese palace companion dog, the Shih Tzu’s entire behavioral profile is oriented around comfortable indoor life with people. They don’t have prey drives, herding instincts, or hunting history — they were developed to sit on royal laps and look decorative. That heritage produces a dog that’s genuinely content in a small space, doesn’t react to building sounds, and is cheerfully tolerant of the close-quarters of urban life. Their exercise requirement is modest: two short walks per day is sufficient. The coat is high-maintenance, so either budget for professional grooming or learn to clip it short yourself.
✅ Best for: Small apartments · First-time owners · Owners with limited mobility
⚠️ Coat requires significant grooming commitment
📏 9–16 lbs 🔇 Quiet ⚡ 20–30 min/day ✅ Always allowed
5
Greyhound (Retired Racing)
😴 Sleeps 18 hrs/day 🔇 Rarely Barks 📏 Large but Low-Energy ⚠️ Check Weight Limits
The most counterintuitive apartment dog on any list — and one of the most well-suited. A retired racing Greyhound spends most of its day horizontal, doesn’t bark at sounds, and requires only two walks per day (with periodic off-leash sprinting opportunities on weekends). They’re gentle, cat-tolerant when properly introduced, and remarkably calm in small spaces. The obstacle is pure logistics: most weigh 55–90 lbs, which bumps them over the weight limit in most apartment policies. If your building allows it, few dogs integrate more easily into apartment life. Adoption through Greyhound rescue networks typically runs $75–$300 and includes a vet workup.
✅ Best for: Owners in buildings without weight limits who want large-breed companionship with low energy demands
⚠️ Often exceeds 50 lb apartment weight limits · Requires secure off-leash space periodically
📏 55–90 lbs 🔇 Almost never barks ⚡ 30–45 min/day ⚠️ Check weight policy first 💰 Adoption: $75–$300
6
Miniature Poodle
🧠 Highly Intelligent 🌿 Non-Shedding 🤧 Allergy-Friendly ✅ No Restrictions
The Miniature Poodle lands in the top tier because it combines everything you want in an apartment dog: non-shedding coat, quiet indoor temperament, intelligence that makes training reliable, and adaptability that means it can match an active owner or a quieter one equally well. The intelligence is a double-edged quality — a Miniature Poodle without enough mental stimulation will create its own entertainment, which in an apartment usually means unwanted behavior. Puzzle feeders, short training sessions, and occasional dog sport participation (obedience, nose work) keep them well-adjusted. Grooming runs $60–$90 every 6–8 weeks.
✅ Best for: Allergy households · Training-oriented owners · Active owners in urban settings
⚠️ Needs mental stimulation daily — bored Poodles are creative problem-solvers in ways you won’t enjoy
📏 10–15 lbs 🌿 Non-shedding ⚡ 45 min/day ✅ Never restricted
7
Pug
😄 Comical Companion 🔇 Quiet ⚡ Very Low Exercise ✅ No Restrictions
Pugs are natural apartment dogs with a well-documented history of thriving in small spaces — they were, after all, bred exclusively as companions for Chinese emperors. They’re adaptable across activity levels, rarely bark with intent, and have a social ease around strangers and elevator encounters that many small breeds lack. Their flat face creates the same brachycephalic health considerations as French Bulldogs — heat sensitivity, potential breathing issues, and higher veterinary attention over their lifetime. But their practical personality fit for apartment life is hard to argue with. Maximum two short walks daily, content to lounge through your work day, and affectionate without being demanding.
✅ Best for: Studio and one-bedroom apartments · Sedentary owners · Social butterflies who take dogs everywhere
⚠️ Brachycephalic health risks · Sheds more than expected despite short coat
📏 14–18 lbs 🔇 Quiet ⚡ 20–30 min/day ✅ Always allowed
8
Boston Terrier
🎩 “American Gentleman” ⚡ Moderate Energy 🏙️ City-Born Breed ✅ No Restrictions
Boston Terriers were literally developed as city dogs — bred in Boston in the 1870s as a compact companion for urban households. That origin shows in their temperament: adaptable to shared spaces, attentive to their people without being clingy, and social with strangers in ways that make elevator rides comfortable rather than awkward. They have more energy than a Pug or French Bulldog, which means they benefit from longer daily walks (30–45 minutes) and enjoy play sessions. But they settle well indoors and don’t build into the agitated pacing that higher-energy breeds exhibit. Tuxedo markings, expressive eyes, and a natural friendliness make them one of the most recognizable — and welcomed — urban dog presences.
✅ Best for: Active-lifestyle apartment owners · Owners who want a more energetic companion without a big dog
⚠️ More exercise need than purely sedentary breeds · Same brachycephalic caution as Pugs
📏 12–25 lbs ⚡ 30–45 min/day ✅ Never restricted
9
Maltese
🌿 Non-Shedding 🔇 Quiet 😊 Emotionally Steady ✅ No Restrictions
Among the smallest true apartment breeds, the Maltese brings non-shedding, a quiet disposition, and an independent streak that makes them better at solitude than most toy breeds. They’re alert but not reactive — aware of sounds without going into sustained alarm barking the way Yorkies or Chihuahuas often do. Their white silky coat requires daily brushing and regular professional grooming, but their physical footprint in a small apartment is minimal. For owners who travel occasionally, Maltese adapt well to pet-sitters and short boarding stays without the separation distress that more velcro breeds exhibit.
✅ Best for: Solo owners · Occasional travelers · Very small apartments
⚠️ Daily coat maintenance required · Fragile — not ideal in households with small children
📏 4–7 lbs 🌿 Non-shedding 🔇 Quiet ✅ Always allowed
10
Basset Hound
😴 Maximum Low Energy 📣 Can Howl — Train Early 🐕 Great Solo Dog ✅ Usually Allowed
Pound for pound, the Basset Hound requires less daily energy management than almost any breed on this list. They are physically built for resting — low to the ground, heavy-boned, and metabolically built to conserve. A Basset in a well-furnished apartment will find its favorite spot within the first 48 hours and spend most of the day there. The complication is noise: when bored, anxious, or left with no enrichment, Bassets deploy a carrying howl that neighbors in thin-walled buildings will notice. Regular mental enrichment (puzzle feeders work well) and at least two short daily walks keep the howling dormant. For owners who are home frequently, they’re nearly ideal.
✅ Best for: Work-from-home owners · Low-activity owners · Anyone who wants maximum calm
⚠️ Will howl when bored — use enrichment · Often exceeds 50 lb policies at 40–65 lbs
📏 40–65 lbs ⚡ 20–30 min/day 📣 Howls if bored ⚠️ Check weight limit
11
Havanese
🇨🇺 Cuba’s Only Native Breed 🌿 Low-Shedding 😄 Sociable ✅ No Restrictions
The Havanese has carved out a genuine niche in urban apartment life because it combines what people say they want (affectionate, sociable, adaptable) with what actually matters in close-quarters living (low-shedding, good with strangers, trainable for bark control). They love being near people, which makes them better for owners who work from home or part-time than for those working long hours. They’re intelligent enough to train reliably and curious enough to stay entertained with minimal enrichment. Their silky coat doesn’t shed significantly but does need regular brushing and occasional trims.
✅ Best for: Social apartments · Work-from-home owners · Owners who take dogs to cafes and stores
⚠️ Dislikes long solitude — not ideal for 8-hour solo work days without backup
📏 7–13 lbs 🌿 Low-shedding ✅ Always allowed
12
Dachshund
🐕 Loyal Companion 📣 Moderate Barker ⚡ Low-Medium Exercise ✅ No Restrictions
Dachshunds are a case where the personality delivers more than the body promises. They’re devoted, curious, and independent in ways that produce genuine entertainment for their owners — but that same independent streak drives a tendency to bark at sounds that interest them. Training for bark control should start early and be consistent. The smooth-coated variety is the most practical for apartment life: minimal grooming, easy to keep clean, and comfortable in close quarters. The long-backed physique means stairs should be managed carefully — ramps or carrying on stairs reduces the spinal stress that dachshunds are genetically prone to.
✅ Best for: Owners who want a bold personality in a small body · Anyone with one-floor apartment access
⚠️ Moderate barker — train early · Back problems are a lifetime concern, avoid stairs when possible
📏 8–32 lbs (standard/mini) ⚡ 30 min/day 📣 Needs bark training ✅ Always allowed
13
Basenji
🔇 Literally Cannot Bark 🌿 Self-Grooming 🧩 Experienced Owner Needed ✅ No Restrictions
The Basenji is physically incapable of barking — their larynx is shaped differently, producing a yodel-like sound called a “baroo” that is rare and quiet. In terms of noise impact on neighbors, no breed comes close to this advantage. They’re also cat-like in their self-grooming and cleanliness. The significant trade-off is temperament: Basenjis are ancient, independent dogs with strong prey drives and selective recall. They won’t reliably come when called off-leash, they need a securely enclosed space for running, and they require experienced dog owners who understand how to work with an independent-minded animal. Extraordinary apartment dog for the right person; frustrating disaster for the wrong one.
✅ Best for: Experienced dog owners who need maximum quiet · Buildings with the thinnest walls
⚠️ Independent temperament — not for first-time owners · Strong prey drive
📏 22–24 lbs 🔇 Cannot bark ✅ Never restricted ⚠️ Experienced owners only
14
Whippet
🏃 Active but Calm Indoors 🔇 Quiet ❤️ Affectionate ⚠️ Check Weight Limits
The Whippet is one of the most underrated apartment breeds because it perfectly mirrors the Greyhound’s indoor calm in a more manageable 25–40 lb package. They sprint, then rest — the biological pattern of a sighthound. Indoors they’re quiet, gentle, and affectionate in a way that’s particularly appealing to active owners who want a dog that can keep up on runs or hikes but come home and quietly lie on the couch for the rest of the day. They don’t have a guarding instinct, which means they’re friendly rather than suspicious with strangers in lobbies and elevators. Their short coat is minimal maintenance. Check weight limits — at 25–40 lbs they sometimes slip under the 50 lb threshold, but not always the 25 lb cap.
✅ Best for: Active urban owners who run or hike · Anyone wanting a large-feeling dog in a smaller package
⚠️ Needs off-leash running time occasionally · Weight may exceed some 25 lb caps
📏 25–40 lbs 🔇 Quiet indoors ⚡ 45 min/day ⚠️ Verify weight limit
15
Cavalier × Poodle Mix (Cavapoo)
🌿 Low-Shedding 🧠 Intelligent & Trainable ❤️ Deeply Affectionate ⚠️ No Breed Club Standards
The Cavapoo sits between the Cavalier’s emotional warmth and the Poodle’s non-shedding coat and trainability — a combination that produces one of the most practically successful apartment dogs currently in demand. Their trainability makes bark control achievable, their coat produces minimal allergen load in a small space, and their social adaptability makes elevator rides and building encounters smooth. The caveat: Cavapoos are mixed breeds without AKC parent club oversight, which means quality varies significantly depending on the breeder. Research carefully — coat type, adult size, and temperament all vary based on which parent’s traits dominate in a given litter.
✅ Best for: Allergy-sensitive households · First-time owners wanting manageable intelligence
⚠️ Breeder quality varies widely — no breed standard · May inherit health issues from either parent
📏 9–25 lbs (varies) 🌿 Low-shedding ✅ No restrictions
16
English Bulldog
😴 Maximum Chill 🔇 Rarely Barks ⚠️ High Vet Costs
The English Bulldog’s natural state is horizontal. Short walks twice daily, no desire to herd or hunt, minimal noise. Their brachycephalic anatomy creates significant veterinary expense across their lifetime, and they’re highly sensitive to heat — air conditioning is a requirement, not a comfort. For owners who have budgeted for higher vet costs and live in a climate-controlled building, few dogs are more relaxed neighbors.
✅ Best for: Sedentary owners · Climate-controlled apartments
⚠️ Among the highest lifetime vet costs of any breed · Heat intolerant
📏 40–50 lbs ⚡ 20 min/day 🔇 Quiet ⚠️ Check 50 lb policies
17
Chihuahua (With Training Commitment)
📏 Smallest Breed 📣 High Bark Risk ⚠️ Anxiety-Prone
Chihuahuas make this list conditionally. Untrained, they’re among the noisiest and most anxious apartment dogs. Properly socialized and trained from an early age — especially for noise control and exposure to building sounds — they become loyal, deeply bonded apartment companions with zero weight restriction concerns. Their bark tendency is the single biggest barrier; consistent positive reinforcement training from the first week, not the sixth month, determines which version of a Chihuahua you end up with. Not recommended for first-time owners or anyone without a clear training plan.
✅ Best for: Experienced owners committed to early socialization and bark training
⚠️ Bark tendency is high without training · Anxiety-prone if undersocialized
📏 2–6 lbs ✅ Always passes weight limits 📣 Must train bark control
18
Cocker Spaniel
❤️ Gentle & Even-Tempered ⚡ Moderate Energy 👶 Great with Families
Cocker Spaniels have a gentle, even-tempered personality that works well in apartment settings as long as their exercise needs are reliably met. One longer walk daily (30–45 minutes) and they’re content indoors. They’re quiet, good with children, and integrate smoothly into social environments. Their silky coat is beautiful and high-maintenance in equal measure — professional grooming every 6–8 weeks is necessary. Ear infections are a breed-specific concern; check ears weekly and dry thoroughly after baths.
✅ Best for: Family apartments · Owners who enjoy grooming as part of dog ownership
⚠️ Grooming is significant commitment · Ear health requires weekly attention
📏 20–30 lbs ⚡ 40 min/day ✅ No restrictions
19
Lhasa Apso
🏔️ Originally Palace Guard Dog 🔇 Alert but Manageable 💪 Independent & Robust
The Lhasa Apso was bred to guard Tibetan palaces — which sounds grand until you realize what that means for apartment life: they’re alert, independent, and capable of being alone without falling apart. Unlike many companion breeds, they’re not velcro dogs. They enjoy their people but don’t require constant proximity, which makes them practical for working owners. They’ll alert bark at doorbell sounds and unfamiliar people, but it’s manageable with training. Long coat requires professional grooming, but many owners opt for a practical “puppy cut” that reduces maintenance significantly.
✅ Best for: Working owners who want an independent, robust small dog
⚠️ Alert barking needs management · Long coat needs professional care unless clipped short
📏 12–18 lbs ⚡ 30 min/day ✅ No restrictions
20
Italian Greyhound
🐾 Miniature Greyhound 🔇 Quiet 🌡️ Needs Warmth ✅ Always Allowed
The Italian Greyhound packs the Greyhound’s calm, quiet sighthound temperament into a 7–14 lb package that passes every weight and breed restriction policy. They’re affectionate, quiet, and content with two daily walks. Their nearly hairless coat means they’re extremely sensitive to cold — a sweater is functional gear for outdoor winter walks, not an affectation. Fragile bone structure means they’re not suited for households with young children or rambunctious other dogs. For quiet apartments with calm routines, they’re a genuinely special small companion.
✅ Best for: Quiet single-person or couple apartments · Owners who want a small dog without toy breed personality
⚠️ Cold-sensitive — needs sweaters in winter · Fragile legs
📏 7–14 lbs 🔇 Quiet ✅ Always allowed ⚠️ Cold-sensitive
📊 At-a-Glance Comparison — All 20 Breeds

Four factors that actually determine apartment success: indoor calm, noise level, alone tolerance, and restriction status. Use this as a quick filter before diving into full breed profiles.

Breed Indoor Calm Noise Level Alone Tolerance Restriction Risk
French BulldogHighVery LowGoodNone
Cavalier K.C. SpanielHighLowModerateNone
Bichon FriséHighLowGoodNone
Shih TzuHighLowGoodNone
Greyhound (retired)Very HighVery LowGoodWeight limit risk
Miniature PoodleHighLow–ModerateGoodNone
PugHighLowGoodNone
Boston TerrierModerateLow–ModerateModerateNone
MalteseHighLowModerateNone
Basset HoundVery HighCan howl if boredGood (with enrichment)Weight limit risk
HavaneseHighModerateNeeds companyNone
DachshundModerateModerateModerateNone
BasenjiHighVery LowModerateNone
WhippetHighLowModerateWeight limit check
CavapooHighLowModerateNone
English BulldogVery HighVery LowGoodWeight limit check
ChihuahuaModerateHigh (untrained)VariableNone
Cocker SpanielHighLowModerateNone
Lhasa ApsoHighAlert barkerGoodNone
Italian GreyhoundHighVery LowModerateNone
💰 What an Apartment Dog Actually Costs

Beyond the breed price or adoption fee, apartment dog ownership carries ongoing costs worth planning for before you bring anyone home. These are 2026 national averages.

Adoption Fee
$50–$500
Shelter / rescue
Breeder Price
$800–$4,000+
Breed-dependent
Annual Food
$360–$900
Size-dependent
Annual Vet
$300–$700
Routine care
Grooming
$0–$1,200
Breed-dependent
Pet Deposit
$200–$500
Refundable
Monthly Pet Rent
$25–$75
Per month
Dog Walker
$15–$30
Per visit
💡 The Apartment-Specific Cost Nobody Mentions First

On top of standard dog costs, apartment renters carry a layer of costs that homeowners don’t: pet deposits ($200–$500), monthly pet rent ($25–$75 on top of base rent), and in some buildings, a one-time non-refundable pet fee as well. Before choosing a breed, budget the full first year including these housing add-ons — they often add $500–$1,500 to year-one costs compared to owning a dog in a house. Pet liability insurance ($10–$25/month) is increasingly requested by landlords for larger breeds and can sometimes also help negotiate past informal restrictions.

🏠 Breed Restrictions — What Renters Need to Know
🚫 The Breeds Most Commonly Restricted by Landlords

Roughly 66.7% of U.S. rental properties enforce some form of breed restriction, according to PetScreening’s 2026 State of Pets in Rental Housing Report. The breeds targeted are consistent across the country because most landlord policies track the same insurance liability lists. Commonly restricted: Pit Bull Terriers and any mix (American Pit Bull Terrier, American Staffordshire Terrier, Staffordshire Bull Terrier), Rottweiler, Doberman Pinscher, German Shepherd, Akita, Chow Chow, Malamute, and Husky. Mixed breeds that “appear” to be a restricted breed are frequently denied even without genetic testing. Weight limits (25–50 lbs) catch additional dogs regardless of breed.

⚖️ Your Rights Under the Fair Housing Act

Service dogs and properly documented Emotional Support Animals are legally exempt from breed restrictions under the Fair Housing Act — including in buildings that otherwise ban specific breeds. A landlord cannot deny a legitimate accommodation request based on breed alone. Key requirements: ESA documentation must come from a licensed healthcare provider with whom you have a genuine ongoing relationship (not a one-time online letter). In a 2025 federal case, courts allowed fair housing claims to proceed against a landlord who denied an ESA based solely on insurance company preferences. When in doubt, consult a housing attorney or your local HUD office.

✅ How to Improve Your Odds if You Have a Larger or Uncommon Breed
  • Offer a pet resume — vaccination records, obedience class certificates, a vet reference letter, and a letter from your previous landlord if you have one
  • Request a dog interview — many building managers will waive informal concerns when they meet a well-behaved dog in person
  • Offer pet liability insurance — $10–$25/month policies that cover dog-related incidents often reassure landlords more than any deposit
  • Propose a higher pet deposit — this signals accountability and gives the landlord financial buffer; differs from breed restrictions based on insurance
  • Search explicitly for “no breed restriction” listings — Zillow, Apartments.com, and PadMapper all have pet filter options; some specifically filter for no breed restrictions
🏃 Keeping Your Apartment Dog Happy — The Indoor Enrichment Playbook

A yard is a convenience. You — your presence, your walks, your games — are your dog’s actual exercise plan. Here’s what works without a backyard.

  • 1
    Two to three structured walks daily — with one real sniff walkTwo or three walks per day, with one being the longer “sniff walk” where your dog leads and you follow their nose. Sniffing is mental exercise: a 20-minute sniff walk tires most apartment dogs as much as 40 minutes of brisk walking. Vary your routes at least every few days to keep the scent environment fresh.
  • 2
    Puzzle feeders replace the food bowlInstead of placing kibble in a bowl, scatter it across a snuffle mat, freeze it in a stuffed Kong, or use a slow-feeder puzzle. This turns the meal into 10–20 minutes of active mental engagement. A dog who works for its food is a calmer dog in the hours that follow — a direct benefit to apartment neighbors.
  • 3
    Five-minute training sessions throughout the dayShort training bursts (five minutes of sit/stay/recall reinforcement, learning a new trick, or practicing loose-leash walking in the hallway) burn mental energy faster than physical exercise alone. Dogs that receive daily training are measurably less likely to develop boredom-driven behaviors like barking and destructive chewing.
  • 4
    Window watching and ambient sound managementA comfortable perch near a window gives your dog passive enrichment — watching street activity, birds, and people — that reduces the isolation most apartment dogs feel during the day. White noise machines or low-volume music help mask hallway trigger sounds that prompt alert barking in reactive breeds.
  • 5
    Midday breaks for longer work daysNo dog should be alone more than 6–8 hours without some form of interaction. A dog walker ($15–$30 per visit), a neighbor with a reciprocal arrangement, or doggy daycare on high-demand days ($25–$45 per day) is not optional for working apartment dog owners — it’s the infrastructure that makes the arrangement actually work for the dog.
📍 Find Dog Services Near You

These buttons find pet-friendly resources near your location — useful whether you’re still choosing a breed or already have your apartment dog.

Searching near you…
🔗 Quick Reference — Apartment Dog Resources
🐾 AKC breed selector: akc.org/dog-breeds 🐾 Petfinder breed search: petfinder.com 📋 HUD Fair Housing: hud.gov/program_offices/fair_housing 🔎 No breed restriction apts: zillow.com (pet filter) 🏥 Vet cost estimator: carecredit.com 🏫 Certified trainers: ccpdt.org
✅ Before You Choose a Breed — Five Questions Worth Answering Honestly
  • What does your building actually allow? Get the weight limit and breed restriction policy in writing before you choose a dog, not after. Verbal confirmations from a leasing agent are not enforceable. Read the pet addendum in your lease.
  • What is your real daily schedule? Not the ideal one — the actual Tuesday-Thursday-Friday schedule. That schedule determines whether a dog who needs three daily walks and a midday break is achievable or aspirational.
  • What is your noise tolerance, and your neighbors’? In a building with thin walls, a breed’s bark tendency should rank as high as any other factor. A quiet dog is a social asset; a noisy one is a lease risk.
  • Can you afford the full first year? Breed price or adoption fee plus pet deposit, pet rent, first-year vet setup, food, supplies, and training. Add 20% for surprises. The dog that costs the least to acquire often doesn’t cost the least to own.
  • Are you choosing for your life as it is, or as you plan it to be? A Border Collie for the hiking lifestyle you intend to have is a different animal than a Border Collie for the current reality of a busy desk job and one 30-minute walk per day. Match the dog to your actual life, not your aspirational one.

This guide is for general informational purposes and does not constitute veterinary or legal advice. Breed characteristics described reflect widely observed behavioral tendencies and may vary significantly by individual dog, training history, and environment. Apartment breed restriction data sourced from publicly available PetScreening 2026 State of Pets in Rental Housing Report and National Apartment Association research. Fair Housing Act information reflects HUD guidance current at publication; consult a housing attorney for your specific situation. Cost figures reflect 2026 national averages and will vary by location, breed, and provider. This content has no financial relationship with any breeder, shelter, training service, or housing provider mentioned.

Recommended Reads

  1. 20 Best Dog Breeds for Families
  2. 20 Best Dogs for Seniors — Complete Companion Guide
  3. 20 Best Dogs for Kids — Complete Family Breed Guide
  4. Pet-Friendly Apartments Near Me
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