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Dogs · Herding Dogs

Puli

SizeMedium
Weight25 to 35 pounds
GroupHerding Dogs
Lifespan~13 yrs

Overview

The Puli is a medium dog from the Herding group — a high-drive, athletic dog that needs a lot of vigorous exercise. In temperament it's intensely devoted and bonded to its family, independent-minded and best with patient, consistent training and it would rather not be left alone for long. With a typical lifespan of 10 to 15 years, the Puli is a medium-length commitment.

Is the Puli right for you?

A good match if — you live in an apartment or smaller home; you have children at home; you're active and want a dog to move with; you want a closely bonded companion.

Think twice if — this is your first dog — it asks for experienced handling; you can't commit to vigorous daily exercise; you want a low-effort, hands-off pet; the dog would regularly be left alone for long stretches.

What a Puli needs from you

Day to day, the Puli needs a major daily time commitment from you and intense daily exercise and a job to do. It does best with a moderate amount of space and experienced, assured ownership. It's a social breed that doesn't like being isolated for long.

Living with a Puli

At home, the Puli adapts to apartment life with daily walks. It's great with kids of all ages, reserved with new people, fairly vocal, and a tidy, low-drool breed.

Key facts

Size
Medium
Height
1 foot, 4 inches to 1 foot, 5 inches tall at the shoulder
Weight
25 to 35 pounds
Life span
10 to 15 years
Group
Herding Dogs

What it needs from you (at a glance)

Space neededmoderate
Experience neededvery high
Maintenanceno data yet
Time per dayvery high
Need for companyhigh
Handling / closenessvery high
Cost levelmoderate

Health & what to watch for

The start matters most: get a Puli from someone who health-tests their lines — ask to see the results — or from a reputable rescue, and register with a vet early. Ask the breeder which screenings they run for the breed, and keep it lean and well-exercised. Across every breed the single biggest lever you control is weight — a lean dog lives longer and has fewer problems. Food intolerances usually show as itchy skin, recurring ear trouble or an upset stomach; if that turns up, a vet-guided elimination diet beats guesswork. This is general guidance, not veterinary advice — your vet knows your individual dog.

Best toys

Good toys for a Puli: toys that burn real energy — a ball launcher, a flirt pole, fetch and tug. Rotate a few at a time rather than leaving everything out — novelty is half the value — and always supervise a new chew.

Growing up

The first months are the socialization window: calm, positive exposure to new people, sounds, surfaces and other animals now shapes the adult dog more than almost anything else. Channel the energy early with structured outlets and basic training, or a bored youngster will invent its own jobs.

What it costs

Scaled to this breed’s roughly 14 kg and a ~13-year life, keeping a Puli works out at about:

Setup & first year
$1,251 – $2,731
Over its whole life
$12,046 – $24,629

Rough cross-breed averages in USD — a planning guide, not a quote. Break it down by life phase in the Cost Calculator →

Temperament (at a glance)

Affectionvery high
Energyvery high
Vocalnesshigh
Trainabilitylow
Tolerates alonelow

Its presence, grown

Raised with patience and consistency, the adult Puli settles into a powerful, restless presence that fills any space. It devotes itself utterly to its family — your shadow, your second self. It is reserved with new faces and slow to give its trust.

As your partner

Picture it as a grown partner at your side: early mornings, serious exercise and a tireless partner for everything you do outdoors. It would rather not be left alone for long. With children it is gentle and patient — a true family dog.

What makes it unique

What sets the Puli apart is an instinct to gather, watch and quietly manage everything that moves. It is built to go all day, and needs that outlet to be its best self.