Choosing a breeder 

Choosing a dog in today's market can feel overwhelming. With commercial puppy mills shut down and independent breeders leading the charge, buyers face a new challenge. Separating caring, professional operations from cramped, inhumane conventions, low standards and high turn over breeding. 

With limited transparency, vague health claims, and no universal standards set by sellers, leaves families confused about what truly makes up a healthy, lifelong companion and a breeder they can trust. 

Here's your roadmap to cut through the noise and find a breeder who prioritizes ethics, genetics, and puppy quality above all.

What Should I Look For When Selecting a Lifelong Companion?

1. Breeder Practices & Ethics

Look for restricted litters per mother (1/year max) prioritizing quality over quantity. Avoid mass breeders; unreasonable or low pricing and lack of care.

Why Breeding Frequency Reveals Everything 

Every 6 Months = Health Disaster

Dogs can heat cycle twice yearly, but back-to-back breeding exhausts the dam. 

  • No recovery time leads to: Malnutrition & exhaustion—depleted nutrients mean weaker puppies (low birth weights, defects).

  • Infections like pyometra (uterus) or mastitis (breasts).

  • Eclampsia (calcium crash from nursing too many).

  • Stressed moms = poor bonding, anxious pups with behavioral issues.

  • Ethical Standard: 1 Litter/Year Minimum

Buyers should consider consulting sellers by asking "When the dam bred her last two litters?" Responsible breeders wait 9-12+ months between litters for full recovery (uterus heals, body rebuilds). This produces stronger, healthier and larger litters. 

2. Why Litter Size Matters to Buyers

Signals Dam's Peak Health

Seek out strong, well-nourished mother and father in their reproductive prime is 1-3 years. This aspect is worth enquiring of what age both parents are. The producing of larger litters (6-8 for smaller dogs and 6-10+ for medium/large breeds) reflects robust fertility, genetics, and care. Small litters (3-4) often signal stress, poor nutrition, old age, health issues and over breeding. More puppies = stronger genetics. Healthy dams deliver bigger, more viable litters. Less puppies = weaker/underweight pups from birth 

3. Comprehensive Health Testing 

Buyers may have read "DNA Cleared" a thousand times but dont know what it actually means. Most buyers see "DNA cleared" and assume their puppy is genetically perfect. The reality is it often means a health check has been done, but doest mean its clear. There is likely at least one defect or disease, most may not be a cause for concern. Buyers should ask what defects or diseases were found from the health screening if one was completed. 

Alternatively a screening for only 10-50 basic markers may have been tested—missing 80-90% of breed-specific diseases like heart conditions, eye disorders, or cancers. Buyers should qualify the breeder by asking how many diseases were tested for.

Only settle for the Gold Standard: 200+ Marker Testing

True DNA Health Screening covers 200+ markers for both dam (mother) and sire (father), evaluating:

Clear: No disease genes (safest).Carrier: One copy (usually safe unless both parents carry)

Affected: Two copies (disease risk).

Breeding dogs need to undergo a full Orivet DNA 200+ Panel Testing, screening for over 200 genetic markers across 100+ diseases, conditions, and traits. 

4. Avoid Fraud & Misrepresentation

Sellers may state their dog is purebred but will not provide the paper work to prove it. Full verification of documentation exposes dilutions. This also protects buyers from overpaying for falsely presented dogs.

Documentation = Proof

Insist on sighted certificates from labs like Orivet/Embark—physical proof breeders can't fake. This is your legal & ethical guarantee, essential for shows, insurance, or resale value

5. Lifetime Support

Seek breeders offering health guarantees, take-back policies, and ongoing guidance. 

6. Red Flags to Avoid Signs of possible puppy milling or dodgy breeders include:

  • Too-frequent breeding from the same dam, with no rest cycles between litters.

  • No genetic testing from services like Orivet or Embark to screen for hereditary defects.

  • Lack of verifiable documentation l

  • Bargaining or unusually low prices

  • Poor living environment: dirty cages, overcrowding, bad odors, or inadequate shelter from weather.

  • Puppies' appearance doesn't match the breed standard exactly (off-conformation, unhealthy coat).

  • Breeder reluctant to show proof of identity, frequently changes contact details, or seems evasive.

  • Insists on meeting only at public locations instead of their home or facility.

  • Refuses in-person visits, won't let you meet both parents, or hides full documentation.

  • Always has multiple litters or breeds available year-round, suggesting overproduction.

  • Puppies sold under 8 weeks old, without vet checks, vaccines, or socialization records.

  • No contract: demands cash-only payment, offers no health guarantees, refunds, return policy or lifetime support 

  • Parents unvaccinated, unhealthy-looking (dirty coats, limping, eye discharge), or overly fearful/aggressive or anxious. 

  • High pressure to buy immediately or vague excuses like "papers pending" or "just moved."