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How Much Exercise Does Your Dog Need Breed Breakdown

By Sarah BennettJuly 2, 20266 min read
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TITLE: How Much Exercise Does Your Dog Actually Need? A Breed-by-Breed Breakdown SLUG: how-much-exercise-does-your-dog-need-breed-breakdown TAGS: dog exercise, breed health, physical wellbeing, dog care CATEGORY: dogs

The Exercise Myth That Is Harming Dogs

There is a persistent and genuinely damaging belief that dog exercise is simple: more is always better. Walk your dog until they are tired and all behavioural problems will solve themselves. In practice, this approach overtires some dogs, under-stimulates others, causes physical damage in growing puppies and working breeds, and fundamentally misunderstands what dogs actually need from their daily activity.

Exercise requirements in dogs are not uniform. They are shaped by breed group, age, health status, individual temperament, and the type of exercise on offer. Getting this right is one of the most meaningful things you can do for your dog's long-term physical and mental health.

Why Breed Matters

Modern dog breeds were developed for specific working functions over centuries of selective breeding. Those functional origins did not disappear when the work stopped. A Border Collie bred to cover 40 miles of terrain herding sheep has a cardiovascular system, a muscular structure, and a neurological drive that is fundamentally different from a Basset Hound bred to work slowly through dense undergrowth at a pace a hunter could follow on foot.

Matching exercise to breed origins is not sentimentality — it is applied biology. Providing insufficient exercise to a high-drive working breed and expecting them to be a calm, easy pet is like keeping a marathon runner in a bedsit and wondering why they seem agitated.

High-Energy Breeds: 2 Hours or More Daily

These breeds were developed for sustained, high-intensity work and have the physical and mental capacity to match. Insufficient exercise in these dogs typically presents as destructive behaviour, excessive vocalisation, hyperactivity indoors, and difficulty settling.

  • Border Collie and working sheepdogs
  • Siberian Husky and Alaskan Malamute
  • Vizsla and Weimaraner
  • Belgian Malinois and German Shepherd Dog
  • Jack Russell Terrier (despite their size, their energy output is substantial)
  • Dalmatian
  • Springer Spaniel and Cocker Spaniel in working lines

For these breeds, exercise should include free running off-lead when safe, not just on-lead walking. Lead walking restricts natural movement patterns and does not adequately address drive. Mental work — scent games, problem-solving tasks, training — must supplement physical exercise, not replace it.

Moderate-Energy Breeds: 1 to 2 Hours Daily

These dogs need consistent, varied exercise but are generally more adaptable to domestic life without specialist provision. They tend to settle well indoors when their exercise needs are met and do not typically show the escalating frustration behaviours seen in high-drive working breeds.

  • Labrador and Golden Retriever
  • Standard Poodle
  • Boxer
  • Australian Shepherd (pet lines, not working)
  • Beagle
  • Staffordshire Bull Terrier
  • Border Terrier

Lower-Energy Breeds: 30 to 60 Minutes Daily

These breeds have lower cardiovascular demands and are well-suited to owners with less active lifestyles. However, lower exercise requirements do not mean no requirements. Boredom-related behaviour problems still occur in under-stimulated individuals of any breed.

  • Basset Hound
  • Shih Tzu and Lhasa Apso
  • Cavalier King Charles Spaniel
  • Maltese and Bichon Frise
  • Pekingese

Brachycephalic Breeds: A Special Case

Flat-faced breeds including Bulldogs, French Bulldogs, Pugs, and Boston Terriers require particular care around exercise. Their shortened airways mean they cannot thermoregulate through panting as efficiently as other dogs, placing them at significant risk of heatstroke. Their exercise capacity is also genuinely limited by their anatomy, not simply by laziness or poor conditioning.

For brachycephalic dogs, short and frequent walks are preferable to sustained effort. Exercise should always take place during cooler parts of the day. Any sign of laboured breathing, excessive noise during exertion, or rapid onset of fatigue warrants immediate rest and veterinary assessment. Many brachycephalic dogs benefit from corrective airway surgery, which can substantially improve their capacity for normal activity.

Giant Breeds: More Is Not Better

Great Danes, Saint Bernards, Irish Wolfhounds, and similar giant breeds are often assumed to need enormous amounts of exercise. In practice, their skeletal systems are under considerable load simply from supporting their size, and over-exercising these dogs — particularly on hard surfaces — contributes to joint damage and accelerates the development of osteoarthritis.

Giant breeds typically need moderate, consistent exercise — around 30 to 60 minutes for adults — with a strong preference for soft, varied terrain over prolonged pavement walking. They are also more susceptible to bloat (gastric dilatation-volvulus), and exercise should be avoided for at least an hour before and after feeding.

Puppies: Protecting Growing Joints

The growth plates in a puppy's long bones do not close until between 12 and 24 months of age, depending on breed size. High-impact exercise, forced running on hard surfaces, and repetitive jumping during this window can cause lasting joint damage.

A commonly used guideline is five minutes of structured exercise per month of age, twice daily. A four-month-old puppy therefore needs around 20 minutes of structured walking twice a day. Free play in a safe garden on soft ground is generally acceptable beyond this, as puppies self-regulate during natural play more effectively than during forced exercise.

Senior Dogs: Adapt, Do Not Stop

Reducing a senior dog's exercise to near-zero is rarely appropriate and often actively harmful. Regular, moderate movement maintains muscle mass that supports arthritic joints, keeps the cardiovascular system healthy, and provides the cognitive stimulation that helps slow the progression of age-related cognitive changes.

The key is adaptation: shorter, more frequent walks rather than long sustained outings; softer ground where possible; and close attention to signs of pain or fatigue during and after exercise. Work with your vet to establish what is appropriate for your individual dog's condition.

Mental Exercise: The Missing Half

Physical exercise addresses the body. Mental stimulation addresses the mind. For dogs with high cognitive demands — herding breeds, scent hounds, working retrievers — mental exercise is not an optional extra. Fifteen minutes of active nose work or training can produce a level of satisfied tiredness that an hour of walking does not.

Effective mental enrichment includes scentwork and tracking games, food puzzle toys and slow feeders, learning new skills and tricks, and structured social interaction with dogs and people. Balance physical and mental provision and you will have a dog who is genuinely content, not just physically depleted.

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Disclaimer:This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute veterinary advice. Always consult a qualified veterinarian for your pet's health concerns.
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