Breed clusters

What your dog is bred for changes which products actually fit. We grouped the 75 breeds covered on PawBench by physical and behavioral attributes that matter for shopping — not by cosmetic group.

7 breeds

High-drive herding breeds

Working herders with strong impulse control needs and a redirected herding instinct that shapes what kind of toys, leashes, and mental work they actually need.

8 breeds

Brachycephalic (flat-faced) breeds

Short-muzzled breeds whose airway anatomy changes what's safe — harnesses over collars, cooling gear in summer, and feeding bowls that slow rapid eating.

9 breeds

Giant and large working breeds

Breeds typically over 70 lb adult weight with shorter average lifespans, joint-load concerns, and gear that has to be sized up structurally — not just by adjusting a strap.

21 breeds

Toy and small companion breeds

Under 20 lb breeds bred primarily as companions. Small jaws, lighter pull strength, and household-living focus changes what gear actually fits and works.

23 breeds

Doodle and low-shed-coat breeds

Poodle-mix and curly/wavy-coat breeds with grooming-heavy maintenance — the right comb, slicker brush, and detangler matter as much as the right food.

12 breeds

Sporting and gun-dog breeds

Retrievers, pointers, setters, and spaniels — high-stamina athletes bred for daylong field work who need real exercise outlets and water/retrieve gear.

5 breeds

Scenthound and tracking breeds

Nose-driven breeds that follow a scent trail before any recall command lands — gear and training products built around "the nose wins" reality.

5 breeds

Arctic and northern breeds

Double-coated breeds bred for cold-weather work. Heavy seasonal shedding and prey drive shape grooming and containment gear.