Are Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs good for first-time owners?
Short answer: yes. Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs are one of the more forgiving breeds for people who've never owned a dog before — responsive to training, predictable in temperament, and not designed to test you at every turn.
The verdict: are Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs right for a first-time owner?
Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs are well-suited to first-time owners — and this isn't just reassuring marketing speak. The breed checks the three boxes that matter most for beginner dog owners: trainability, temperament stability, and tolerance of the inevitable errors that come with learning.
Their trainability is rated easy, which means they respond reliably to positive reinforcement and pick up commands at a pace that keeps new owners motivated. They don't require specialist training techniques or an exceptionally experienced hand. Standard puppy classes and consistent daily practice are usually sufficient.
The energy level is manageable — medium — meaning the exercise requirement, while real, isn't the kind that demands marathon-level commitment from an owner who's still figuring out the basics.
Equally important: Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs tend to be forgiving of the small inconsistencies and mistakes that every new owner makes. They don't exploit ambiguity the way some breeds do. A Greater Swiss Mountain Dog that gets mixed signals on one occasion doesn't suddenly decide the rules no longer apply.
Why yes. a solid choice for first-time owners
- Easy to train with positive reinforcement
- Forgiving of rookie mistakes
- Predictable, stable temperament
The challenges you need to prepare for
Regardless of where a breed sits on the first-timer-friendliness spectrum, every Greater Swiss Mountain Dog owner faces some common challenges. These are more pronounced for people without prior dog experience:
The first 6 months
The most challenging period for any first-time dog owner is the first 6 months with a puppy: toilet training, bite inhibition, the chaos of a teething phase, the sheer energy of a young dog learning the world. With Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs, this period is more manageable than with many other breeds.
The owners who get through this period best are the ones who start puppy classes in the first 8–12 weeks (as soon as vaccination allows), not the ones who decide to handle it themselves and enrol in classes "if it becomes a problem."
What first-time Greater Swiss Mountain Dog owners need to know
Beyond the general first-time-owner advice, there are things specific to Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs worth knowing before you bring one home:
- Exercise needs are medium — budget time accordingly before getting a puppy, not after.
- Trainability is easy — invest in formal puppy classes rather than relying purely on YouTube tutorials. A qualified trainer who knows the breed can identify problems before they become ingrained habits.
- Barking tendency is medium — not a significant concern, though early training around triggers is always worthwhile.
- Good with kids: yes — Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs are generally patient and tolerant with children, which reduces one major stressor for family first-time owners.
- Monthly costs — budget for insurance (typically £70–£150/month for a Greater Swiss Mountain Dog), food, grooming, and routine vet care. First-time owners often underestimate the total cost of ownership.
Where to get support as a first-time Greater Swiss Mountain Dog owner
The best first-time Greater Swiss Mountain Dog owners are not the ones who know everything at the start — they're the ones who know where to find help quickly when they need it.
- Puppy classes — find a qualified trainer (look for APDT, IMDT, or PPG membership in the UK) in the first few weeks. Group classes have the added benefit of socialisation, which is critical during the puppy developmental window.
- Breed clubs — the UK breed club for Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs will have a network of experienced owners, a breeder referral list, and often helplines for new owners. The Kennel Club website lists all recognised breed clubs.
- Online communities — Facebook groups and forums dedicated to Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs put you in contact with hundreds of owners who've navigated the same challenges. Experienced members can often save you weeks of trial and error.
- Your vet — beyond health checks, a good vet is a resource for early behavioural concerns. Many practices have or can refer to clinical animal behaviourists for issues that go beyond standard training.
Want the full picture on Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs?
Read the complete Greater Swiss Mountain Dog breed guide →