Are Pekingese high maintenance?
There's no point sugarcoating it: Pekingese are high maintenance. Between the grooming, the exercise requirements, and the training demands, they need a committed owner.
A Chinese imperial companion who has never forgotten its royal status. Dignified, opinionated, and utterly devoted.
Time commitment breakdown
Owning a Pekingese isn't just about daily walks. Here's what the weekly time commitment actually looks like:
- Grooming: 3–5 hours per week — brushing, bathing, checking ears and nails.
- Exercise: 3–5 hours per week — walks, off-lead time, active play.
- Training: Regular sessions — Pekingese are challenging to train and need consistent, patient work to stay well-behaved.
- Mental stimulation: Occasional — low-energy breeds still benefit from mental stimulation but don't demand it daily.
Grooming requirements
Grooming is one of the biggest daily commitments with Pekingese. They shed heavily year-round, with two particularly intense coat blow periods in spring and autumn. Expect daily brushing as the baseline, not the exception.
A de-shedding brush (Furminator or equivalent), a slicker brush, and a vacuum cleaner rated for pet hair are all non-negotiable. Some owners invest in a professional groom every 6–8 weeks to remove the bulk of the undercoat in one session — it helps.
Exercise requirements
Pekingese have lower energy levels — 30–60 minutes of daily walking is typically sufficient. They're content to relax once their exercise needs are met and generally don't have the restless edge of high-energy breeds.
This makes them much more practical for owners with less time, smaller homes, or a less active lifestyle.
Mental stimulation needs
Physical exercise alone isn't enough for most dogs. Pekingese also need mental engagement. Pekingese are fairly relaxed about mental stimulation — occasional training sessions and enrichment activities are appreciated but won't become an emergency if they're occasionally skipped.
What "low maintenance" actually means day to day
High-maintenance breeds like the Pekingese aren't the right choice for every owner — and that's not a criticism. Matching a breed's actual needs to your actual lifestyle is the most important decision in dog ownership. Be honest with yourself: if the time commitment described above feels like too much on a regular week, consider a lower-demand breed.
Is this breed right for your lifestyle?
Want the full picture on Pekingese?
Read the complete Pekingese breed guide →