ForTheBreed
Higher risk — needs rigorous management High energy

Are Salukis destructive?

Salukis have a higher risk of destructive behaviour than many breeds — their high energy and challenging trainability create a dog that finds an outlet when unmet needs build up. Here's the honest picture and how to stay ahead of it.

Higher risk — needs rigorous management
High energy + challenging trainability = real risk without proactive management.
About the Saluki

The Persian greyhound. One of the oldest domesticated dog breeds, deeply sensitive and utterly impossible to recall.

Size
Large
Weight
16–29 kg
Energy
High
Trainability
Challenging
Lifespan
12–14 yrs

Are Salukis destructive?

The risk is real and worth taking seriously. Salukis's combination of high energy and challenging trainability creates a dog that needs a significant amount of exercise and mental engagement — and one that is relatively harder to redirect when they're channelling energy in the wrong direction.

An under-exercised, under-stimulated Saluki will find ways to discharge energy. That might mean chewing furniture, digging in the garden, pulling apart soft furnishings, or more extreme behaviours if separation anxiety is also present. This isn't the dog being bad — it's the dog expressing unmet needs in the only ways available to them. The solution is management, not punishment.

Why dogs become destructive

Destructive behaviour in dogs almost always has an identifiable cause. The most common are:

  • Under-exercise. Dogs that don't get enough physical activity have energy that has to go somewhere. Chewing and destruction are often the outlet. This is the most common cause in high-energy breeds.
  • Boredom. A dog left alone with nothing to do for hours will eventually do something. Often that something is destructive. Mental stimulation. Puzzle feeders, chew toys, food-dispensing toys. Provides appropriate outlets.
  • Separation anxiety. Destruction associated with being alone is different in character from boredom destruction. It often involves items belonging to the owner (socks, shoes, cushions from the sofa where the owner sits), panicked damage near exits, and the dog showing distress signals before the owner even leaves. This requires specific intervention, not just more exercise.
  • Teething (puppies). Puppies under 6 months chew because their gums hurt. This is developmental and resolves with appropriate chew objects and management. Not training.
  • Redirected frustration. A dog that's overstimulated, over-aroused, or frustrated may redirect that arousal into chewing or destruction. Common in dogs that spend time behind barriers watching activity they can't participate in.

How to prevent destructive behaviour in Salukis

Prevention is always more effective than dealing with the aftermath:

  • Meet exercise needs fully — for Salukis with high energy, this means vigorous off-lead exercise, not just lead walks. A dog that's properly tired is not a destructive dog.
  • Provide mental stimulation. Training sessions (even 10 minutes), puzzle feeders, lick mats, chew treats, and scent games occupy the dog's brain. Mental tiredness is as effective as physical tiredness for preventing problem behaviour.
  • Manage the environment. If the dog chews the sofa when left alone, remove access to the sofa when alone. Crate training or pen management keeps puppies and destructive dogs out of trouble when unsupervised. This isn't punishment. It's management.
  • Provide appropriate chew objects. Every dog needs things it's allowed to chew. Antlers, rubber chews, raw bones, and dental chews all provide appropriate outlets. A dog with nothing to chew will chew something.
  • Limit alone time. Most dogs shouldn't be left alone for more than 4 hours at a stretch. Beyond this, anxiety and boredom build significantly. Dog walkers, daycare, or staggered schedules can help.

Signs of stress vs boredom in Salukis

Understanding whether destructive behaviour is driven by stress or boredom matters, because the solutions differ:

Boredom destruction typically happens after the dog has been settled for a while. It tends to be methodical rather than frantic — the dog finds something and works at it steadily. It may be random items or high-value items the dog has discovered are rewarding to chew. The dog is usually calm and relaxed when you return.

Stress/separation anxiety destruction happens shortly after you leave (often captured on pet cameras). It tends to be frantic — scratching at doors, chewing exit points, howling, pacing. It focuses on owner-associated items or escape routes. The dog may show distress before you leave — following, panting, clingy behaviour. The dog is often still aroused or distressed when you return.

Boredom destruction is solved with more exercise and enrichment. Separation anxiety requires a specific graduated desensitisation protocol — often with professional support. Treating separation anxiety as a boredom problem (just give more exercise) typically doesn't resolve it.

Full Saluki profile — temperament, training, costs and more.

Read the complete Saluki breed guide →

More questions about Salukis

Do they shed?Do they bark a lot?Are they good with kids?Are they good with cats?Are they easy to train?Are they aggressive?