ForTheBreed
Not ideal with young kids medium energy

Are Toy Poodles good with kids?

Toy Poodles can be challenging around young children. They tend to suit families with older, calmer kids rather than toddlers or very young children.

Toy Poodles are not ideal for families with young children
Better suited to households with children aged 8+ who understand how to interact respectfully with dogs. Always supervised.

The honest answer on Toy Poodles and children

Toy Poodles are not the easiest breed around young children.

Many Toy Poodles live successfully with children. The bar for supervision, training, and teaching children how to interact is just higher than with a breed known specifically for family tolerance.

Intelligence helps in a family context. These dogs learn household rules quickly and pick up on context, including when a child is playing versus behaving in a way the dog finds uncomfortable. An active breed is ideal for families that want a dog that actually participates in outdoor activity with children rather than accompanying them reluctantly. Alert dogs adjust to shifts in a child's behaviour quickly, which makes them attentive family companions once they've learned to interpret children's body language.

With toddlers and very young children (under 5)

Are Toy Poodles safe around toddlers?
With toddlers, extra caution is needed. Toy Poodles are generally better suited to households with older children who understand dog behaviour. Toddlers are unpredictable, loud, and often don't read a dog's stress signals — which increases the risk of an incident. Constant supervision and careful management of interactions is essential.

With older children (ages 6–12)

Are Toy Poodles good with school-age children?
Older children (8+) are a much better fit for Toy Poodles than toddlers. Children who can follow instructions, read a dog's body language, and approach calmly have far more positive experiences. Set clear rules: no disturbing the dog during meals or sleep, no teasing, no pushing. With these boundaries in place, Toy Poodles can develop real, affectionate relationships with older kids.

Key traits that matter for families

Temperament
intelligent, active, alert
Energy
Moderate — balanced
Training
Easy — responds well
Size
Small (2–4kg)

How to set your Toy Poodle and kids up for success

Breed temperament is a starting point — how you manage the relationship matters just as much.

  • Socialise early. Expose puppies to children of different ages from 8–16 weeks. Early positive experiences build lasting tolerance.
  • Teach children dog rules. No pulling ears, tails, or fur. No approaching a dog that's eating, sleeping, or unwell. No staring directly in the eyes.
  • Give the dog an escape route. Always provide a quiet space (crate, bed in another room) where the dog can retreat from children. A dog that can always escape rarely needs to escalate.
  • Involve older children in training. Kids who can give commands and get responses feel respected by the dog. The dog learns to listen to them too.
  • Never leave any dog alone with young children. Regardless of breed, track record, or temperament. Incidents happen in seconds.

See the full Toy Poodle profile — temperament, costs, training and more.

Read the complete Toy Poodle breed guide →

More questions about Toy Poodles and children

Should I get a Toy Poodle if I have a baby on the way?
This combination is particularly challenging. Toy Poodles aren't the most natural fit with very young children, and puppies are extremely demanding. Consider waiting until your child is older before adding a dog to the mix — or consider an alternative breed.
Are male or female Toy Poodles better with children?
Individual temperament matters far more than sex. Properly socialised Toy Poodles of both sexes can be excellent with children. The breeder's assessment of each puppy's character is more useful than a gender preference.
What age should children be before you get a Toy Poodle?
For Toy Poodles, we'd suggest waiting until children are at least 7–8 years old. Older children can understand dog boundaries and interact appropriately — which leads to better outcomes for everyone.
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