ForTheBreed
Risky with cats Small breed · 2–3kg Challenging to train

Are Yorkshire Terriers good with cats?

Tiny dog, enormous personality. The Yorkie doesn't know it's small and will pick a fight with anything.

Yorkshire Terriers are not reliably safe with cats. Their prey drive, territorial instincts, or sheer energy often makes this combination stressful at best and dangerous at worst.

Not reliably cat-safe
Most Yorkshire Terriers should not be trusted unsupervised with cats, regardless of training.

Why Yorkshire Terriers struggle with cats

Yorkshire Terriers have instincts that make cat cohabitation a real risk. Whether it's a high prey drive, territorial behaviour, or simply the medium energy level that leads to relentless harassment, the combination often doesn't end well for the cat.

Strong attachment to people can create an odd dynamic with cats. The dog wants to be close to everyone; the cat repeatedly declines. Managing that one-sided dynamic takes consistent intervention. Curiosity is the main daily challenge. These dogs notice the cat, watch the cat, and follow the cat without being aggressive, yet persistent watchful attention is something most cats find stressful. Bold dogs are not easily deterred by a cat's warning signals. Hissing and swatting stop most dogs. They don't reliably stop this one.

Even without intending harm, a Yorkshire Terrier that constantly chases a cat causes chronic stress — which has serious health consequences for cats. A dog doesn't need to injure a cat to make the cat's life miserable.

The size factor with Yorkshire Terriers

At 2–3kg, the Yorkshire Terrier is small enough that physical injury risk is lower — though persistent chasing from any size dog causes significant stress to cats.

Be honest about this before committing to keeping both. The question isn't just "will they get along?" but "what happens when they don't?" The answer changes significantly depending on the physical size of the dog involved.

Training won't fully solve it

As a challenging breed to train, keeping Yorkshire Terriers reliably away from cats through commands alone is difficult. Management through physical separation — baby gates, separate rooms — is more reliable than training alone for this breed.

Even the most well-trained Yorkshire Terrier will still have prey instincts — training suppresses the behaviour in controlled situations, but cannot remove the underlying drive. A startled dog, a running cat, a moment of inattention — these are the situations where training alone isn't a reliable safeguard.

Stress in the shared home

Yorkshire Terriers tend to bark more than average. This matters in a cat-dog home: even non-aggressive barking directed at a cat creates chronic stress. A cat that lives with a frequently barking dog is a stressed cat — often showing stress through hiding, reduced eating, or house-soiling.

Cats under chronic stress show it through hiding, reduced appetite, changes in litter box behaviour, and over-grooming. A cat that "seems fine" but spends most of its time in one room, avoids the dog's areas, and rarely relaxes fully is not fine — it's managing a situation it has no good way out of.

When it might work

Exceptions exist. Some individual Yorkshire Terriers — particularly those raised alongside cats from puppyhood — develop a genuine tolerance or even friendship. The key factors that improve the odds:

  • Dog and cat raised together from very young ages
  • The specific dog has a lower-than-typical prey drive for the breed
  • The cat is confident and not a runner (running always triggers chase instinct)
  • Permanent separation capability if things don't work out

If you have both, do this

Never leave them unsupervised until you are absolutely certain the dog will not chase. Even then:

  • The cat must always have escape routes the dog can't follow
  • Baby gates give the cat safe zones throughout the house
  • Separate feeding areas and litter tray in a dog-free space
  • Be honest about whether the cat is stressed. A cat hiding permanently is not "fine"

The most important question to ask yourself honestly is whether you can permanently commit to a home setup that keeps both animals safe. This means baby gates that stay up for years, not weeks. It means a cat with reliable access to at least one room the dog can never enter. It means routine supervision, not occasional supervision. Many people start with good intentions and let the arrangement slip — with consequences that are hard to undo.

If you're getting a Yorkshire Terrier puppy into a home that already has a cat, you have the best possible starting point — puppies socialised with cats early are far more likely to develop a genuine tolerance than dogs introduced to cats later in life. Even then, the breed's natural instincts don't disappear; they require active management and a home layout that protects both animals throughout the dog's life. With a lifespan of 13–16 years, you're committing to that management for a long time.

Full guide to Yorkshire Terriers

Read the complete Yorkshire Terrier guide →

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