Do Greyhounds bark a lot?
Greyhounds are a notably quiet breed — they rarely bark without a clear reason. If noise levels matter to you (flat living, terraced house, close neighbours), this breed is one of the easier choices.
The world's fastest dog that spends 18 hours a day asleep. Ex-racers make the most gentle and grateful pets.
How much do Greyhounds bark?
Greyhounds are a quiet breed. They might bark to alert you to someone at the door, or react to an unusual noise, but sustained or excessive barking isn't in their character. Most owners report that their neighbours are unaware they have a dog at all.
This makes them one of the more practical breeds for UK urban living — flats, terraced houses, semi-detached homes. Noise from a dog is one of the most common neighbour complaints; with a Greyhound, it's rarely an issue.
An independent dog barks on its own assessment of what's worth barking at, not to get your attention. The bark means something, even if you disagree with its reasoning.
What triggers Greyhounds to bark?
- Visitors at the door. A brief alert bark is typical, but it usually stops quickly
- Unusual sounds. Uncommon triggers, and responses are short-lived
- Separation anxiety. Like any dog, prolonged isolation can cause distress barking if not properly managed
Do Greyhounds suit flat living?
The bigger considerations for flat living are:
- Exercise — Greyhounds need modest exercise. A couple of good walks daily is sufficient.
- Alone time. Any dog in a flat needs proper habituation to being alone. Barking while you're out affects neighbours even with a quiet breed.
How to manage barking in Greyhounds
With a naturally quiet breed, management is minimal. The main thing to avoid is inadvertently rewarding alert barking with attention — if you come running every time the dog makes a noise, you teach them that barking produces a response. Acknowledge, then settle, and move on.
If a Greyhound that's usually quiet suddenly starts barking more than normal, it's worth investigating the cause. Increased vocalisation in a low-barking breed can signal boredom, a change in the environment, separation anxiety developing, or a health issue causing discomfort. A change from baseline is always more meaningful than the absolute barking level — even in quiet breeds.
Full Greyhound profile — temperament, shedding, training and costs.
Read the complete Greyhound breed guide →