Saluki pros and cons
The honest breakdown — not a breed promotion piece. Salukis have real strengths and real trade-offs. Here's the full picture so you can decide whether the breed suits your life.
Pros of owning a Saluki
- Low shedding
- Quiet breed — minimal barking
- Gentle temperament
The headline strengths of the Saluki are real, but they only materialise when the breed's needs are properly met. A Saluki described as gentle and reserved is describing what the breed is when well-bred, well-socialised, and properly exercised — not what any individual dog will automatically be without that foundation.
Saluki cons — the honest downsides
- Needs careful management around young children
- Not reliably safe with cats
- Challenging to train — requires experienced owner
- High exercise requirements — needs significant daily activity
None of these cons are unique to Salukis — every breed has trade-offs. But they're worth taking seriously before you commit. The most common source of dog rehoming isn't an incompatible breed — it's an owner who bought based on the pros without fully engaging with the cons.
The real cost of owning a Saluki
Purchase price is just the beginning. A realistic lifetime cost for a Saluki:
- Puppy cost: £700–£1 800 from a reputable breeder. Lower prices often indicate puppy farms or poor breeding — a false economy when health problems emerge.
- Insurance: approximately £28–£60 per month. Shop around — premiums vary significantly between providers for the same level of cover.
- Food: £50–£200+ per month depending on the quality of food and the dog's size. Large and giant breeds eat significantly more than small dogs.
- Vetting: annual check-up, boosters, parasite treatment, and the unexpected. Budget £500–£1,500 per year on average, more for complex health needs.
- Grooming: Basic grooming is manageable at home with occasional professional appointments.
- Training: puppy classes (£100–£250), followed by ongoing reinforcement. 1-to-1 training support is strongly recommended for this breed.
- Lifetime total: a conservative estimate over 12 years puts the total cost of owning a Saluki at £36 700–£71 800. Be honest about whether this is affordable across the dog's whole life, not just in the puppy year.
Is a Saluki right for you?
The answer depends entirely on whether your lifestyle, experience, and expectations match this breed's actual profile. Ask yourself honestly:
- Can you provide at least 90 minutes of vigorous exercise daily?
- Do you have experience with training challenging breeds, or the commitment and budget to get professional support?
- Are you prepared to manage the dog carefully around young children? This breed is not reliably safe with kids without ongoing supervision and management.
- Do you have outdoor access and the time for meaningful daily exercise — not just a quick walk around the block?
- Are you financially prepared for the full cost — insurance, food, vetting, and grooming — for the next 12–14 years?
- Have you researched breeders carefully and are you prepared to wait for a well-bred puppy rather than taking a shortcut?
If you can answer yes honestly to these questions, a Saluki can be an excellent companion. If some of these give you pause, it's better to pause now than after the puppy is home. Every breed guide makes their subject sound wonderful — this one is trying to give you what you actually need to know.
Full Saluki profile — costs, care, temperament and more in detail.
Read the complete Saluki breed guide →More about Salukis
Related guides for Saluki owners and prospective owners