Chinese Crested 🌸

Chinese Crested

Toy Group · Purebred · The world's most distinctive toy dog — available in hairless or fully coated varieties, with an ancient seagoing history and one of the longest lifespans of any breed

8–12 lbsWeight
11–13 inHeight
13–18 yrsLifespan
LowEnergy

🎬 Chinese Crested Facts

Watch this video for a quick overview of the Chinese Crested — see the breed in action before diving into the details below.

🐾 Overview

The Chinese Crested's exact origin is debated — the breed has ancient roots traced to African hairless dogs that Chinese sailors acquired during maritime trading voyages, then selectively bred on Chinese ships to create a compact, affectionate companion and ratter. Hairless dogs were prized as living hot water bottles by sick sailors and traded at ports worldwide, which explains why similar hairless breeds appear across multiple continents. The breed was further refined in China and arrived in the modern Western show world in the 20th century.

Every Chinese Crested litter contains both hairless and fully coated ('Powderpuff') individuals — both are the same breed with different coat genetics, and both varieties can appear in the same litter. The hairless variety requires sunscreen in summer, moisturizer in winter, and protection from cold temperatures; the Powderpuff is fully coated and needs regular grooming. Both varieties are affectionate, playful, and deeply devoted to their owners, with an exceptional lifespan that often reaches 15–18 years.

📸 Photo Gallery

Real Chinese Cresteds — browse photos showcasing their look, size, and personality.

😊 Temperament & Personality

Chinese Cresteds are known for being surprisingly bold for their small size. They form deep bonds with their families and thrive on consistent human connection. They strike a good balance — lively enough to enjoy playtime and adventures, but calm enough to settle indoors when the day is done.

Training is generally a pleasure with Chinese Cresteds — they are responsive, motivated, and pick up commands quickly. They are typically gentle and patient with children, making them a reliable family companion.

  • Moderately active — enjoys exercise and playtime but appreciates downtime at home
  • Affectionate and people-oriented — thrives on closeness with their family
  • Patient and gentle with children — a dependable family companion
  • Intelligent and eager to learn — responds enthusiastically to positive training methods
  • Breed-typical personality is reliable and predictable — makes planning your lifestyle together easier
  • Genuinely enjoys relaxing — equally happy on a couch as on a trail with the right owner

🏃 Exercise & Activity Needs

Chinese Cresteds need regular daily exercise to maintain a healthy weight and an even temperament. They are versatile companions who enjoy active outings but are equally content to relax at home after their needs are met.

  • Daily exercise: 30 – 45 minutes of moderate activity
  • Short daily walks and indoor play sessions — tiny legs cover ground faster than you think, but overall distance needs are modest
  • Daily walks, play sessions, and occasional trips to a dog park are ideal
  • Mental enrichment (puzzle toys, training) complements physical exercise
  • Adjust intensity based on age — puppies and seniors need gentler, shorter sessions
  • Indoor play can substitute on days with extreme weather

✂️ Grooming & Coat Care

Chinese Cresteds have a dense double coat built for protection against the elements. They shed year-round with two major blow-out seasons in spring and fall. Regular brushing dramatically reduces the amount of hair around your home and keeps the coat healthy.

  • Brush 2–3 times per week; daily during heavy shedding seasons
  • Use a slicker brush followed by an undercoat rake to reach the dense undercoat
  • Bathe every 6–8 weeks — avoid overbathing as it strips the natural protective oils
  • Never shave a double coat — it disrupts insulation and the coat may grow back unevenly
  • Clean ears weekly and check for signs of infection
  • Trim nails every 3–4 weeks — they rarely wear down naturally indoors

🎓 Training

Chinese Cresteds are moderately trainable and respond well to patient, consistent positive reinforcement. They benefit from clear expectations and a calm, confident trainer who establishes routines early.

Keep sessions short — 10 to 15 minutes — and always end on a success. Enrolling in a puppy or adult obedience class provides structured learning and valuable socialization.

  • Begin training and socialization as early as possible — the puppy window is critical
  • Reward-based training (treats, praise, play) produces the best and fastest results
  • Be consistent — the same rules must apply every session and every family member must agree
  • Toy breeds are often underestimated — they're very intelligent. "Small dog syndrome" comes from inconsistent rules. Train them exactly as you would a large dog.
  • Crate training establishes boundaries, aids house training, and gives your dog a safe personal space
  • Short, positive sessions daily beat long, infrequent sessions every time

🏥 Health & Common Issues

Chinese Cresteds are generally healthy for their size, though regular screening helps catch issues early. Responsible breeders screen breeding stock for the most common conditions, significantly reducing risk in puppies from health-tested parents.

Patellar luxation Dental disease (crowded teeth in small mouths) Tracheal collapse Hypoglycemia in very small individuals Dental disease Obesity (if under-exercised)
Average Lifespan
13–18 yrs
Size Category
Small — 8–12 lbs
Vet Visits
Annual wellness exams + vaccinations
Pet Insurance
Strongly recommended for all breeds

🏠 Is a Chinese Crested Right for You?

A Chinese Crested suits someone looking for a calmer, lower-energy companion. They are excellent for apartment living, retirees, or households with a quieter routine. They still benefit from daily walks and mental stimulation, but they won't demand the intensive commitment of high-energy breeds.

👶With Kids★★★★☆
🐕With Dogs★★★★☆
🐈With Cats★★★★☆
🏠Apartment★★★☆☆
🔰First-Time Owner★★★☆☆
🌡️Hot Climates★★☆☆☆

🍽️ How Much to Feed a Chinese Crested

Chinese Cresteds need consistent, well-portioned meals matched to their life stage. Overfeeding is one of the biggest health risks for any dog — use these guidelines and adjust based on your dog's activity level and body condition.

Puppy (8–12 weeks)
3–4 small meals per day
Puppy (3–6 months)
3 meals per day
Adult (1+ year)
2 meals per day
Senior (7+ years)
2 smaller meals per day

📏 Daily Portion Guide by Weight

These are general guidelines for a toy-breed dog. Always check the feeding instructions on your specific food brand, and adjust based on activity level and body condition score.

5 lbs (inactive)
¼ cup/day
8 lbs (average)
⅓ cup/day
10 lbs (active)
½ cup/day
12 lbs (very active)
½–¾ cup/day

✅ Best Foods for Chinese Cresteds

Look for dog foods where the first ingredient is a named protein — chicken, beef, salmon, or lamb. Toy-breed formulas are calibrated for their metabolism and nutritional needs.

  • Very small breed with minimal caloric needs — overfeeding is a serious risk; measure portions precisely
  • Dental-supportive diet is important — dental disease is the breed's most common health issue
  • Warm food slightly to entice this small breed, which may be choosy about food texture and temperature
  • High-quality small-breed formula helps maintain the coat in Powderpuffs and supports skin health in hairless varieties

🚫 Foods That Are Dangerous for Chinese Cresteds

These common human foods can be toxic — even life-threatening — for dogs. Keep them safely out of reach at all times.

Chocolate Grapes & Raisins Onions & Garlic Xylitol (artificial sweetener) Macadamia Nuts Alcohol Avocado Raw yeast dough

🦴 Healthy Treats for Chinese Cresteds

  • Carrots — low calorie, great for dental health
  • Blueberries — antioxidants and a sweet reward
  • Plain cooked chicken or turkey (no seasoning)
  • Apple slices (remove seeds and core)
  • Plain rice cakes — low-calorie training reward
  • Commercial treats sized appropriately for a toy breed

💡 Tip: Boarding your Chinese Crested?

Always bring your Chinese Crested's regular food when boarding. Switching food suddenly can cause digestive upset. Provide the facility your exact feeding schedule and portion sizes.

💰 How Much Does a Chinese Crested Cost?

The upfront cost of a Chinese Crested is just the beginning. Here's a realistic breakdown of what to expect — both to acquire one and to own one for their lifetime.

Reputable Breeder
$500–$2,000
Show / Champion Lines
$2,000–$5,000+
Rescue / Adoption
$50–$300
Backyard Breeder ⚠️
$200–$600 (risky)

📅 Monthly Cost of Owning a Chinese Crested

Beyond the purchase price, owning a Chinese Crested costs between $80–$150 per month on average. Here's where the money goes:

Food (quality kibble)
$20–$35/month
Vet visits (annual)
$400 – $800/year
Pet insurance
$30 – $70/month
Grooming
$30 – $80/month
Toys & supplies
$15 – $35/month
Training classes
$100 – $300 (one-time)

📊 Lifetime Cost Estimate

Over a 12–16 year lifespan, a Chinese Crested typically costs between $6,000–$14,000 total — depending on health, lifestyle, and the services you use.

  • First year is the most expensive: purchase cost + vaccinations + spay/neuter + starter supplies
  • Budget extra for unexpected vet bills — accidents and emergencies can happen to any breed
  • Pet insurance pays for itself if your dog ever needs surgery or serious treatment
  • Boarding costs: plan for $50–$100/night at quality facilities when you travel

💡 Money-saving tip

Pet insurance is worth considering for any breed. Buying before your dog turns 1 gives the best rates and fewest pre-existing condition exclusions. Compare 2–3 providers before committing.

💡 How to Save Money as a Chinese Crested Owner

  • Get pet insurance before your dog turns 1 — premiums are lower and pre-existing conditions won't be excluded
  • Buy food in larger bags when possible — significantly cheaper per pound
  • Learn basic grooming at home — brushing, ear cleaning, and nail trimming save groomer fees
  • Ask your vet about wellness plans — many clinics offer annual packages that bundle routine care
  • Use a rewards credit card for larger vet bills
  • Adopt instead of buying — rescue Chinese Cresteds are just as loving and cost a fraction of the price

🧬 Popular Chinese Crested Mix Breeds

Because Chinese Cresteds have such wonderful traits, they're a popular choice for intentional mixed breeding. Here are the most common — and most loved — Chinese Crested crosses.

🐕 Chinese Crested × Chihuahua (Chi-Chi Crested)

Two ancient companion breeds combine into a tiny, devoted, potentially hairless crossbreed with enormous personality and loyalty packed into a very small frame.

Size
5–15 lbs
Energy
Moderate–High
Shedding
Moderate
Price
$300–$1,200

🐩 Chinese Crested × Poodle (Chinese Crestepoo)

The Poodle's intelligence and potentially low-shedding coat meets the Crested's affectionate, people-focused nature in a small, clever companion.

Size
45–70 lbs
Energy
Moderate–High
Shedding
Low
Price
$800–$3,000

🐾 Chinese Crested × Maltese Mix

Two silky-haired toy companions combine into a gentle, affectionate lap dog with a potentially flowing coat and an easygoing, sociable temperament.

Size
5–15 lbs
Energy
Moderate–High
Shedding
Low
Price
$300–$1,200

🐾 Chinese Crested × Papillon Mix

Two distinctively beautiful toy breeds produce a small, lively crossbreed with striking ears, a unique coat, and an alert, playful personality.

Size
20–45 lbs
Energy
Moderate–High
Shedding
Moderate
Price
$300–$1,200

🎉 Amazing Facts About Chinese Cresteds

Chinese Cresteds are full of surprises. Here are some of the most fascinating, funny, and heartwarming facts about this breed.

  • 🚢 Chinese Cresteds traveled the world's oceans on trading ships — the hairless breed was valued by sailors for multiple reasons: they provided warmth (hairless dogs have skin temperature slightly higher than coated breeds), they caught rats in the ship's hold, and they were disease-resistant in ways that medieval and early modern sailors believed, perhaps partly due to the perceived cleanliness of a hairless animal. Ports from China to Africa to Latin America all have records of similar hairless dogs.
  • 🎪 The Chinese Crested consistently wins the World's Ugliest Dog Contest at the Sonoma-Marin Fair in California — a beloved annual event in which the most unusually-featured dog is celebrated rather than the most beautiful. Chinese Cresteds have dominated the competition for decades, with their combination of sparse hair, protruding teeth (a genetic consequence of the hairless gene), and striking features perfectly designed for the contest's aesthetic. The dogs' owners universally report that their Cresteds are, to them, the most beautiful dogs in the world.
  • 🧬 The hairless gene that defines the Chinese Crested is a mutation in the FOXI3 gene — an autosomal dominant mutation that also affects tooth development, which is why hairless Chinese Cresteds reliably have missing or malformed teeth. Responsible breeders never breed two hairless-to-hairless, because inheriting two copies of the hairless gene is lethal before birth. Every litter from a hairless × powderpuff or hairless × hairless breeding contains a statistical mix of hairless and fully coated puppies.
  • 🌞 Owning a hairless Chinese Crested requires a skincare routine that most dog owners never anticipate. The bare skin must be moisturized regularly to prevent dryness and cracking, protected from sun exposure with pet-safe SPF products, checked for acne (yes, dogs can get acne and Cresteds are prone to it on their skin), and bundled in cold weather. Many Crested owners keep a wardrobe of sweaters and dog coats — often the most elaborate canine wardrobes of any breed owner.
  • 🏆 The Chinese Crested is one of the longest-lived of all dog breeds — individual Cresteds regularly reach 18 years of age, and the breed's average lifespan of 13–18 years substantially exceeds that of most toy breeds. Researchers attribute this longevity partly to the breed's genetic diversity (introduced through its mixed seaport origins) and partly to the reduced cancer rates that accompany hairlessness in some research models. Whatever the cause, a Crested is a genuinely long-term companion commitment.

📋 Chinese Crested At a Glance

AKC Rank
#72 most popular (2025)
Group
FCI Group 9 : Companion & Toy Dogs
Origin
China (via Africa)
Also Known As
Crested, Chinese Crested Hairless, Powderpuff

❤️ Why People Love the Chinese Crested

  • Loyal and devoted companions who form deep bonds with their families
  • Adaptable to a wide variety of living situations with the right exercise and care
  • Unique history and personality that sets them apart from other breeds
  • Consistently ranked among the most rewarding breeds to live with