Livestock Guardian / FCI Group 1 · Purebred · Italy's ancient white guardian from the Maremma coastal plains and Abruzzo highlands — a noble, independent, and highly capable livestock protection dog with a thick white coat, deep intelligence, and a worldwide conservation role protecting endangered wildlife from predators
The Maremma and the Abruzzes Sheepdog (Italian: Cane da Pastore Maremmano-Abruzzese) is one of Italy's oldest and most culturally significant dog breeds, with roots stretching back to ancient Roman times. Named for two Italian regions — the Maremma coastal lowlands of Tuscany and Lazio, and the Abruzzo highlands of central Italy — where it has been used for centuries to guard sheep and cattle from wolves, bears, and human predators, the Maremma is the quintessential Italian livestock guardian dog.
The breed is characterized by its striking pure white (or ivory) thick double coat, its bear-like head, and its large, powerful build. White coloring was selectively maintained by Italian shepherds for a practical reason: a white dog moving among white sheep is harder for predators to identify as a threat until it is too late, and shepherds could distinguish their guardian dog from a wolf in low-visibility conditions. The Maremma is recognized by the FCI under Group 1 (Sheepdogs and Cattledogs) and has been exported worldwide, where it has found remarkable new roles in wildlife conservation programs protecting endangered species from predator attack.
Real Maremma and the Abruzzes Sheepdogs — their thick white coats, bear-like heads, and powerful, noble presence.
The Maremma's character is that of a classic livestock guardian: calm, self-reliant, deeply loyal to its charges, and instinctively suspicious of strangers and potential threats.
A naturally hardy working breed shaped by centuries of selection in variable Italian terrain. Relatively healthy for a large guardian breed.
The Maremma is a magnificent breed for the right owner in the right environment. It excels on farms and ranches with livestock, where it can fulfill its deeply embedded guardian purpose. As a purely domestic companion without a guardian role, it can be challenging — it needs space, purpose, and experienced handling. For those who can provide these, the Maremma rewards its people with extraordinary loyalty, calm dignity, and the satisfaction of working with one of the world's most ancient and capable guardian breeds.
Boarding a Maremma requires a facility experienced with independent livestock guardian breeds. Its wariness of strangers means it needs time to accept staff — never approach forcefully. Individual kenneling is strongly recommended; group play with unknown dogs is inappropriate. Brief staff on its nighttime activity patterns and tendency to bark — this is normal LGD behavior, not distress. Ensure secure, large enclosures; the Maremma will test fencing as part of its territory assessment.
Budget approximately $130–$230 per month for a Maremma and the Abruzzes Sheepdog.
Maremma mixes are uncommon but do occur, particularly in Australia where the breed has become a popular livestock guardian. Any Maremma cross inherits strong guardian instincts and typically a white or pale coat.
A massive, white, double-coated livestock guardian combining two of the world's finest flock protection breeds. Deeply calm, self-reliant, and capable of confronting any predator. Requires significant land and experience.
An unusual combination producing a large, typically white or cream dog with more trainability and social warmth than a purebred Maremma, while retaining some guardian instinct. Popular in Australian livestock communities.