Yorkshire Terrier 🐕

Yorkshire Terrier

Toy Group · #13 Most Popular in the US · A Big Dog Trapped in a Tiny Body

Under 7 lbsWeight
7–8"Height
11–15 yrsLifespan
Blue & TanColors
★★★★☆Family Dog

🎬 Yorkshire Terrier Facts

Watch this video to discover everything about the Yorkie — one of the most popular toy breeds in the world and a dog with attitude far exceeding its size.

🐾 Overview

The Yorkshire Terrier — affectionately called the "Yorkie" — is one of the most popular small dogs in the world, and one of the feistiest. Don't be fooled by their glamorous silky coat and tiny size: Yorkies have the spirit of a much larger terrier. They were originally bred to catch rats in Yorkshire textile mills in 19th-century England — a working dog through and through.

Today Yorkies are treasured companions who have made a successful transition from mill floors to handbags and luxury apartments. They are adaptable, spirited, and fiercely loyal to their families. They may be small, but they have not gotten the memo — Yorkies regularly challenge dogs ten times their size and treat every walk like a victory lap.

Origin
Yorkshire, England (1800s)
Group
FCI Group 9 : Companion & Toy Dogs
Bred For
Rat catching in textile mills and mines
Coat Type
Long, silky, fine — similar to human hair

📸 Photo Gallery

Real Yorkshire Terriers — from the classic long-coated show look to the practical short puppy cut, showing all sides of this little breed.

📷 Photos: various photographers (CC BY / CC BY-SA / PD) · via Wikimedia Commons

😊 Temperament & Personality

Yorkies are bold, curious, and confident — traits inherited directly from their terrier heritage. They are deeply affectionate with family and can become very attached to one person in particular. They are alert and often make excellent little watchdogs, barking to announce anything unusual. The flip side is that excessive barking can become a problem if not addressed early.

They are not always patient with young children who handle them roughly, and they can be bossy with other dogs despite their size. Proper socialization from puppyhood is essential to round out their terrier edges. With the right training and boundaries, they are genuinely wonderful companions.

  • Feisty, confident, and fearless — classic terrier personality
  • Devoted and affectionate with family; may favor one person
  • Alert and vocal — natural watchdogs
  • Better with older, gentle children than toddlers
  • Can be bossy with other dogs — size awareness is not a Yorkie trait
  • Intelligent and curious — loves exploring and investigating

🏃 Exercise & Activity Needs

Yorkies need moderate daily exercise relative to their small size. Two short walks plus indoor play keeps most Yorkies happy. They are surprisingly energetic and enjoy a good romp, but their tiny legs mean a 20-minute walk covers significant ground from their perspective. They also enjoy mental stimulation through toys and training.

  • Daily exercise: 20–30 minutes of walking plus play
  • Two short walks daily is sufficient for most adults
  • Indoor play counts — they run a lot inside
  • Avoid overexertion in heat or cold — small bodies lose temperature quickly
  • Mental stimulation through toys and training keeps them sharp
  • Can be a good fit for apartment living with regular walks

✂️ Grooming & Coat Care

The Yorkie's coat grows continuously, like human hair, and doesn't shed much — making them a popular choice for allergy sufferers. The trade-off is that it requires regular grooming. Many owners keep their Yorkies in a "puppy cut" (trimmed short) for ease. Show coats that reach the floor are strikingly beautiful but require daily maintenance.

  • Long coat: brush daily to prevent tangles; professional grooming every 6–8 weeks
  • Puppy cut: brush a few times weekly; professional groom every 6–8 weeks
  • Clean around the eyes daily — tear staining is common
  • Dental care is critical — Yorkies are very prone to dental disease
  • Nails grow quickly — trim every 3–4 weeks
  • Check and clean ears monthly

🎓 Training

Yorkies are smart and can learn quickly, but their independent terrier nature means they aren't always motivated to follow directions just to please you. Food rewards and play work well as motivators. Housetraining can be surprisingly challenging with small breeds — consistency with crate training and a strict schedule makes a huge difference.

  • Food and play rewards work better than praise alone
  • Housetraining requires extra patience and consistency
  • Crate training is highly recommended for housetraining success
  • Early socialization prevents excessive barking and dog-dog issues
  • Enforce the same rules you'd enforce with a large dog — no small dog syndrome
  • Short, positive, frequent training sessions work best

🏥 Health & Common Issues

Yorkies are a generally hardy breed with a good lifespan, but they have several breed-specific vulnerabilities. Tracheal collapse is a serious concern — use a harness, never a collar. Their tiny size makes hypoglycemia (low blood sugar) a real risk in puppies. Dental disease is extremely common in the breed and should be actively managed.

Tracheal Collapse Patellar Luxation Legg-Calvé-Perthes Disease Hypoglycemia (puppies) Dental Disease Portosystemic Shunt (liver) Eye Conditions
Average Lifespan
11–15 years
Collar Warning
Always use a harness — never a collar (tracheal risk)
Dental Priority
High — brush teeth daily if possible
Overall Health
Good — manageable with preventive care

🏠 Is a Yorkshire Terrier Right for You?

A Yorkie is an excellent companion for apartment dwellers, single people, couples, and families with older children. They need consistent training and grooming care. They're not the best choice for families with very young children, people who want a passive low-energy dog, or owners who can't commit to regular grooming.

👶With Kids★★★☆☆
🐕With Dogs★★★☆☆
🐈With Cats★★★☆☆
🏠Apartment★★★★★
🔰First-Time Owner★★★☆☆
👴Seniors★★★★★

🐾 Related Breeds

🍽️ Diet & Feeding Guide

Yorkshire Terriers are tiny dogs — typically 4–7 lbs — with surprisingly big appetites relative to their size. Because of their small stomachs, Yorkies do best with multiple small meals per day using high-quality small-breed kibble.

Life StageDaily AmountNotes
Puppy (2–12 mo) ¼ – ½ cup/day Split into 3–4 small meals; watch for hypoglycemia
Adult (1–8 yr) ½ – ¾ cup/day 2 meals/day; small-breed formula recommended
Senior (8+ yr) ⅓ – ½ cup/day Reduce as activity slows; watch dental health

💧 Hydration & Treats

Always provide fresh water. Keep treats to ≤10% of daily calories. Avoid chocolate, grapes, onions, and xylitol — all toxic to dogs.

💰 Cost & Price Guide

ExpenseEstimated Cost
Puppy from Breeder$1,200 – $2,500
Monthly Food$30 – $50
Annual Vet Care$500 – $1,200
Grooming (professional)$50 – $90/month
Dental Cleanings$200 – $400/year
Tracheal Collapse Treatment$500 – $3,000 (if needed)

💡 Cost-Saving Tips

Adopt from a rescue for $100–$400. Use at-home grooming between professional appointments to cut costs. Pet insurance (~$30/mo) is worthwhile given Yorkies' tendency toward dental and tracheal issues.

🧬 Popular Yorkshire Terrier Mix Breeds

Yorkies' silky coats, bold personalities, and compact size make them popular in designer mixes. Most Yorkshire Terrier mixes inherit the Yorkie's feisty spirit and low-shedding coat.

Yorkipoo

Yorkipoo

Parents: Yorkshire Terrier + Poodle

Playful, hypoallergenic-friendly, and wickedly smart. One of the most popular Yorkie mixes.

Shorkie

Shorkie

Parents: Yorkshire Terrier + Shih Tzu

Affectionate and fiercely loyal. Gets the silky coat of both parents — gorgeous but high-maintenance.

Morkie

Morkie

Parents: Yorkshire Terrier + Maltese

Tiny, fluffy, and social butterflies. Wonderful lap dogs for apartment living.

Biewer Terrier

Biewer Terrier

Parents: Yorkshire Terrier (tri-colored mutation)

A piebald variety developed in Germany in 1984. Now recognized as its own breed by the AKC.

🎉 Fun Facts About Yorkshire Terriers

🐀

Born Ratters

Yorkies were bred in 19th-century Yorkshire, England to catch rats in clothing mills and mines. Despite their glamorous reputation today, they are fearless working terriers at heart.

📦

Tiniest War Hero

Smoky, a 4-lb Yorkie found in a New Guinea jungle in 1944, served in WWII with Corporal William Wynne — running communications wire through a 70-foot pipe under an airfield, saving hundreds of lives.

👑

Victorian Fashion Icon

By the late 1800s, Yorkies had become the dog of British high society. Wealthy women carried them in their purses — making the Yorkie the original "purse dog" 150 years before chihuahuas.

🏆

Big Personality, Small Body

Yorkies consistently rank among the top 10 most popular breeds in the US despite weighing less than a standard bag of sugar. Their bold, almost cat-like independence makes them favorites in small apartments.

🧬

Coat That Grows Like Hair

Unlike most dogs, Yorkies have hair rather than fur — it grows continuously, doesn't shed seasonally, and has a texture nearly identical to human hair. This makes them a top choice for allergy sufferers.