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Goldendoodle for Sale in the Philippines

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Goldendoodle

Goldendoodle

Medium–Large · 30–70 lbs

Needs space

Golden Retriever

Friendly · high energy · heavy shedder

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Poodle

Intelligent · low-shed · eager to please

Most variable coat and traits. Good hybrid vigor but shedding is unpredictable.

The Goldendoodle was first intentionally bred in North America and Australia in the early 1990s, following the success of the Labradoodle and inspired by the same goal: combining the Golden Retriever's world-famous friendliness and trainability with the Poodle's low-shedding coat. The cross quickly became one of the best-selling mixed breeds in the United States and Canada, particularly in F1B generations bred specifically for allergy-sensitive families.

The Goldendoodle is one of the most popular mixed breeds in the world — combining the Golden Retriever’s friendliness (88–97/100) with the Poodle’s intelligence and low-shed potential. Shedding varies significantly by generation, so F1B or F2B is the better choice for allergy sufferers; all generations need regular grooming and tend toward separation anxiety.

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Puppies in the same litter can have straight, wavy, or curly coats — which directly affects shedding. F1B and F2B generations are more consistently low-shed. Always ask the breeder about the parents' coats.

Traits

Energy
High
Trainability
Very easy
Stubbornness
Very low
Friendliness
Very high

Care

Grooming
Moderate
Shedding
Light
Exercise
45 min/day
Drooling
Minimal
🕐10–15 years
AffectionatePlayfulSocialHigh grooming cost
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Goldendoodle Buyer's Guide

Common questions answered before you buy

A Goldendoodle is a cross between a Golden Retriever (Friendly · high energy · heavy shedder) and a Poodle (Intelligent · low-shed · eager to please). The goal of this cross is to combine the best traits of both parents — but it's important to understand that results vary significantly from puppy to puppy, even within the same litter.

No dog is truly hypoallergenic — all dogs produce dander, saliva, and urine proteins that trigger allergies. However, the Goldendoodle is a coin-flip. Puppies in the same litter can have straight, wavy, or curly coats — which directly affects shedding. F1B and F2B generations are more consistently low-shed. Always ask the breeder about the parents' coats. Puppies with curlier, Poodle-dominant coats tend to shed less. Puppies with wavy or straight coats may shed noticeably. There is no guarantee until the adult coat comes in around 12–18 months. If you're buying for allergy reasons, request an F1B litter which is more consistently low-shed.

Goldendoodles typically weigh between 30–70 lbs. However, size can vary significantly depending on which parent the puppy takes after and the generation (F1 — 50/50 mix, F1B — 75% Poodle, F2 — two F1 parents). A smaller parent — particularly if one parent is a Miniature or Toy variant — will produce smaller offspring. Always ask breeders about the parent sizes, not just the breed average.

Generally yes — the Goldendoodle benefits from the trainability of both parent breeds. With trainability ranging from 82–95/100 (average around 88/100), they respond quickly to positive reinforcement and are eager to please. Early puppy classes set a strong foundation.

It depends on your priorities. **F1**: Most variable coat and traits. Good hybrid vigor but shedding is unpredictable. **F1B**: More consistently curly and low-shed. Better for allergy sufferers. **F2**: Coat variance increases again — some puppies may shed more than expected. For most buyers, the F1B generation offers the most predictable coat (important for allergy sufferers) while still carrying the hybrid vigour of a cross. F1 is fine if coat variability doesn't concern you. Ask breeders which generation the litter is and review both parent health records.

The Goldendoodle typically lives 10–15 years. Hybrid dogs often benefit from "hybrid vigour" — a tendency for mixed breeds to be healthier than either purebred parent. However, they can still inherit health conditions from either parent line. Ask breeders about health testing on both parents (hips, eyes, heart, depending on the parent breeds), and schedule annual vet check-ups throughout your dog's life.

Not ideally. The Goldendoodle has an energy level averaging 72/100 and needs about 45 minutes of moderate exercise daily. Without adequate space and exercise, they can become destructive or anxious in confined spaces. A home with a yard, or an owner committed to multiple daily outdoor sessions, is a better fit.