PuppyBase

German Longhaired Pointer vs Greyhound

Side-by-side comparison across all 14 AKC trait ratings, with a clear verdict on which breed fits which kind of household.

Perfect Puppy Quiz · 5 questions · 90 seconds

Not sure which breed fits your life?

Answer five questions about your home, your schedule, and your tolerance for shedding. We’ll match you to your top three breeds from over 200.

The bottom line

German Longhaired Pointer vs Greyhound

You wouldn’t think someone would compare a German Longhaired Pointer and a Greyhound at first glance. One’s a field-ready, all-weather hunting machine from Germany; the other’s a sleek, ancient racer built for desert speed. But both stand tall, lean into elegance, and share that deceptive blend of high energy and couch-friendly calm. People size them up against each other when they want a big dog who isn’t a bulldog. athletic but not aggressive, graceful but not aloof. Here’s where they split hard. The Pointer is a partner. It wants to work with you. You’ll need to. this dog lives to point, retrieve, and engage. It thrives in a home where weekends mean hikes, hunts, or training sessions. You can’t just walk it and call it a day. Mental stimulation isn’t optional. And while it’s great with kids, its energy and herding-level trainability mean it needs direction. It’s not built for city living; it needs space and purpose. The Greyhound? It’s the athlete that clocks out early. Yes, it can hit 45 mph, but afterward it’s snoring on your sofa. Surprisingly apartment-friendly, low-shedding, and deeply affectionate with its people, it’s ideal for adopters. especially former racers looking for soft landings. But it won’t come when called off-leash, and many can’t be trusted with cats or squirrels. It’s independent, less eager to please, and doesn’t need constant mental drills. Here’s the real talk: the Pointer bonds through activity. The Greyhound bonds through proximity. One wants to do things with you. The other just wants to be near you after the sprint’s over. Pick based on whether your life is a mission or a moment.

German Longhaired Pointer
Greyhound
22–28 in
Height
27–30 in
55–80 lb
Weight
60–70 lb
12–14 yr
Lifespan
10–13 yr
$1.2–3.0k
Puppy price
$1.0–3.0k
AKC popularity
#145

Trait-by-trait

Higher bar = more of that trait. Shedding, barking, drooling, grooming flipped for readability.
Affectionate w/ Family
Good with Young Children
Good with Other Dogs
Shedding Level
Coat Grooming
Drooling Level
Good with Strangers
Playfulness
Watchdog / Protective
Adaptability
Trainability
Energy Level
Barking Level
Mental Stimulation Needs
AffectionGood w/ KidsGood w/ DogsShedding LevelGroomingDrooling LevelGood w/ StrangersPlayfulnessProtectiveAdaptabilityTrainabilityEnergy LevelBarking LevelMental Stim.
German Longhaired Pointer Greyhound
Overlay

Where they diverge

Good with Young Children
German Longhaired Pointer is better with kids (2-point difference)
German
Trainability
German Longhaired Pointer is easier to train (2-point difference)
German
Shedding Level
Greyhound sheds less (1-point difference)
Greyhound
Drooling Level
Greyhound drools less (1-point difference)
Greyhound
Good with Strangers
German Longhaired Pointer is friendlier with strangers (1-point difference)
German
The verdict

Choose the German Longhaired Pointer if…

  • Hunters
  • Active families
  • Rural living
  • You value good with young childrenGerman Longhaired Pointer scores noticeably higher.

Choose the Greyhound if…

  • Apartment dwellers (surprisingly calm indoors)
  • Adoption-minded owners (many ex-racers)
  • Low-maintenance coat owners
  • You value adaptabilityGreyhound scores higher here.
German Longhaired Pointer Owner’s Guide
Everything you need before bringing your German Longhaired Pointer home.
Breed variants, breeder red flags, and what to ask
First-week checklist and daily schedules by age
Training timeline from 8 weeks to adulthood
Health screenings, emergency card, and feeding portions
Grooming schedule, first-year costs, and what nobody tells you
Get Your Guide
Greyhound Owner’s Guide
Everything you need before bringing your Greyhound home.
Breed variants, breeder red flags, and what to ask
First-week checklist and daily schedules by age
Training timeline from 8 weeks to adulthood
Health screenings, emergency card, and feeding portions
Grooming schedule, first-year costs, and what nobody tells you
Get Your Guide

Other comparisons people run