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Pudelpointer vs Teddy Roosevelt Terrier

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

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The bottom line

Pudelpointer vs Teddy Roosevelt Terrier

People compare the Pudelpointer and Teddy Roosevelt Terrier because both are versatile hunting dogs with a working drive, but that’s where the similarities end. One’s a big, rugged gun dog built for marshes and miles of hiking. The other is a compact, feisty farm dog that fits in a truck cab or a studio apartment. Choosing between them isn’t about skill—it’s about scale. The Pudelpointer is a German-designed all-terrain machine. At 45 to 70 pounds and up to 26 inches tall, it’s built to swim through icy lakes, point pheasants, and track wounded game for hours. You’ll need land, time, and outdoor ambitions. It thrives with hunters who want one dog to do it all. But it’s not the dog you want if your idea of adventure is a walk around the block. The Teddy Roosevelt Terrier, under 25 pounds and standing no taller than 15 inches, was bred to clear barns of rats and chase varmints in tight spaces. It’s fearless, energetic, and bonds tightly with families. Kids love its playful, affectionate nature. It adapts to farms or city living, as long as it gets daily activity. But it’ll bark at squirrels, fence intruders, and the mailman’s shadow—so quiet households need not apply. Here’s what the data won’t tell you: the Pudelpointer needs a job, not just exercise. Without purpose, it becomes a bored 60-pound problem. The Teddy, meanwhile, will turn your sock drawer into a digging pit if under-stimulated—but it’s easier to redirect because it’s small enough to manage indoors. Pick the Pudelpointer if you hunt waterfowl, have acreage, and live outdoors. Pick the Teddy Roosevelt Terrier if you want a bold, loyal companion that fits in your life, not a kennel. One is a specialist at scale. The other is a tenacious little engine in a 10-inch frame. Know your lifestyle. Then the choice becomes obvious.

Pudelpointer
Teddy Roosevelt Terrier
22–26 in
Height
8–15 in
45–70 lb
Weight
8–25 lb
14–14 yr
Lifespan
14–16 yr
$1.2–3.0k
Puppy price
$0.8–2.5k
AKC popularity

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.
Pudelpointer Teddy Roosevelt Terrier
Overlay

Where they diverge

Good with Young Children
Teddy Roosevelt Terrier is better with kids (2-point difference)
Teddy
Good with Other Dogs
Teddy Roosevelt Terrier is better with other dogs (2-point difference)
Teddy
Drooling Level
Teddy Roosevelt Terrier drools less (2-point difference)
Teddy
Affectionate w/ Family
Teddy Roosevelt Terrier is more affectionate (1-point difference)
Teddy
Coat Grooming
Pudelpointer needs less grooming (1-point difference)
Pudelpointer
The verdict

Choose the Pudelpointer if…

  • hunters
  • very active owners
  • waterfowl and upland bird hunters
  • You value drooling levelPudelpointer scores noticeably higher.

Choose the Teddy Roosevelt Terrier if…

  • Active families
  • Farm settings for pest control
  • Apartment or small home living
  • You value good with young childrenTeddy Roosevelt Terrier scores higher here.
Pudelpointer Owner’s Guide
Everything you need before bringing your Pudelpointer 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
Teddy Roosevelt Terrier Owner’s Guide
Everything you need before bringing your Teddy Roosevelt Terrier 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

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