BreedQuestBreedsHerdingPembroke Welsh Corgi
At a glance: The Corgi is a small (10–14 kg) herding breed with a huge personality: bright, bold, and surprisingly athletic. Alert and vocal, it makes a fine watchdog, herds anything that moves, and packs a heavy shed into a small package.

Vital stats

SizeSmall · 25–30 cm
Weight10–14 kg
Life expectancy12–15 years
EnergyModerate-high — 60 min/day
SheddingHeavy for the size
CoatMedium double coat · red, sable, fawn, tricolour
GroupHerding · AKC / FCI №39

Breed traits

Friendliness

Affectionate with family
Good with children
Good with other dogs
Openness to strangers

Care

Shedding level
Grooming effort
General health
Drooling

Mind

Trainability
Energy level
Barking / alert
Herding instinct

Temperament

A true herder in a small frame, the Corgi is confident, clever and busy — happiest with a job, an alert to raise, or ankles to marshal. Devoted to its family and famously the breed of Queen Elizabeth II, it is bigger in attitude than in stature.

BreedQuest census: Corgis over-index for "vocal" and "bossy" in owner-logged traits — the herding wiring runs deep.

Habits & quirks

Ankle herding

No livestock? Children, guests and other pets will do nicely.

Big bark

A serious watchdog voice in a knee-high body.

Sheds like a big dog

That double coat blows twice a year and mid-blow it is everywhere.

Back care matters

Long spine, short legs — limit stairs and jumping to protect the back.

Care

ExerciseAbout 60 min/day plus mental work — smart and easily bored
WeightGuard the waistline; extra weight strains the long back
GroomingBrush 2–3× weekly, daily during seasonal sheds
TrainingQuick learner with a stubborn streak — keep it fun and firm

Common questions

Do Corgis shed a lot?

Yes — a lot for their size, year-round, with two heavy seasonal blows. Regular brushing is essential.

Are Corgis good with children?

Generally yes, though the herding instinct can mean nipping at heels — teach and supervise with young kids.

Do Corgis bark a lot?

They're alert and vocal by design — excellent watchdogs, but early training keeps the barking in check.

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