Beagles are members of the Hound Group. They originated in the United Kingdom and are similar in looks and often confused with larger Foxhound. Beagles are natural hunters. They have an incredible sense of smell and are commonly used in law enforcement as detection dogs to sniff out drugs, agricultural contraband, and foodstuffs at airports.
Beagles are intelligent, happy, gentile and very loving. They make excellent family pets due to their size, good temperament, and easy-going nature. They are affectionate and generally get along well with other pets and children.
Because of their gentile nature, Beagles do not make guard dogs. They are known to bark and howl which can alert you to a visitor or stranger, but they will most likely be wagging their tail happily to greet them. If you live in an apartment and are thinking of getting a Beagle, this could be an issue.
Beagles can be stubborn which can make them hard to train. They need at least an hour of exercise and stimulation each day. They have an incredible sense of smell and can follow scents that could easily lead them away from home so a fenced in yard is preferred to keep them safe.
This breed does not like to be left alone for long periods of time as they could get bored and become destructive. Beagles don’t shed a lot due to their very light coat, but it is important to brush and groom them regularly. Beagles are generally a healthy breed.
While Beagles make great family pets, it’s their popularity and high prices that make them an attractive business model for unscrupulous dog breeders. They are sold online by USDA commercial dog breeders, online puppy broker websites, and backyard breeders otherwise known as puppy mills.
It is for this reason that our Puppy Mill Watchdog monitors and reports on Beagle breeders and other online puppy sellers as well as puppy broker websites.
Read the story of four rescued breeding dogs.
Please do your research before you buy a Beagle puppy. If you can’t meet the mother dog and see where she and all of the breeders dogs live, find a new breeder. Video chats, videos and photos do not take the place of seeing in person
About the Breed: Beagles
They are generally between 13 and 16 inches high and weigh between 18 and 35 lb with females being slightly smaller than males on average.
Age Expectancy: 12-15 years
Temperament: Intelligent, gentle, and loving.
Coat: Smooth dense short coat. Moderate shedding.
Color: Tricolor, white and tan, lemon and white, white and chocolate, chocolate tri, orange and white.
Grooming: Very low maintenance due to short coats and slowing growing hair.
Training: Beagles are relatively difficult to train because they tend to get distracted easily. It is suggested to start socializing and positive training your Beagle at an early age.
Vet Care: Regular vet care is essential for the health and well-being of your Beagle.
Types of Beagles
FAQ’s About Buying Beagle Puppies Online
When buying a Beagle puppy, you want to make sure it was born in a loving clean environment. The puppy should have an overall healthy look to him. Make sure his eyes are bright, he is clean and happy. Look at his body language make sure his tail is up and wagging. Is his posture good? Does he hold his head up, is he curious? Does he run up to you or is he afraid to approach you?
Buying a puppy from a picture is risky, always meet your new puppy in person before you buy him. These are all clues to his overall health and mental state. You want a happy well adjusted puppy and unless you meet them in person, you have no way of knowing.
There are many risks to buying a Beagle puppies online. Just because two purebred dogs are crossed does not mean they best traits of both parents are seen in the offspring. Since your Beagle will live for 12-15 years it is important to see firsthand where it was born. Make sure your breeder is not a puppy mill. Never have the puppy shipped to you.
Always pick your Beagle puppy up in person, meet the mother dog, see her mental and physical condition. She should be clean, happy and well adjusted. If the breeder won’t let you meet the mother and see where she lives we recommend finding another breeder. No excuses. Reputable breeders have nothing to hide. Video chats, videos and photos do not take the place of seeing in person.
It is not safe to buy any puppy online. It is not safe to have a Beagle puppy shipped to you by plane, delivered by nanny and never meet the breeder halfway or in a parking lot. If you are not able to pick up the puppy in person, meet the mother dog and where she and all of the breeder’s dogs live, you might be supporting a puppy mill.
Over 1 million puppy mill puppies are sold online each year and it is in your best interest to make sure your new puppy is not coming from one of these bad breeders. It is in your best interest to get a healthy, happy well bred puppy and to not support cruelty of any kind.
It takes time to find a new puppy and that is ok. The pup will be a part of your family for 12 plus years so it’s important to find a healthy well-bred puppy. It’s ok to do your research online but never take a breeder’s word for it. Since Beagles are purebreds, go to The National Beagle Club of America to find a breeder that is a member of their clubs. These breeders breed by a code of ethics. They breed to improve the breed..
Always meet the mother dog, see her mental and physical condition and where she lives before you buy a puppy. See where and how she and all the breeding dogs live. Photos videos and video chats do not take the place of seeing in person.
If they have excuses why you can’t come…walk away!
A puppy mill is any dog breeder who puts profit over the health and well-being of the breeding dogs and puppies produced. These bad breeders come is all sizes, Some could have ten to twenty dogs, while larger breeders could have hundreds of breeding dogs. Puppy mills are legal too!
The cruelty is tremendous. Puppy mills keep the mother and father dogs pregnant and sell the puppies. The breeding dogs never leave, they are forced to breed twice a year or at every heat cycle and they are usually kept in wire cages, many times stacked in dark pole barns. Yes, this is legal and how most USDA dog breeders keep their breeding dogs.
The breeding dogs are not groomed, they are not given opportunity to exercise nor do they know the touch of a loving hand. They are not given veterinary care and most are living and breeding with painful health and mental conditions. Imagine living with urinary tract infections, ear infections, rotten teeth, infected eyes, tumors, infected mammary glands and sore feet from standing on wire cage floors — that never get addressed.
It is important to know that any breeder can be a puppy mill. It’s hard to imagine the breeder you are talking or texting with could be a puppy mill. If the breeder has excuses why they won’t let you come to see where and how the breeding dogs live, if you are not able to meet the mother dog in person, we suggest you find another breeder. Video chats, videos and photos do not take the place of seeing in person.