Basset Fauve de Bretagne
Overview
The Basset Fauve de Bretagne is a small dog from the Hound group — an energetic, active breed that needs real daily exercise. In temperament it's intensely devoted and bonded to its family, responsive to training with steady guidance and it tolerates some alone time once settled. With a typical lifespan of 12 to 15 years., the Basset Fauve de Bretagne is a long commitment.
Is the Basset Fauve de Bretagne right for you?
A good match if — you're newer to dogs and want a forgiving breed; you live in an apartment or smaller home; you have children at home; you're active and want a dog to move with; you want a closely bonded companion.
What a Basset Fauve de Bretagne needs from you
Day to day, the Basset Fauve de Bretagne needs a lot of daily time from you and substantial daily exercise. It does best with little space and a little dog know-how.
Living with a Basset Fauve de Bretagne
At home, the Basset Fauve de Bretagne adapts to apartment life with daily walks. It's good with children, polite but not overly outgoing with strangers, fairly quiet, and a tidy, low-drool breed.
Key facts
- Size
- Small
- Height
- 12 to 15 inches.
- Weight
- 25 to 35 pounds.
- Life span
- 12 to 15 years.
- Group
- Hound Dogs
What it needs from you (at a glance)
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Health & what to watch for
The start matters most: get a Basset Fauve de Bretagne from someone who health-tests their lines — ask to see the results — or from a reputable rescue, and register with a vet early. Smaller breeds tend to be more prone to dental disease and slipping kneecaps, so stay on top of teeth and watch for limping or skipped steps. Across every breed the single biggest lever you control is weight — a lean dog lives longer and has fewer problems. Food intolerances usually show as itchy skin, recurring ear trouble or an upset stomach; if that turns up, a vet-guided elimination diet beats guesswork. This is general guidance, not veterinary advice — your vet knows your individual dog.
Best toys
Good toys for a Basset Fauve de Bretagne: toys that burn real energy — a ball launcher, a flirt pole, fetch and tug; puzzle feeders and treat-dispensing toys to keep that quick mind busy. Rotate a few at a time rather than leaving everything out — novelty is half the value — and always supervise a new chew.
Growing up
Mind the small frame — go easy on jumps down from furniture, and start dental care and house-training patiently from day one. The first months are the socialization window: calm, positive exposure to new people, sounds, surfaces and other animals now shapes the adult dog more than almost anything else. Channel the energy early with structured outlets and basic training, or a bored youngster will invent its own jobs.
What it costs
Scaled to this breed’s roughly 14 kg and a ~14-year life, keeping a Basset Fauve de Bretagne works out at about:
Rough cross-breed averages in USD — a planning guide, not a quote. Break it down by life phase in the Cost Calculator →
Temperament (at a glance)
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Its presence, grown
Raised with patience and consistency, the adult Basset Fauve de Bretagne settles into a lively, animated presence. It devotes itself utterly to its family — your shadow, your second self. It is polite with newcomers once they are introduced. It carries an outsized presence in a small frame.
As your partner
Picture it as a grown partner at your side: active days, real walks and a partner with energy to share. It can settle on its own once it trusts the routine.
What makes it unique
What sets the Basset Fauve de Bretagne apart is a nose or an eye that locks onto a trail and a single-minded drive to follow it.