At a glance: The Golden is a medium-large (25–34 kg) sporting breed: kind, eager and eminently trainable. A superb family and therapy dog, it needs daily exercise, sheds a great deal, and wants nothing more than to be near its people.
Vital stats
| Size | Medium-large · 51–61 cm |
| Weight | 25–34 kg |
| Life expectancy | 10–12 years |
| Energy | High — 60–90 min/day |
| Shedding | Heavy, year-round |
| Coat | Lustrous double coat · light to dark golden |
| Group | Sporting · AKC / FCI №111 |
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
Eagerness to please
Temperament
Bred to retrieve game gently to hand, the Golden is soft-mouthed in temperament too — patient, gentle and endlessly willing. It's a leading choice for guide, therapy and assistance work, and it stays playful and puppyish well into adulthood.
BreedQuest census: Goldens are the most-logged therapy and assistance breed in the census — "gentle" is their defining owner-chosen trait.
Habits & quirks
Soft mouth
Will carry your shoes, the post, and the occasional houseplant — gently.
Velcro dog
Follows you room to room; struggles with being left alone.
Serious shedder
That golden coat comes off year-round and blows out seasonally.
Water-lover
Never met a lake, pond or sprinkler it didn't like.
Care
| Exercise | 60–90 min/day — retrieving, swimming and sniff walks |
| Grooming | Brush 2–3× weekly to manage the heavy coat and prevent mats |
| Health | Screen breeders for hips, elbows, eyes and heart; watch cancer risk with age |
| Company | Craves companionship — not a dog to leave alone for long days |
Common questions
Are Golden Retrievers good family dogs?
Exceptionally — gentle, patient and trainable, they're a benchmark family and therapy breed.
Do Golden Retrievers shed a lot?
Yes — heavily and year-round, with seasonal peaks. Regular brushing is a must.
How much exercise does a Golden need?
60–90 minutes of real activity daily; they love retrieving and swimming above all.