ic-fb ic-tw ic-you ic-insta ic-search ic-cart ic-loc ic-loc-box ic-store ic-user ic-phone ic-caret-down

Flat-Coated Retriever

The Peter Pan of the Sporting Group, the forever-young Flat-Coated Retriever is a gundog of relatively recent origin. Happy, self-assured, and willing to please, a good Flat-Coat will retrieve a duck or a show ribbon with equal aplomb.

Ask About Flat-Coated Retriever ?
breed left paw icon
breed right paw icon
Please fill out this field.
Please fill out this field.
Please fill out this field.
Please enter a valid 10-digit number.
Please fill out this field.

I agree to receive pet & promotional information via the options selected below.

Breed Traits

Size
Small
X-Large
Grooming
Hardly Ever
Daily
Energy
Calm
Energetic
Trainability
Stubborn
Highly Trainable
Disposition
Low
High

Group

Sporting

About

History

Standard

Nutrition

Grooming

Exercise

Training

Health

General Appearance

The Flat-Coated Retriever is a versatile family companion hunting retriever with a happy and active demeanor, intelligent expression, and clean lines. The Flat-Coat has been traditionally described as showing "power without lumber and raciness without weediness." The distinctive and most important features of the Flat-Coat are the silhouette (both moving and standing), smooth effortless movement, head type, coat and character. In silhouette the Flat-Coat has a long, strong, clean, "one piece" head, which is unique to the breed. Free from exaggeration of stop or cheek, the head is set well into a moderately long neck which flows smoothly into well laid back shoulders. A level topline combined with a deep, long rib cage tapering to a moderate tuck-up create the impression of a blunted triangle. The brisket is well developed and the forechest forms a prominent prow. This utilitarian retriever is well balanced, strong, but elegant; never cobby, short legged or rangy. The coat is thick and flat lying, and the legs and tail are well feathered. A proud carriage, responsive attitude, waving tail and overall look of functional strength, quality, style and symmetry complete the picture of the typical FlatCoat. Judging the Flat-Coat moving freely on a loose lead and standing naturally is more important than judging him posed. Honorable scars should not count against the dog.

Size, Proportion, Substance

Head

Neck, Topline, Body

Forequarters

Hindquarters

Coat

Color

Gait

Temperament

Character