Quiet Dog Breeds for Apartments
Noise is the number one reason apartment dog ownership fails — not size, not energy, not lack of space. A quiet dog in a small flat is manageable. A barking dog in any flat is a neighbour dispute. This guide ranks the genuinely quietest breeds, explains why each is quiet, and tells you what “quiet” actually means in practice.
The quietest dog breeds for apartments fall into three categories: dogs bred not to bark (Basenjis, Greyhounds), dogs selectively bred for calm temperament (Cavalier King Charles Spaniels, Shih Tzus), and dogs whose low drive means they rarely encounter the triggers that cause barking. No breed is 100% silent — but some come remarkably close.
Why dogs bark — and why breed matters
Barking is not random. It is driven by specific triggers, and different breeds have different threshold levels for those triggers. Alert breeds bark at sounds. Herding breeds bark to control movement. Scent hounds bark while tracking. Terriers bark at prey-sized movement. Companion breeds bark primarily for attention or when distressed.
Understanding why a breed barks tells you what you’re managing. You can train a companion breed not to demand-bark with relative ease. You cannot train a Beagle not to have an instinctive response to a scent trail — you can only manage the environment and the consequences.
Tier 1: Near-silent breeds
Basenji
The most famous “barkless” dog — though the description is slightly misleading. Basenjis don’t produce the standard domestic dog bark. What they produce are yodels, choruses, and murmurs that are genuinely unusual and considerably quieter than a bark. They are a medium-sized breed with high intelligence and strong independence — not the easiest beginners’ dog temperamentally, but unparalleled for apartment noise management.
Greyhound / Whippet
These sighthounds bark rarely because they don’t have strong alarm-bark instincts. They were bred to chase silently — barking while hunting would alert prey. The result in an apartment setting is a dog that registers sounds without necessarily vocalising about them. Many greyhound owners report weeks going by without a bark.
Tier 2: Low-bark breeds with consistent track records
Cavalier King Charles Spaniel
Bred as court companions rather than guard dogs, Cavaliers have low territorial instinct and low alarm-bark threshold. They can bark when excited or bored, but this is manageable with standard training. Generally one of the quietest breeds for apartment hallway and corridor sounds.
Shih Tzu
Palace dogs historically — bred to be decorative companions, not watchdogs. Low territorial barking. Can become vocal when attention-seeking, which is managed by not rewarding the behaviour. Generally quiet in response to environmental sounds.
Bichon Frisé
Generally quiet indoors. Can be excitable greeters (some barking when visitors arrive), but settles quickly. Low alarm-bark tendency. Management of arrival barking is straightforward with consistent training.
Italian Greyhound
Even smaller and quieter than a Whippet, with the same sighthound silence instinct. Fragile — care required with small children and rough play. Excellent for quiet urban environments.
Pug
Low alert-bark tendency and low territorial instinct. They snore, grunt, and snort considerably — but the vocalisation pattern is not bark-based. Generally accepted by neighbours much more easily than barking breeds.
Tier 3: Manageable with consistent training
French Bulldog
Not naturally silent, but the triggers are manageable. Frenchies typically bark at arrival excitement and occasionally at corridor sounds. With consistent “thank you and settle” training, this is manageable in most apartment contexts. Rarely sustained or loud barkers.
Maltese
Can be vocal — particularly when strangers enter their space — but the bark is small and high-pitched rather than large and penetrating. Training for quiet is effective. Not naturally quiet but the sound profile is more manageable than larger reactive breeds.
Standard Poodle
Intelligent enough to learn quiet quickly. Alert barkers — they will tell you about sounds — but respond very well to training. A trained Standard Poodle in an apartment is generally manageable; an untrained one is not.
Breeds to reconsider for noise
| Breed | Barking type | Why it’s a problem in apartments |
|---|---|---|
| Beagle | Howling / baying | Bred to vocalise while tracking; this instinct is nearly impossible to extinguish |
| Husky / Malamute | Howling | Howls penetrate walls and floors; can last extended periods when bored or anxious |
| Jack Russell Terrier | Alert / excitement barking | High reactivity, high arousal threshold — triggers in apartment environments constantly |
| Miniature Schnauzer | Alert barking | Bred as ratters with strong alarm bark; territory extends to the whole corridor |
| Yorkshire Terrier | Alert / demand barking | Big bark for small dog; often not trained out because owners find it endearing until neighbours don’t |
| German Shepherd | Alert / guarding | Deep, carrying bark in a breed that takes territorial responsibility seriously |
What “quiet” really means day-to-day
No dog breed is completely silent. What varies is the frequency of barking, the trigger threshold, the duration of bark episodes, and the pitch and carry of the bark. A Basenji who yodels occasionally is very different from a Beagle who bays for 20 minutes when a neighbour’s lift opens.
For apartment residents, the most important factor is often the sustained-barking pattern when left alone. See why dogs bark at night for the full breakdown of vocalisation causes, and how to stop apartment barking for the management approach.
