Akita
Hachikō — the dog who waited at the train station every day for 9 years after his owner died. The Akita is the symbol of loyalty in Japanese culture and one of the most dignified, powerful breeds on Earth. Complete guide: the severe same-sex aggression that means two male Akitas should NEVER live together, the autoimmune diseases that plague the breed, and Akita Inu vs American Akita.
📋 Breed Overview
📑 TOC
🇯🇵 History — Hachikō & The Most Loyal Dog in History
In 1924, Hachikō, a golden Akita, began accompanying his owner, Professor Hidesaburō Ueno, to Shibuya Station in Tokyo every morning and meeting him there every evening. In 1925, Professor Ueno died suddenly at work and never returned. For the next 9 years, 9 months, and 15 days, Hachikō returned to the station at exactly the same time every afternoon, waiting for his owner who would never come. Commuters who initially shooed him away eventually began bringing him food. A bronze statue of Hachikō now stands at Shibuya Station — it's one of Tokyo's most famous meeting spots. The Akita was declared a Japanese National Monument in 1931. Helen Keller brought the first Akita to the US.
⚠️ Same-Sex Aggression — A Real Danger
Akitas have intense, deeply ingrained same-sex aggression — especially male-to-male. Two male Akitas in the same household will almost certainly fight — and these are not minor scuffles; these are 50 kg dogs with bear-hunting heritage who fight to injure or kill. The safest Akita household is one dog, opposite sex to other pets. Female-female aggression is also common. Same-sex pairs can work with highly experienced owners and strict management — but the risk is always there.
Akitas also have strong prey drive and are often aggressive toward strange dogs, especially of the same sex. Off-leash dog parks are NOT recommended. Early and continuous socialization is mandatory but does NOT override genetics — a well-socialized Akita is tolerant, not friendly, toward strange dogs.
🇯🇵 Akita Inu vs American Akita — Two Separate Breeds
After WWII, American soldiers brought Akitas home — typically the larger, heavier-boned, more bear-like fighting-line dogs. Japan preserved the smaller, fox-like, more refined original type. Today, they are considered separate breeds in many countries (including Japan and the FCI). The AKC still considers them one breed with different "types." Akita Inu: 32-45 kg, only red/fawn, sesame, brindle, and white — always with urajiro (white markings). American Akita: 45-59 kg, all colors accepted including black masks, pinto patterns, etc.
⚕️ Health — Autoimmune Diseases
- Sebaceous Adenitis (SA): Autoimmune destruction of sebaceous glands — hair loss, scaling, odor
- Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada (VKH): Autoimmune — depigmentation of skin, hair, and eyes, potentially causing blindness
- Hypothyroidism: Very common — annual blood work from age 5
- Hip Dysplasia: OFA essential
- Bloat (GDV): Prophylactic gastropexy recommended
💰 Cost Breakdown
💡 Fun Facts
9 years of waiting: Hachikō waited at Shibuya Station every single day for 9 years, 9 months, and 15 days for an owner who was never coming home. He died at the station in 1935 — still waiting. Japan declared a national day of mourning.
Helen Keller's gift: In 1937, Helen Keller visited Japan and was so moved by Hachikō's story that she asked for an Akita. The Japanese government gave her Kamikaze-go — the first Akita in America. After Kamikaze died, they sent her a second.
Child guardians: In Japan, Akitas were traditionally left to guard children while parents worked — like the Staffy in England. An Akita will protect its family children with its life but may misinterpret normal child roughhousing as a threat to "their" child.
Bear hunters: Japanese hunters used pairs of Akitas (male + female) to hunt Yezo bears — a 400 kg subspecies of brown bear. The dogs would hold the bear until the hunter arrived with a spear. This required extraordinary courage and a dog that fought in silence.