Pembroke Welsh Corgi
Queen Elizabeth II's breed — 30+ Corgis throughout her 70-year reign made this the most royal dog in history. The #11 AKC breed with the same dwarfism gene as Dachshunds, a 25% IVDD spinal risk, and a 1,000-year-old Welsh fairy legend. Discover everything in our complete breed guide.
Breed Overview
Quick facts at a glance — the Queen's dog
Temperament & Training
📖 About the Corgi — Queen Elizabeth's 70-Year Legacy
The Pembroke Welsh Corgi is the most royal dog breed in history — and it earned that title through 70 years of continuous presence at the side of Queen Elizabeth II. The Queen received her first Corgi — Dookie — in 1933 when she was 7 years old. On her 18th birthday in 1944, she was given Susan — a Pembroke Corgi who became the foundation of the royal Corgi dynasty. Every single Corgi the Queen owned for the next 70+ years — over 30 dogs across 14 generations — descended directly from Susan. The Queen personally supervised breeding, whelping, and training. She walked her Corgis daily, fed them herself, and was famously photographed with them at her feet during meetings with presidents, prime ministers, and world leaders. When Susan died in 1959, the Queen buried her at Sandringham with a headstone reading: "For almost 15 years the faithful companion of the Queen." The last of the royal Corgi line — Willow — died in 2018, ending an 85-year continuous royal bloodline.
The Fairy Steed of Welsh Folklore — 1,000 Years Before Buckingham Palace
Long before they were royal companions, Corgis were the dogs of Welsh farmers and the mounts of fairies. According to Welsh legend, the Pembroke Welsh Corgi was a gift from woodland fairies who used them as steeds to ride into battle and pull their fairy coaches. The faint saddle-like markings on a Corgi's back — called the "fairy saddle" — were said to be marks left by fairy harnesses. Two Corgi puppies were found by Welsh children tending cattle in a field — the children thought they were foxes, but a local farmer recognized them as fairy dogs. The puppies grew into superb cattle herders, and the farmer's family bred them into the Corgi we know today. The name "Corgi" comes from the Welsh "Cor" (dwarf) + "Gi" (dog) — literally "dwarf dog."
Pembroke vs Cardigan — Two COMPLETELY Different Breeds
The Pembroke Welsh Corgi and the Cardigan Welsh Corgi are NOT varieties of the same breed — they are two completely separate breeds with different origins, different genetics, and different physical characteristics. Pembrokes came from Flemish weavers who settled in Pembrokeshire, Wales in the 1100s, bringing their Spitz-type herding dogs. Cardigans came from Celtic tribes who settled in Cardiganshire 3,000+ years ago, bringing dogs descended from the Teckel (Dachshund) family. They were only recognized as separate breeds in 1934 — before that, they were shown together and interbred. Today: Pembrokes have no tail (natural bob or docked), pointed ears, and a lighter, foxier build. Cardigans have a long bushy tail, rounded ears, and a heavier, longer body. The AKC and Pembroke Welsh Corgi Club of America (PWCCA) are the definitive resources for the breed.
💛 Personality & Temperament
Corgis are the biggest dogs in the smallest packages — a breed that genuinely believes it's 10 feet tall and absolutely in charge of every room it enters. They're called "big dogs on short legs" for a reason: the herding instinct, intelligence, and assertive confidence of a 50-lb Border Collie compressed into a 25-lb body with 4-inch legs.
Key Personality Traits
- Herding instinct — EVERYTHING must be gathered: Corgis were bred to nip at the heels of cattle — massive, kicking, 1,500-lb animals. A 25-lb Corgi would dart in, nip a cow's heel, and duck flat to the ground as the kick sailed over their head. This herding instinct is completely intact in modern Corgis — they will nip at the heels of running children, chase bicycles, circle joggers, and "herd" other pets, vacuum cleaners, and lawn mowers. This is genetically programmed and must be managed, not punished.
- Big-dog brain in a small-dog body: Corgis are working dogs through and through — not toy breeds, not lap dogs. They need daily mental work, structured exercise, and a job to do. A bored Corgi is a barking, destructive, ankle-nipping, furniture-herding menace. They're not "easy small dogs" — they're herding dogs that happen to be short.
- Vocal, bossy, and absolutely certain they're in charge: Corgis are not quiet dogs. They bark at everything: doorbells, squirrels, leaves blowing across the yard, suspicious shadows, their own reflection. They're confident to the point of bossiness and will argue with you loudly when asked to do something they disagree with. This is the breed that ran Queen Elizabeth's household — if they can boss a monarch, they can boss you.
- The Corgi sploot — the breed's signature pose: Corgis lie flat on their stomach with both hind legs stretched out behind them like a frog — this is the "sploot." It's adorable, completely normal, and a sign of healthy hips. Corgis sploot to cool their belly on cool surfaces and because their short legs and long body make it a natural resting position.
🔍 Pembroke vs Cardigan — Two Different Breeds
| Feature | Pembroke Welsh Corgi | Cardigan Welsh Corgi |
|---|---|---|
| Origin | Flemish weavers, 1100s, Pembrokeshire | Celtic tribes, 3,000+ years, Cardiganshire |
| Tail | Natural bob or docked short | Long, bushy fox-like tail |
| Ears | Pointed, erect, slightly rounded tips | Larger, more rounded, farther apart |
| Build | Lighter, foxier, less substantial bone | Heavier, longer, more substantial bone |
| Colors | Red, Sable, Fawn, Black & Tan (all with white) | All Pembroke colors + Brindle, Blue Merle |
| Front | Straight front legs | Slightly bowed front legs (wrapped around cattle) |
| AKC Rank 2026 | #11 | #68 |
⚠️ IVDD — The Same Spinal Crisis as Dachshunds
⚠️ Degenerative Myelopathy (DM) — The SOD1 Gene
Degenerative Myelopathy is a progressive, fatal spinal cord disease caused by a mutation in the SOD1 gene — the canine equivalent of ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease). It causes progressive hind-limb paralysis starting at 8-10 years of age, with no cure and no treatment. DNA test is AVAILABLE — all breeding Corgis must be tested. The disease is recessive — both parents must be carriers to produce an affected puppy. ONLY buy from breeders who provide DM DNA certification showing at least one parent is CLEAR (if one is clear, no puppies can be affected, though they may be carriers). Source: OFA — DM DNA Testing.
⚕️ Health & Wellness
- IVDD: ~25% lifetime risk. Same chondrodysplasia gene as Dachshunds. Prevention protocol identical to Dachshunds.
- Degenerative Myelopathy (DM): SOD1 gene mutation. DNA test available — mandatory for all breeding dogs.
- Hip Dysplasia: ~20% affected (OFA). OFA screening mandatory.
- Progressive Retinal Atrophy (PRA): DNA test available.
- Von Willebrand Disease (vWD): Blood-clotting disorder. DNA test available — Pembroke Corgis are one of the breeds most commonly affected by Type 1 vWD.
- Epilepsy: Idiopathic epilepsy occurs at elevated rates.
- Obesity: The #1 preventable crisis — Corgis are food-obsessed and gain weight rapidly on their short frame. Obesity DOUBLES IVDD risk. Kitchen scale for ALL meals.
🏃 Exercise & Activity
Corgis are moderate-to-high-energy herding dogs — they need daily physical AND mental work.
- 45-60 minutes of exercise daily: Two walks + play sessions. Scent games, puzzle toys, herding balls (the giant inflatable balls they "herd" around the yard).
- Mental work essential: Puzzle toys, obedience training, trick training, herding instinct tests. 15 minutes of nose work = 30 minutes of walking.
- AGILITY — the Corgi DOMINATES: Despite their short legs, Corgis are shockingly fast and agile — they excel at agility, flyball, and herding trials. Their low center of gravity gives them exceptional turning ability.
✂️ Grooming — Double Coat Apocalypse
Corgis have a thick double coat that sheds CONSTANTLY, HEAVILY, and WITHOUT MERCY.
- Brushing 3-4× weekly (daily during coat blows). Undercoat rake + slicker brush. You will fill multiple trash bags with fur.
- Bathing every 4-6 weeks.
- Nail trims every 2-3 weeks.
Care Needs
Spine Safety
NO jumping, NO stairs. Ramps everywhere. Harness only. Lean weight.
LIFESAVINGShedding
CONSTANT. Double coat apocalypse. Robot vacuum mandatory.
APOCALYPTICWeight Control
Kitchen scale for ALL meals. Obesity = DOUBLED IVDD risk.
CRITICALBarking
Barks at EVERYTHING. Corgis are NOT quiet dogs. Apartment = angry neighbors.
VERY VOCALMental Work
Puzzle toys, scent work, agility, herding. Daily. Not optional.
ESSENTIALExercise
45-60 min daily. Agility, herding balls, walks. Surprisingly athletic.
MODERATE-HIGH🍽️ Feeding & Nutrition
- Daily caloric needs: 600-900 kcal. Kitchen scale for ALL meals — precision matters on a 25-lb frame.
- Feed 2 measured meals/day. Puzzle feeders for mental work.
- NO table scraps — EVER. A 2-lb weight gain on a Corgi = proportionally massive extra load on an already stressed spine.
Colors — All With White Markings
Cost Breakdown
| Expense | Cost (USD) |
|---|---|
| 🐶 Puppy (DM/vWD-tested, OFA parents) | $1,200 – $3,000 |
| 🍖 Annual Food | $400 – $800 |
| 🏥 Annual Vet + Genetic Screening | $500 – $1,200 |
| 🦴 Spine Safety Equipment (ramps, harnesses) | $100 – $400 |
| 💵 ANNUAL TOTAL | $2,200 – $5,400 |
| 💵 LIFETIME (12–13 yrs) | $28,000 – $68,000 |
| ⚠️ IVDD Emergency Surgery (ONE event — if uninsured) | $3,000 – $8,000 |
👤 Ideal Owner Profile
✅ Great For
- Active individuals/couples who enjoy daily walks + training sessions.
- Homes committed to IVDD prevention — ramps, no stairs, harness, lean weight.
- Those who find bossiness CHARMING — Corgis WILL run your house if you let them.
⚠️ NOT For
- Apartments with noise-sensitive neighbors — Corgis bark at EVERYTHING.
- People wanting a quiet, low-maintenance lap dog.
- Homes with many unavoidable stairs.
💡 Fun Facts
Queen Elizabeth owned 30+ Corgis over 70 years: All descended from Susan — her 18th birthday gift in 1944. 85 years of continuous royal Corgi bloodline ended in 2018 with Willow's passing. The Queen personally bred, whelped, and trained them.
Fairy steeds of Welsh legend: 1,000-year-old folklore says Corgis were gifts from woodland fairies who rode them into battle. The "fairy saddle" markings on their backs are said to be harness marks.
Same dwarfism gene as Dachshunds: Chondrodysplasia — the short-leg gene — is identical in Corgis and Dachshunds. Both breeds were designed to duck under kicks: Corgis under cattle hooves, Dachshunds underground.
Pembroke ≠ Cardigan: They're two completely different breeds from different ancestral dogs — Pembrokes from Flemish Spitz types (1100s), Cardigans from Celtic Teckel types (3,000+ years). NOT varieties. Different breeds.
Same IVDD risk as Dachshunds — 25%: The long back + short legs + chondrodysplasia creates identical spinal biomechanics. Same prevention protocol applies: no jumping, no stairs, harness only.
Internet-famous "Corgi butt" — the sploot: Corgis lying flat with both hind legs stretched behind them is called the "sploot." It's completely normal, a sign of healthy hips, and the reason Corgis dominate social media.
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