← Back to All Toronto Dogs

Bichon Frise Adoption Toronto

Adoptable Bichon Frises and Bichon crosses from Toronto and GTA rescues. Atopic dermatitis, calcium oxalate stones, grooming intensive — read this page first.

4 Bichon Frises listed in Toronto from 2 rescues

Showing 4 dogs

Gear for your Bichon Frise

The essentials we'd set up for a new Bichon Frise, starting with the escape-proof no-pull harness.

Amazon affiliate links — we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you, which helps keep LocalPetFinder free and more rescue dogs finding homes. See all our gear picks →

Bichon Frises in Toronto, right now

We're currently tracking 4 adoptable Bichon Frises in or near Toronto, listed by 2 rescues including TEAM Dog Rescue and Ontario SPCA (Central Ontario). Listings update regularly, and most Bichon Frises in Toronto get adopted within days of being posted — if one catches your eye, reach out fast.

Adopting a Bichon Frise in Toronto

Bichon Frises appear in Toronto and GTA rescue with moderate frequency. The Toronto Humane Society on River Street, Save Our Scruff, City of Toronto Animal Services, and Ontario SPCA Toronto Area branches all see Bichons and Bichon crosses through the year. Most adoptable Bichons are 3 to 8 year old dogs surrendered when owners discovered the chronic skin allergy routine, the grooming cost, or the dental load. The breed has a deserved reputation as a cheerful, sociable Liberty Village or CityPlace condo dog — when the medical maintenance budget is matched.

This page pulls every adoptable Bichon from the launched GTA shelters into one searchable place, refreshed regularly. Demand is high among small-dog adopters — listings move within 48 to 72 hours. Toronto rescues place Bichons with applicants who understand the atopy routine, the grooming budget, and the hypoallergenic-coat reality (the coat sheds minimally; the dander is still real, and severe allergy sufferers should meet the dog first). The 12 to 18 lb size fits all GTA condo weight caps comfortably.

Atopic dermatitis is breed-defining — budget for it

The Bichon Frise has one of the highest documented rates of atopic dermatitis (environmental allergy skin disease) in any breed. The dog reacts to dust mites, pollens, grasses, and food proteins with itching, ear infections, paw licking, and recurring skin infections. Diagnosis typically happens between age 1 and 3. Veterinary management costs $80 to $200 monthly long-term — Apoquel ($80 to $130/mo for a 12 to 18 lb dog) or Cytopoint injections every 4 to 8 weeks ($90 to $140/injection) control the itch. Severe cases get referred to OVC Guelph dermatology for allergy testing and immunotherapy (sublingual drops or injection series), which runs $1,500 to $3,000 upfront plus $80 to $150/mo maintenance but addresses the underlying disease.

Annual ear-care budget is $300 to $600 (the atopy almost always involves the ear canals). Bathing weekly with a medicated shampoo from a Toronto-area vet helps barrier function. The white coat makes skin redness, hot spots and staining highly visible — adopters will see it. Foster notes on a Bichon should explicitly cover current itch level, ear status, what medications the dog is on, and any food trial history. Pet insurance taken out the week of adoption is essential — atopy diagnosed before policy start is excluded as pre-existing.

Calcium oxalate bladder stones — the other big medical line

Bichons are predisposed to calcium oxalate urolithiasis (bladder stones) at elevated rates compared to mixed-breed dogs. Stones present as frequent urination, straining, blood in urine, or accidents — and in male dogs can cause life-threatening urinary obstruction (the urethra is narrower). Surgery to remove stones runs $2,500 to $5,000 at GTA emergency centres (Toronto Veterinary Emergency Hospital, MOVE, VCA Canada Toronto branches). Long-term prevention requires a prescription urinary diet (Hill's u/d, Royal Canin Urinary SO) for life plus annual urinalysis monitoring.

Other breed concerns: cataracts (most Bichons develop senior cataracts; surgical correction $4,500 to $6,500 per eye at OVC Guelph or specialty practices), diabetes mellitus (insulin therapy $80 to $150/mo plus monitoring), patellar luxation (knee dislocation, surgical correction $2,500 to $4,500), immune-mediated thrombocytopenia (ITP) and autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA). Dental disease is severe — many Bichons need professional dental cleaning every 12 to 18 months at $800 to $1,500 per cleaning. A 12 to 15 year lifespan is realistic with proactive medical management.

Grooming is the dominant ongoing time cost

The Bichon coat is a double coat — soft undercoat plus curly topcoat — that requires professional grooming every 4 to 6 weeks at $80 to $150 in the GTA, plus daily brushing at home to prevent matting. Annual GTA grooming spend is $900 to $1,800. Skipping the routine leads to dense matting that requires shave-down and restarts the coat-care timeline. The classic round "powder-puff" Bichon trim takes a skilled groomer 90 to 120 minutes — Toronto Pet Spa Royal York, Pawsh Dog Boutique on King West, and many independent Annex and Riverdale salons specialise in the breed.

The white coat shows every speck of Toronto street salt, mud, and grass stain — daily face wiping with a tear-stain wipe (Bichons have prominent tear staining) and weekly bath maintenance is realistic. The breed sheds minimally — coat ends up in the brush, not on the couch — and is generally well-tolerated by allergy sufferers, though "hypoallergenic" is overstated. Always meet a Bichon before adopting if anyone in the home has severe dog allergies; dander is still present.

What Bichons are actually like to live with

A well-matched Bichon Frise in Toronto is one of the most cheerful, sociable, and condo-friendly small breeds in any rescue. The realistic parts to plan for:

  • Atopic dermatitis budget. $80 to $200/mo medical management long-term plus $300 to $600/yr ear care.
  • Calcium oxalate stones risk. Prescription urinary diet for life in affected dogs.
  • Grooming. Professional every 4 to 6 weeks $80 to $150 plus daily brushing. Annual $900 to $1,800.
  • Dental disease. Professional cleaning every 12 to 18 months at $800 to $1,500.
  • Moderate exercise. 30 to 45 minutes daily plus play. Good condo dog.
  • Cheerful sociable temperament. Good with kids and other dogs by default.
  • Pet insurance essential — taken out the week of adoption before atopy progresses.
  • 12 to 15 year lifespan with proactive medical management.

What the fee usually covers

Bichon Frise adoption fees at Toronto and GTA rescues typically run $400 to $900 for an adult dog, $700 to $1,200 for puppies under 1 year. The fee covers spay or neuter, core vaccinations, microchip, deworming, ear and skin assessment, dental assessment, urinalysis where age-appropriate, and a vet check before placement. Confirm the exact number on the dog's own listing. GTA breeder pricing for a Bichon puppy is $1,800 to $3,500 — rescue is materially cheaper and the dog is already vetted.

How to actually search

Apply the same day a Bichon appears. Demand is high — listings move within 48 to 72 hours. Use the filters above to narrow by energy (low-medium), size (small, 12 to 18 lbs), compatibility, and shelter. Read foster notes on current itch level, ear status, medications, bladder stone history, and dental condition. Foster homes will set up a video call before in-person meet.

Looking more broadly? Browse every adoptable dog across the province on Dog Adoption Ontario.

The rescues that most often list Bichon Frises across Ontario are Toronto Humane Society, Save Our Scruff, City of Toronto Animal Services, and Ontario SPCA (Toronto Area). For breed-specific background, the Canadian Kennel Club is a useful reference.

Bichon Frise Adoption FAQ — Toronto

Where can I adopt a Bichon Frise near me in Toronto?

Bichons appear with moderate frequency in Toronto and GTA rescue. The major sources are the Toronto Humane Society on River Street, Save Our Scruff foster-based rescue, City of Toronto Animal Services West/North/East shelters, and Ontario SPCA Toronto Area branches. Demand is high among small-dog adopters — set up an alert and apply within 48 to 72 hours of a dog appearing. Toronto rescues place Bichons with applicants who understand the atopy management routine, the grooming budget, and the dental care load.

Are Bichon Frises really hypoallergenic?

They shed minimally and are better tolerated by some allergy sufferers than shedding breeds, but "hypoallergenic" is overstated. Dander, saliva and urine proteins are still present and trigger reactions in severe allergy sufferers. The coat ends up in the brush rather than on the couch, which helps. Always meet a Bichon in person before adopting if anyone in the home has severe dog allergies. Many Toronto Bichon foster homes will arrange a 30-minute meeting specifically for allergy testing before formalising the adoption.

How much do Bichon skin allergies cost in Toronto?

Veterinary management runs $80 to $200 monthly long-term. Apoquel costs $80 to $130/mo for a 12 to 18 lb dog; Cytopoint injections every 4 to 8 weeks run $90 to $140/injection at GTA general practices. Severe cases get referred to OVC Guelph dermatology for allergy testing and immunotherapy — $1,500 to $3,000 upfront plus $80 to $150/mo maintenance, but it addresses the underlying disease. Add $300 to $600/yr for ear-care visits (atopy almost always involves the ear canals). Pet insurance taken out the week of adoption is essential — atopy diagnosed before policy start is excluded as pre-existing.

Is a Bichon a good condo dog in Toronto?

Yes — one of the better small-breed fits. Size (12 to 18 lbs) sits well within all Liberty Village, CityPlace, Annex and Queen West condo weight caps. Exercise needs are moderate (30 to 45 minutes daily plus play) and the breed is cheerful with neighbours in elevators and lobbies. The two routines that matter: the grooming time and cost ($900 to $1,800/yr) and the atopy medical budget ($80 to $200/mo if affected). Toronto Bichon owners with hybrid work and a reliable GTA groomer-dermatologist combination report high satisfaction.

Have a dog to rehome?

Rehoming a Bichon Frise in Toronto?

List your dog free. Local adopters browsing Toronto see owner listings first: no shelter, no fees, you choose the home.

List your pet free →

Takes 3 minutes. You stay in control of who adopts.

Not seeing one yet?

Get notified when a Bichon Frise is listed in Toronto

We'll email you the moment a Bichon Frise becomes available near Toronto, from a rescue or an owner rehoming.

One email when there's a match. Unsubscribe anytime.

For rescues & shelters

Are you a Toronto-area rescue? List your adoptable dogs free.

Free shelter account: your dogs appear here and across LocalPetFinder, with analytics and adoption applications included.

Create a shelter account →