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Getting ready to bring a dog home?
The basics most new dogs need before day one: a safe den, accident cleanup, and a secure harness.

Decompression Crate
A safe den for the first three days — sized to feel secure, not empty.
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Leak-Proof Poop Bags
The walk essential you'll restock for years — extra-thick and 100% leak-proof.
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Long Training Line (15–30 ft)
Recall practice and breathing room before you fully trust each other.
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Crash-Tested Car Harness
The drive home is the first ride of their new life — make it the safe one.
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Best Family Dog Breeds in Regina Rescues
These breeds and their mixes have a strong track record with children. The individual dog's foster assessment matters more than the breed label, and many wonderful family dogs are mixed breeds. Browse a breed page to see availability in Regina now.
Labrador Retriever →
The classic family dog. Patient, friendly, and forgiving of clumsy kid handling. Plan for exercise as a young dog.
Golden Retriever →
Gentle, tolerant, and endlessly patient. One of the best breeds with children. Rare in rescue and quick to go.
Beagle →
Sturdy, cheerful, and kid-sized. Great with children, though the nose leads to wandering and the bark can be loud.
Boxer →
Playful, patient, and famously devoted to kids. High energy as youngsters, so supervise around toddlers.
Bernese Mountain Dog →
A gentle giant that adores family life. Calm and affectionate with kids. Size, shedding, and lifespan are the trade-offs.
Cavalier King Charles →
Small, sweet, and adaptable. A lovely lap-sized family dog, gentle with careful kids and easy in apartments.
Cocker Spaniel →
Affectionate, medium-sized, and people-focused. Good with gentle children. Needs regular grooming and ear care.
Poodle & Poodle Mixes →
Smart, trainable, and low-shedding, which helps allergy-prone families. Every size. Grooming is the commitment.
Adopting a family dog in Regina is different from buying one. Bright Eyes Dog Rescue runs a foster network rather than a kennel, which means the dog has already been living in a real home for weeks or months. The foster family knows how the dog handles noisy mornings, dropped food at the table, kids running through the living room, and bedtime routines. That history is far more useful than a fifteen-minute meet at a shelter. Regina Humane Society also assesses dogs in care and tags kid compatibility on individual listings.
The dogs you see below have been flagged as good with kids by either Regina Humane Society or Bright Eyes Dog Rescue. Regina's prairie climate means families get long bright summer evenings for outdoor time and a real winter that asks for some preparation, both of which shape how a dog fits into family life. Active families do well with active dogs here because there is genuinely time and space to run them year-round, between Wascana Centre, the Devonian Pathway, and the city's off-leash parks.
When you find a dog you like, ask the rescue what ages of children the dog has lived with. “Good with kids” covers a wide range: a calm dog that lived with a quiet ten-year-old is a very different match than a dog that thrived with active toddlers. The right question to ask is not whether the dog is good with kids in general, but whether the dog is good with your kids in particular. Most Regina rescues will happily set up a structured meet so the foster can watch your kids interact with the dog before you commit.
Breeds that often do well
Lab and Golden mixes, foster-raised Pit Bull mixes, calm hound mixes, and many farm-bred herding mixes that come into Regina rescues. Individual foster history matters more than breed every time.
Foster-evaluated kid compat
The dog has lived in a home with children and been observed across normal family life. Ask the rescue what ages of kids the dog has lived with, not just whether it likes kids.
Year-round family walks
Wascana Centre and the Devonian Pathway are plowed through winter and stroller-friendly. Cathy Lauritsen Memorial and Mount Pleasant off-leash areas suit kids and dogs together.
Browse all Regina rescue dogs
See every adoptable dog from Regina-area shelters, not just the kid-friendly ones. Filter by size, age, energy level, and compatibility.
See All Regina Dogs →Frequently Asked Questions
Where can I find family-friendly dogs for adoption near me in Regina?
LocalPetFinder lists rescue dogs verified good with kids from Regina-area shelters, including Regina Humane Society and Bright Eyes Dog Rescue. Bright Eyes is foster-based, which means each dog has lived in a real home (often one with children) before adoption. Foster notes are the gold standard signal for kid compatibility.
How do Regina rescues verify a dog is good with kids?
Bright Eyes Dog Rescue is foster-based, so dogs live in real homes for weeks or months before adoption, often with children present. Foster families observe how the dog reacts to noise, rough play, food handling, and being startled. Regina Humane Society assesses dogs in care and notes kid compatibility on each listing. The best question to ask any rescue is what ages of children the dog has lived with, since that gets you a far more useful answer than a generic kid-friendly tag.
What breeds tend to do well with kids in Regina family homes?
Regina rescue intake skews toward Labrador and Golden mixes, herding mixes (with so many farm dogs in the region), Pit Bull mixes, and Husky mixes. Labs and Goldens are classic family dogs. Many Pit Bull mixes are excellent with kids when raised in stable foster homes. Herding breeds can be brilliant with older children but may nip at running toddlers. Individual temperament matters far more than breed, which is why foster notes are the gold standard.
Are dogs better with toddlers or older children?
Most adoption counsellors recommend waiting until children are at least five or six before bringing home a new dog. Toddlers move unpredictably, grab fur and ears, and cannot read a dog's stress signals. That said, plenty of foster-evaluated dogs do beautifully with toddlers when supervised constantly. Adult dogs aged two to five with confirmed kid history are usually the safest bet for young families. Bright Eyes Dog Rescue's foster network is a good place to ask about toddler-tested dogs specifically.
What supervision rules should we follow in the first weeks?
Never leave a child alone with any dog, even a verified kid-friendly one. Teach kids the three big rules: do not bother the dog while it eats, do not wake the dog up, and stop interacting if the dog walks away. Give the dog a safe space (a crate or a gated room) where children are not allowed. Use baby gates to create separation when you cannot directly supervise. Most bite incidents involve a familiar dog and a child who was missing the warning signs. The 3-3-3 framework (3 days decompression, 3 weeks settling, 3 months bonding) applies for kid-dog relationships too.
What does foster-evaluated kid compatibility actually mean?
It means the dog has lived in a home with children of a specific age range, and the foster family observed the dog day to day across normal family chaos: meal times, bath time, bedtime, friends over, loud TV, dropped food. This is the closest you get to a real test before adoption. Always ask the rescue what ages of children the dog has lived with, since “good with kids” can mean a calm ten-year-old or an active toddler, and those are very different dogs.
What signs of kid-friendliness should I look for during a meet-and-greet?
A kid-friendly dog stays loose and wiggly around children, accepts gentle touch without freezing or stiffening, takes treats softly, and does not resource-guard food or toys. Watch for a soft mouth, a relaxed tail (not tucked, not stiff-high), and a willingness to walk away from the child when ready. Avoid dogs that hard-stare, lip-lift, freeze, or growl during the meet, no matter what the listing says. A good rescue will encourage you to bring your kids to the meet-and-greet so they can see the real interaction.
How do family walks work in Regina year-round?
Wascana Centre around Wascana Lake is Regina's spine for year-round family walks. The paved paths are plowed and used heavily in winter, so a stroller and a leashed dog can both move easily. The Devonian Pathway connects Wascana to neighbourhoods across the city and works well for longer family loops. For off-leash family outings, Cathy Lauritsen Memorial Off-Leash Park is the big destination and Mount Pleasant off-leash area is a smaller neighbourhood option that suits kids and dogs together. In winter, watch the wind chill, use paw protection on salted paths, and keep walks shorter when it dips below minus 25°C. Most family dogs handle Regina winters fine with a coat and booties for the cold snaps.



































