How to Choose a Golden Retriever Breeder in Oregon: 8 Questions to Ask

Choosing the right breeder is the most important decision you’ll make when adding a Golden Retriever to your family — more important than color, price, or how quickly you can bring a puppy home. In Oregon’s busy Golden market, here are eight questions that separate responsible breeders from the rest.

8 questions to ask any Golden Retriever breeder

  1. “Are both parents health-tested, and can I see the results?” The answer should be an immediate yes, covering hips, elbows, heart, and eyes — with registered names you can look up at ofa.org. Learn what to look for.
  2. “Can I meet the parents (or at least the mother)?” A good breeder welcomes it. You should see where the puppies are raised.
  3. “How are the puppies raised and socialized?” Look for home-raised puppies with structured early socialization, not kennel-raised in isolation.
  4. “Do you provide a written health guarantee and contract?” Reputable breeders always do.
  5. “What vet care do puppies have before going home?” Expect a vet exam, first vaccinations, deworming, and microchip by around eight weeks.
  6. “Can you provide references from past puppy families?” Happy families are a breeder’s best proof.
  7. “What support do you offer after I take my puppy home?” Great breeders stay available for the dog’s whole life.
  8. “Will you take the dog back if I ever can’t keep it?” Responsible breeders never want one of their dogs to end up in a shelter.

Red flags to walk away from

  • No health testing, or reluctance to share parent names/results
  • Always has puppies available, multiple litters at once, no waitlist
  • Won’t let you visit or meet the mother
  • No contract, guarantee, or vet records
  • Pressure to buy quickly or pay by unusual methods

A great breeder will happily answer every one of these questions — and will ask you plenty in return, because they care where their puppies go. At Nextgen Goldens in Boring, Oregon, we health-test every parent, raise our puppies in our home, and place them thoughtfully by waitlist. Ask us anything — we’d love to talk.

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