Guides · Choosing a Cavapoo

Are Cavapoos Hypoallergenic? An Honest Answer

"Hypoallergenic" is the word that sells Cavapoos — and it's not quite true of any dog. Here's the honest version, so you can make a decision you won't regret if there's an allergy in the family.

What 'hypoallergenic' really means

The myth is that people are allergic to dog hair. They're not — they're reacting to proteins in a dog's dander (shed skin flakes), saliva and urine. Hair only matters because it carries dander around your home and into the air.

So a low-shedding dog doesn't produce fewer allergens — it just keeps more of them locked in the coat instead of floating around your living room. That's a real, meaningful difference for many allergy sufferers, but it's not the same as "allergen-free." Any breeder promising a genuinely hypoallergenic dog is overselling.

Why Cavapoos are easier for many allergy sufferers

Cavapoos inherit the Poodle's low-shedding, hair-like coat (to varying degrees). Because they shed so little, far less dander escapes into your environment, and many people with mild-to-moderate dog allergies find they can live comfortably with one where a heavy-shedding breed would be miserable.

Key word: many, not all. Sensitivity varies hugely person to person, and it varies dog to dog too.

Coat type matters — and so does generation

The curlier and more Poodle-like the coat, the lower the shedding and the more allergy-friendly the dog tends to be. That's why generation matters here:

  • F1b Cavapoos (around 75% Poodle) are usually the safest bet for allergy households — curlier coats, least shedding.
  • F1 Cavapoos are more variable; some inherit a wavier, slightly higher-shedding coat.

If you're not sure what the labels mean, our guide to F1, F1b and F2 Cavapoos breaks it down. Just remember the trade-off: the lowest-shedding coats are also the ones that need the most grooming.

Test it before you commit

Never take a coat type on trust when there's an allergy involved. Before you bring a Cavapoo home:

  • Spend real time — an hour or more, more than once — with the specific dog or its parents, ideally in an enclosed space. A five-minute meet-and-greet won't trigger a reaction that living together will.
  • Handle the dog — stroke it, let it lick your hand, then notice how your skin and eyes respond over the next few hours.
  • Talk to your GP or an allergist if reactions are significant. Some people manage well with a low-shedding breed plus good home habits; for others no dog is realistic, and it's kinder to everyone to know that first.

Living well with a Cavapoo if you're sensitive

If you're on the mild end, a few habits make a Cavapoo very liveable: brush regularly (outdoors when you can) to remove trapped dander before it spreads, wash bedding often, keep the dog off your own bed, use a HEPA air filter in the main rooms, and wash your hands after big cuddle sessions. Consistent grooming — see our grooming guide — is genuinely one of the most effective allergen-control tools you have.

Frequently asked questions

Are Cavapoos good for people with allergies?
Often, yes — for mild-to-moderate allergies. Their low-shedding coats keep dander trapped rather than airborne, so many sufferers cope well. But no dog is fully hypoallergenic, and severe allergies may still react. Always spend real time with the individual dog first.
Do Cavapoos shed at all?
Very little compared to most breeds, but not zero. The curlier, more Poodle-like the coat (as in F1b Cavapoos), the less it sheds. Lower shedding means loose hair and dander stay in the coat, which is why regular brushing matters.
Which Cavapoo is best for allergies?
An F1b Cavapoo is generally the most allergy-friendly, thanks to its higher Poodle content and curlier, lower-shedding coat. Even so, test your reaction to the specific dog before committing.