Are Finnish Lapphunds Good Apartment Dogs? Plus Cold and Hot Weather
Are Finnish Lapphunds good apartment dogs? An owner's honest take on apartment living, plus how t...
People stop us on the trail near Castlegar all the time to ask if Timber is a Samoyed. He is not. He is our black and tan Finnish Lapphund, and the mix-up makes sense, because both breeds are fluffy Arctic dogs with thick double coats and curled tails. But once you live with one, the differences are night and day. We are Jill and the team behind Lapphund Designs, real Finnish Lapphund owners since 2023, and we get this question so often that we wanted to lay out an honest, side by side comparison.

The Finnish Lapphund and the Samoyed are both Arctic, double-coated spitz breeds, but they were bred for different jobs and they differ most in size, colour, and temperament. The Finnish Lapphund is a smaller reindeer-herding dog from Finland, biddable and vocal, and it comes in nearly every colour. The Samoyed is a larger Siberian sledding and herding dog, more independent, and it only comes in white shades. Both shed heavily and both are friendly, people-loving dogs that are poor guard dogs.
The Finnish Lapphund was developed by the Sami people of Lapland as a reindeer herder and watchdog, and the American Kennel Club places it in the Herding Group. The Samoyed comes from the Samoyedic peoples of Siberia, where it pulled sleds, herded reindeer, and even slept with the family to keep them warm. The AKC places the Samoyed in the Working Group. Same Arctic roots, two different working backgrounds.
The Samoyed is the bigger dog of the two. A male Samoyed stands 21 to 23.5 inches at the shoulder and a female 19 to 21 inches, with males weighing roughly 45 to 65 pounds. The Finnish Lapphund is smaller, with males around 19.5 inches and females around 17.5 inches, and an informal working weight of about 33 to 53 pounds. If you want a hardy fluffy dog that is easier to lift into the car or onto the vet table, the Lappy has the edge.
The biggest visual difference is colour. The Samoyed comes in white only: pure white, white and biscuit, cream, or all biscuit, per the breed standard. The Finnish Lapphund comes in almost every colour, including black and tan, wolf sable grey, brown, cream, and blond, with the main colour dominant and lighter markings on the face, legs, and chest. Both breeds carry that classic spitz tail curled over the back.

| Trait | Finnish Lapphund | Samoyed |
|---|---|---|
| Height (male) | About 19.5 in (range 18 to 21 in) | 21 to 23.5 in |
| Height (female) | About 17.5 in (range 16 to 19 in) | 19 to 21 in |
| Weight | About 33 to 53 lb (informal range) | About 45 to 65 lb (males); 35 to 50 lb (females) |
| Colour | Almost all colours (black and tan, wolf sable, cream, brown, blond) | White only (pure white, cream, biscuit) |
| Coat | Long, harsh double coat | Long, harsh double coat |
| Tail | Fluffy, curled over the back | Fluffy, curled over the back |
| AKC group | Herding | Working |
| Lifespan | 12 to 15 years | 12 to 14 years |
Both breeds are friendly, family-oriented dogs, but the Finnish Lapphund is generally more biddable and the Samoyed more independent. The AKC describes the Lappy as intelligent, eager to learn, friendly, and notably submissive with people. The breed standard calls it calm, docile, and faithful. Because it was bred to take direction from a herder, it tends to want to work with you, which makes training feel like teamwork.
The Samoyed is intelligent and gentle too, but it has a stronger independent and sometimes stubborn streak, a legacy of working at a distance from its people. The breed is famous for the "Samoyed smile," the upturned corners of the mouth that give it a permanently cheerful look. Sammies do best with early socialization and patient, consistent training using a firm but gentle hand.
Both breeds are vocal. The Finnish Lapphund is markedly chatty, a trait carried over from using its bark to move the reindeer herd, though it can be trained to tone it down. Samoyeds are also known talkers. Neither breed is a quiet apartment dog by default, and neither is a guard dog. They alert, then they want to make friends.

Neither breed is low maintenance, and both shed a lot. Each has a weatherproof double coat, a harsh outer layer over a dense, soft undercoat, and each blows that undercoat heavily once or twice a year in spring and fall. During a coat blow you will be brushing often and vacuuming more, with both breeds.
That said, the Samoyed is usually the bigger grooming commitment. Its pure white coat shows dirt, and that famous bright-white floof takes real upkeep to keep clean and mat-free, often needing brushing several times a week year round. The Finnish Lapphund needs brushing roughly a couple of times a week, increasing to daily during the coat blow, and its coat is fairly low-odour and largely self-maintaining between sessions. Neither breed should ever be shaved, because the double coat insulates against both cold and heat. And to be clear, neither breed is hypoallergenic.
Both are reasonably long-lived for their size, with the Finnish Lapphund typically living 12 to 15 years and the Samoyed 12 to 14 years. Both can be affected by hip dysplasia and progressive retinal atrophy (PRA), an inherited eye disease. The Finnish Lapphund also carries breed-specific risks for elbow dysplasia and Pompe disease (a rare inherited muscle disorder), so reputable breeders DNA test for it. The Samoyed has its own breed concerns, including Samoyed hereditary glomerulopathy (an inherited kidney disease that mainly affects males), diabetes, and heart conditions. With any health question, talk to your vet and always buy from a breeder who health tests.
On price and rarity, the Finnish Lapphund is the rarer breed in North America and puppies generally run from roughly $1,000 to $2,500 from a breeder. Samoyeds are more established and more in demand, and puppies typically cost more, often around $1,500 to $4,000 or higher. Both breeds are true Arctic dogs that love cold and snow and need real care in the heat, with shade, water, and cool rest, never a shaved coat.

Pick the breed that fits your home and your lifestyle, not just the one that looks the cutest in photos (though both are heart-meltingly cute). A Finnish Lapphund tends to suit owners who want a smaller, trainable, colour-varied companion that bonds closely and slots into family life. A Samoyed suits owners who love the iconic all-white look, do not mind a more independent personality, and can commit to the heavier grooming.
| Lifestyle factor | Finnish Lapphund | Samoyed |
|---|---|---|
| Good with children | Yes, gentle and people-loving | Yes, friendly and gentle |
| Good with other pets | Generally good when raised together | Generally good when raised together |
| First-time owners | Manageable; biddable and eager to please | Workable, but the independent streak takes patience |
| Grooming commitment | Moderate to high | High (white coat shows dirt) |
| Barking | Vocal herder, can be trained down | Vocal, known talker |
| Exercise needs | Daily exercise, has an off switch at home | Daily exercise, active and playful |
| Cold tolerance | Excellent | Excellent |
| Heat tolerance | Limited; needs shade and care | Limited; needs shade and care |
| Guarding | Alerts only, not a guard dog | Alerts only, not a guard dog |
Honestly, you cannot go wrong with either if you match the dog to your life. We are biased toward the Lappy, but a well-raised Samoyed is a wonderful dog. If you want to dig deeper into the Finnish Lapphund side, our Finnish Lapphund breed guide and our honest is a Finnish Lapphund right for you post are the best places to start.
No. They are separate breeds. The Finnish Lapphund is a smaller herding breed from Finland that comes in many colours, while the Samoyed is a larger working breed from Siberia that is white only. They share an Arctic, double-coated spitz look, which is why people confuse them.
The Samoyed is bigger. Males stand 21 to 23.5 inches and can weigh 45 to 65 pounds, while a Finnish Lapphund male stands about 19.5 inches and weighs roughly 33 to 53 pounds.
Both shed heavily and blow their coats seasonally. The Samoyed often needs more frequent brushing because its pure white coat shows dirt and mats more visibly, so day to day it can feel like more work.
Most owners find the Finnish Lapphund easier, because it is biddable and eager to please from its herding background. The Samoyed is intelligent but more independent and can be stubborn, so it rewards patient, consistent training.
Yes, both are friendly, gentle, people-loving breeds that generally do well with children. As with any dog, supervise young kids and teach them to handle the dog kindly.
Samoyeds usually cost more, often around $1,500 to $4,000 or higher, while Finnish Lapphund puppies typically run about $1,000 to $2,500. The Finnish Lapphund is the rarer breed in North America.
Lappies have an opinion about everything and they are not afraid to vocalize it at length.
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