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Aidi vs Shiba Inu

A side-by-side comparison to help you find the right breed for your lifestyle.

GuardianWorking
Aidi breed photo

Aidi

Also known as: Atlas Mountain Dog, Chien de l'Atlas, Kabyle Dog

FCIUKCAKC FSS

The Aidi, also known as the Atlas Mountain Dog, is a primitive livestock guardian dog from Morocco's Atlas Mountains. This is not a 'pet' in the conventional sense - it's a working breed with retained hunting drive and intense territorial instincts. They were bred to guard nomadic camps from jackals and wolves, and to hunt alongside Sloughis.

Size

Large

Energy

High

Lifespan

10-12 yrs

Height

52-62 cm

Weight

22-26 kg

VS
Non-SportingSpitz
Shiba Inu breed photo

Shiba Inu

Also known as: Japanese Shiba Inu, Shiba Ken, Brushwood Dog

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The Shiba Inu is not a 'dog' in the traditional Western sense - it's a primitive Japanese hunting breed that behaves more like a cat. While their 'Doge' meme popularity has skyrocketed, this has led to high surrender rates due to mismatch between expectation and reality. They require experienced owners who understand their stubborn, independent nature.

Size

Small

Energy

Medium

Lifespan

14.6 yrs

Height

35-43 cm

Weight

8-11 kg

Quick Comparison

TraitAidiShiba Inu
Energy
Trainability
Grooming Needs
Family Friendly
Independence

Key Characteristics

Good with Kids
Good with Dogs
Good with Cats
Hypoallergenic
Apartment Friendly
First-Time Owner OK
DetailAidiShiba Inu
SizeLargeSmall
Energy LevelHighMedium
GroomingMediumMedium
Trainabilitychallengingchallenging
Barking LevelHighLow
Shedding LevelHighHigh
Chew strengthModerateModerate
HousingAcreageApartment

Owner Fit & Decision Guide

Owner Match

TraitAidiShiba Inu
Experience LevelAdvancedIntermediate to Advanced
First-Time Owner
Ideal OwnerExperienced owner who understands canine body language, threshold management, and resource guarding. Has acreage or large securely fenced yard. Can provide job and active management. No children under 10. Prepared for liability insurance and rental restrictions.Working single or couple without young children. Appreciates cat-like independence. Patient with stubborn behavior. Has secure fenced yard or commits to always-leashed walks. Understands operant conditioning and positive reinforcement.

Aidi Dealbreakers

  • Apartment living
  • Social butterfly lifestyle (breweries, festivals, soccer games)
  • Passive ownership wanting a dog that 'just hangs out'
  • Households with toddlers
  • Other male dogs in the home

Shiba Inu Dealbreakers

  • Want a cuddle buddy - get a Golden Retriever. Shibas sit near you, not on you
  • Want an off-leash hiking dog - get a Border Collie. Shibas will run away
  • Have toddlers - risk of bite due to handling intolerance is too high
  • Cannot handle stubborn refusal (the 'Shiba Halt')

Surrender Risk

FactorAidiShiba Inu
Risk LevelHighMedium
Primary ReasonsHe bit my friend who walked in without knocking, He keeps fighting with my other dog, Owners buy for 'rare' status or 'fluffy' look, ignoring 1000 years of jackal-killing programmingHe bites when I try to take his toy - resource guarding, He attacks other dogs - same-sex dog aggression, Many bought for 'meme' factor without realizing they're buying a primitive hunting dog

Temperament & Personality

Behavior Comparison

TraitAidiShiba Inu
Prey Drive
Watchdog Ability
Stranger Friendly
Drool Level
Wanderlust

Vocalization

TraitAidiShiba Inu
Barking LevelHighLow
Howling Tendency
Whining TendencyLowLow
Separation Vocalization
Aidi bark triggers
Perimeter breaches (real or imagined)Strangers approachingUnusual sounds
Shiba Inu bark triggers
Unusual stimuli onlyStress/unhappiness

Safety & Reliability

TraitAidiShiba Inu
Escape Artist
Dog Park Suitable
Off-Leash Reliable
Small Animal Safe
Leash Reactivity
Resource Guarding RiskHighModerate to High

Aidi Social Traits

Velcro Dog
One Person Dog
Handling ToleranceLow
Stranger Wariness

High

With Other Dogs

Same-sex aggressive; intolerance emerges at 18-24 months

Shiba Inu Social Traits

Velcro Dog
One Person Dog
Handling ToleranceLow
Stranger Wariness

High

With Other Dogs

High - same-sex aggression common. Play rough (body slamming, growling) which other breeds misinterpret.

Training

Aidi

MethodRelationship-based positive reinforcement
Repetitions to Learn25-40
Challenges
Do not obey for sake of obedience - must respect handlerBore easily - drilling 'sit' 20 times results in walking away'What's in it for me?' is their motto
Tips
  • Keep sessions short (5-10 mins) and varied
  • Use high-value rewards (liver, cheese) - moderate food motivation
  • Harsh corrections damage bond and trigger defensive aggression
  • Convince them obedience is in their best interest

Shiba Inu

MethodPositive reinforcement ONLY
Repetitions to Learn25-40
Challenges
Force-based methods cause shutdown or retaliationRequire high-value rewards (cheese, freeze-dried liver) - won't work for praise aloneSocialization must be continuous and positive - flooding creates reactivity
Tips
  • Make it worth their while - they only work for valuable rewards
  • Never force into scary situations - creates permanent reactivity
  • Start handling desensitization day one for vet visits and nail trims
  • Accept that recall will never be reliable off-leash

Aidi Considerations

dealbreakerTerritorial Aggression

The Aidi views anything outside its family unit as a potential threat. This includes mail carriers, neighbors, and visiting children. Their default setting is suspicion, and they do not 'warm up' quickly.

dealbreakerSame-Sex Aggression

High propensity for intolerance toward dogs of the same sex, emerging at social maturity (18-24 months). Can escalate to serious fighting if not managed with strict separation. A male Aidi with another male dog is a ticking time bomb.

dealbreakerResource Guarding

As a survivalist breed from harsh environments, they may guard food, toys, or space with intensity. This is a genetic survival trait that makes them dangerous in households with toddlers.

challengeIndependence

They are not eager to please. If busy patrolling or investigating a scent, they will likely ignore you. They were bred to make autonomous decisions without human direction.

Shiba Inu Considerations

challengeThe 'Shiba Halt'

Extreme stubbornness. If a Shiba doesn't want to walk, it will plant its feet and refuse to move. This is not a training failure - it's a personality trait.

dealbreakerHandling Intolerance

Unlike Golden Retrievers that tolerate hugs, Shibas have strict bodily autonomy boundaries. They may snap or scream if touched in a way they dislike - risky for families with toddlers.

dealbreakerSame-Sex Aggression

Highly common for Shibas to develop aggression toward dogs of the same sex, typically emerging at 18-24 months. Dog parks become impossible.

dealbreakerZero Recall

You can almost NEVER trust a Shiba off-leash. Their prey drive and independence override training. If they see a squirrel or decide to explore, they're gone.

Multi-Species Compatibility

SpeciesAidiShiba Inu
With CatsGenerally unsafe - high prey drive; may view running cats as prey to flush or grabProceed with caution - high prey drive, may chase running cats
Small MammalsUnsafe - birds, rabbits, and rodents trigger prey driveUNSAFE - will hunt them
Birds / ReptilesUnsafe - birds fluttering trigger chase instinctUnsafe

Advanced Behavior

TraitAidiShiba Inu
Predatory Sequence RiskFullFull
BiddabilityLowLow
Noise SensitivityLowMedium
Territorial Barking
Same-Sex Aggression Onset18 months18 months

Aidi: Full predatory sequence intact (Orient-Eye-Stalk-Chase-Grab-Kill). Their hunting history with Sloughis means chase and flush instincts remain. In absence of Sloughi to finish, they may complete kill sequence on small animals. They are intelligent problem solvers but do not look to humans for permission.

Shiba Inu: Full predatory sequence (Eye -> Stalk -> Chase -> Grab -> Kill) retained from hunting heritage. High adaptive intelligence (problem solving - opening latches, escaping crates) but will fail obedience tests because they don't see the point.

First Year & Life Stages

First Year Challenges

ChallengeAidiShiba Inu
Puppy Difficulty
Destructive Phase6-186-12
House TrainingMediumEasy
Crate TrainingMediumMedium
Adolescent Regression

Aidi: Critical socialization window 8-16 weeks - if missed, dog will be reactive. At 18 months, guardian instinct activates; a dog that loved the dog park at 6 months may suddenly pick fights. Most surrenders happen during adolescence.

Shiba Inu: While exceptionally clean and often house-trained by 8 weeks with zero accidents, the 'land shark' phase is intense - they bite hard and frequently during play. Their intolerance for handling makes vet visits and nail trims a battle from day one if not desensitized.

Life Stages Timeline

StageAidiShiba Inu
Puppy Phase12 months12 months
Adolescence12-246-18
Adult Years2-82-10
Senior Onset~9 years~10 years
Peak Energy Age2-5 years1-3 years

Size & Physical Characteristics

Physical Stats

MeasurementAidiShiba Inu
Height52-62 cm35-43 cm
WeightNot enough data yetNot enough data yet
Size CategoryLargeSmall
Lifespan

10–12 years

15 years

Litter Size5-82-4

Aidi Coat

Type double
Length Medium
Texture coarse
Colors
WhiteBlackTawnyBrindleFawn

Shiba Inu Coat

Type double
Length Medium
Texture stiff outer, soft undercoat
Colors
RedBlack and TanSesameCream

Lineage & Origin

DetailAidiShiba Inu
Original PurposeDual-purpose: Livestock guardian protecting nomadic camps from jackals/wolves, and hunter working with Sloughis to flush and track gameHunting small game (birds, rabbits) and occasionally wild boar in dense mountainous brush in Japan
OriginAtlas Mountains, Morocco/Algeria/TunisiaJapan, ancient breed - smallest of six native Japanese Spitz breeds (Nihon Ken)

Breeding Details

DetailAidiShiba Inu
C-Section RateLowLow
Whelping DifficultyEasyEasy
Puppy Mortality RateLowLow

Physical Risks

RiskAidiShiba Inu
Bloat / GDV RiskMediumLow
Slippery Floor RiskLowLow
Min Fence Height1.8m1.5m
Dig / Escape RiskLowHigh

Health & Common Conditions

Aidi Health Issues

Hip Dysplasia15-20%
Elbow Dysplasia10-15%
Eye Conditions (PRA, Cataracts)Occasional
Gastric Dilatation-Volvulus (Bloat)Medium risk
Patellar LuxationMinor concern

Shiba Inu Health Issues

Allergic Dermatitis (Atopy)Extremely common
GlaucomaHigh predisposition
Patellar LuxationCommon
Hip Dysplasia6-15%
GM1 Gangliosidosis~1% carrier rate

Aidi Suggested Tests

  • Genetic Testing (MDR1, PRA)
  • Annual Ophthalmologist Exams (CERF)
  • Hip Evaluation
  • Elbow Evaluation

Shiba Inu Suggested Tests

  • OFA Eyes (goniodysplasia/glaucoma)
  • OFA Patellas
  • OFA Hips
  • DNA Testing for GM1 Gangliosidosis

Health Risk Overview

Risk FactorAidiShiba Inu
Cancer RiskLowLow
Cardiac RiskLowLow
Neurological RiskLowLow
CCL/ACL Tear RiskMediumLow
Vet Burden TierLowMedium

Sensitivities & Allergies

SensitivityAidiShiba Inu
Skin Allergies
Environmental Allergies
Stomach SensitivityLowMedium
Food AllergiesChicken, Beef, Environmental (grass, pollen)

Health Maintenance

Care ItemAidiShiba Inu
Nail Growth RateFastNormal
Eye Care NeedsMediumHigh
Anal Gland IssuesRareRare

Senior Care & Aging

Aidi Senior Care

Common Senior Issues

  • Hip/knee arthritis
  • Cognitive decline (may become grumpier)
  • Vision loss
Mobility Aid LikelihoodHigh
QoL Decline Age~10 years
End of Life ComplexityMedium

Hips and knees first to go in this medium-large breed. Ramps for cars and non-slip rugs essential. May become more intolerant of disruption with age.

Shiba Inu Senior Care

Common Senior Issues

  • Cognitive dysfunction (dementia) in very old Shibas (15+)
  • Arthritis
  • Vision decline (glaucoma risk)
Mobility Aid LikelihoodLow
QoL Decline Age~13 years
End of Life ComplexityMedium

Long-lived breed. VetCompass UK data shows median lifespan of 14.6 years - significantly higher than average for dogs.

Grooming & Care

Aidi

medium maintenance
Coat Typedouble
Coat Lengthmedium
Coat Texturecoarse
Shedding LevelHigh
Seasonal SheddingExtreme
Ear Cleaningweekly
Dental RiskLow
Obesity Prone
Winter Gear Needed
Summer Restrictions
Paw Protection
Odor LevelModerate (musky smell, especially when wet)
Tactile FeelCoarse, harsh - not soft/silky; not soothing for tactile sensitivity
Colors
WhiteBlackTawnyBrindleFawn

Shiba Inu

medium maintenance
Coat Typedouble
Coat Lengthmedium
Coat Texturestiff outer, soft undercoat
Shedding LevelHigh
Seasonal SheddingExtreme
Ear Cleaningmonthly
Dental RiskLow
Obesity Prone
Winter Gear Needed
Summer Restrictions
Paw Protection
Odor LevelLow - very little 'doggy odor', fastidious self-groomers
Tactile FeelStiff and coarse coat, not silky
Colors
RedBlack and TanSesameCream

Lifestyle Compatibility

Aidi Daily Life

Exercise Needs60-90 min/day
Alone TimeUp to 8h
Mental StimulationHigh
ApartmentDealbreaker - they need territory to patrol
Work from HomeSuitable - will sleep under desk or watch window, but manage barking during video calls when delivery trucks arrive
Weekend WarriorChallenging - need daily perimeter checks and stimulation; cannot crate 5 days then hike 2 days
HousingAcreage
Barking LevelHigh
First-Time Owner
Exercise Types
Hiking on uneven terrainPerimeter patrolsScent work/trackingFlirt pole for impulse control
NighttimeNocturnal guardians - expect barking at 2 AM for leaves blowing; white noise recommended
Food MotivationModerate

Shiba Inu Daily Life

Exercise Needs60-90 min/day
Alone TimeUp to 7h
Mental StimulationHigh
ApartmentExcellent - clean, quiet indoors, compact. But the 'Shiba 500' zoomies will happen in your living room.
Work from HomeExcellent - independent, will sleep under desk for hours without demanding attention. Not 'velcro' dogs.
Weekend WarriorYes - can handle a hike but also content with moderate daily activity
HousingApartment
Barking LevelLow
First-Time Owner
Exercise Types
Brisk walks (territory patrolling)Nosework and scent gamesPuzzle feedersShredding enrichment (cardboard boxes)
NighttimeGenerally sleeps well, cat-like
Food MotivationHigh (but only for high-value treats)

Housing & Legal Restrictions

RestrictionAidiShiba Inu
BSL Restricted
Common Rental Ban
Insurance Blacklist
Weight CategoryOver 50lbsUnder 25lbs

Climate Tolerance

ClimateAidiShiba Inu
Heat Tolerance
Cold Tolerance
Water AffinityLowLow

Travel Compatibility

ActivityAidiShiba Inu
Car TravelGoodGood
Camping
Beach Friendly
Hiking Rating
Cabin Flight Eligible
Hotel Friendly Size

Niche Suitability

RoleAidiShiba Inu
Service DogNoneNone
Therapy DogNoneNone
Deep Pressure Therapy
Canicross / Bikejoring
Apartment Adaptable
Tactile / Sensory Friendly
Livestock Guardian
Medical AlertNoneNone

Costs & Expenses

Upfront Costs

CostAidiShiba Inu
Purchase Price$1,000-2,000 (plus import costs)$1,500-3,500
Initial Cost Range$1,000–$2,000$1,500–$3,500
Cost Tier

Ongoing Costs

CostAidiShiba Inu
Monthly Range$150–$250$80–$150
Yearly Range$2,000–$2,500$960–$1,800
Food / Month$60-90$40-60
Insurance / Month$80-120$30-50
Grooming / Session$50-80$0-50
Vet Routine / Year$400-800$300-500
Monthly Cost Tier

Aidi Lifetime Cost

$20,000-30,000

Shiba Inu Lifetime Cost

$15,000-25,000

Quirks & Fun Facts

Daily Quirks

QuirkAidiShiba Inu
Snoring
FlatulenceRareRare
Slobber LevelLightNone
Smell When WetStrongLow
Zoomies FrequencyRareDaily
Counter Surfing
Digging TendencyLowMedium

Aidi Quirks

The Side Eye

Aidis constantly watch and observe you - this is assessment, not aggression. They are always monitoring the environment.

Tactile Sensitivity

They show affection by leaning or sitting on your foot, but often dislike being hugged or restrained.

Metabolic Off-Switch

Like lions, they conserve energy until a threat appears. Not hyperactive pacers like Malinois.

Shiba Inu Quirks

The Shiba Scream

A high-pitched, deafening vocalization when unhappy, stressed, or simply don't want to do something (like nail trims). Can be heard blocks away.

The Shiba 500

Explosive zoomies around the house or yard, often at random times

Cat-Like Cleanliness

Groom themselves like cats, avoid puddles, hate baths. One of easiest breeds to housebreak.

Drama Queens

If they step on a leaf wrong, they may scream as if their leg is broken. Extremely sensitive to physical discomfort.

The 'What's In It For Me?' Factor

Unlike Labs that work for praise, Shibas work only for high-value rewards (cheese, freeze-dried liver). If reward isn't worth the effort, they ignore you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Only for experienced families with older children (10+). They are loyal protectors but too sharp for chaotic households with toddlers. Their resource guarding and territorial nature make them dangerous around young children who might approach a sleeping or eating dog.
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