Australian Terrier vs Flat-Coated Retriever
A side-by-side comparison to help you find the right breed for your lifestyle.

Australian Terrier
Also known as: Aussie, Australian Rough
The Australian Terrier is a small, robust breed known for its spirited personality, intelligence, and loyalty. Originally bred to hunt vermin and guard homes, this terrier is both a devoted companion and an alert watchdog, characterized by its distinctive rough, weather-resistant coat and keen expression.
Small
Medium
11-15 yrs
25-28 cm
6.8-9.1 kg

Flat-Coated Retriever
Also known as: Flattie, Flat-Coat
The Flat-Coated Retriever is a cheerful and energetic gun dog breed known for its glossy black or liver-colored coat and friendly disposition. Originally developed in the UK for retrieving game both on land and in water, this versatile and intelligent breed is celebrated for its playful nature and strong bond with families. Often called the 'Peter Pan' of dogs, they retain their puppy-like enthusiasm well into old age.
Large
High
9-12 yrs
56-62 cm
25-36 kg
Quick Comparison
| Trait | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| 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 |
| Detail | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Size | Small | Large |
| Energy Level | Medium | High |
| Grooming | Medium | Medium |
| Trainability | Moderate | Moderate |
| Barking Level | High | Medium |
| Shedding Level | Low | High |
| Chew strength | Moderate | Hard |
| Housing | Yard | Yard |
Owner Fit & Decision Guide
Owner Match
| Trait | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Experience Level | Beginner (with conditions) | Intermediate |
| First-Time Owner | ||
| Ideal Owner | Confident beginner or experienced owner willing to train consistently. Works from home or has flexible schedule. Single-dog household preferred, or with opposite-sex passive dog. No small prey animals. Comfortable with managing barking through training. | Active family with a yard who wants a permanent puppy and can handle potential health heartbreak. Works from home or can provide midday breaks. |
Australian Terrier Dealbreakers
- Want a silent dog
- Have pocket pets (hamsters, rats) that roam
- Want a dog that can be off-leash in unfenced areas
- Unwilling to manage potential dog-aggression
- Passive or permissive owner (if you treat them like a baby, they will become a tyrant)
Flat-Coated Retriever Dealbreakers
- Sedentary lifestyle - will become a nightmare without daily exercise
- Fastidious cleanliness - they shed, track mud, and drool water
- Emotional fragility - sensitive dogs that become anxious with anger/shouting
- Work long hours away from home
- Not financially prepared for cancer treatment
Surrender Risk
| Factor | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Risk Level | Low | Low to Medium |
| Primary Reasons | Barking complaints from neighbors, Incompatibility with other pets (chasing cats, fighting dogs), Owners buy thinking they are low-maintenance small dogs and are overwhelmed by their big-dog energy and tenacity | Energy mismatch - owner underestimated exercise needs, Separation anxiety - owner works too much, Slow maturation - puppy brain in adult body for 2-3 years |
Temperament & Personality
Behavior Comparison
| Trait | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Prey Drive | ||
| Watchdog Ability | ||
| Stranger Friendly | ||
| Drool Level | ||
| Wanderlust |
Vocalization
| Trait | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Barking Level | High | Medium |
| Howling Tendency | ||
| Whining Tendency | Low | High |
| Separation Vocalization |
Safety & Reliability
| Trait | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Escape Artist | ||
| Dog Park Suitable | ||
| Off-Leash Reliable | ||
| Small Animal Safe | ||
| Leash Reactivity | ||
| Resource Guarding Risk | Low | Low |
Australian Terrier Social Traits
Medium
Often bossy and may spark fights with much larger dogs, refusing to back down. Same-sex aggression is a known trait.
Flat-Coated Retriever Social Traits
None
Loves all dogs - same-sex aggression is rare
Training
Australian Terrier
- Harsh methods trigger their 'terrier grit,' causing them to shut down or fight back
- Use high-value rewards (food/toys)
- Keep training sessions short and varied
- Practice 'Nothing in Life is Free' to maintain household boundaries
Flat-Coated Retriever
- Use high-value food rewards - they are highly food-motivated
- Keep training sessions fun and playful
- Harsh correction causes shutdown or passive 'noodle-like' behavior
- Channel retrieval instinct into carrying tasks
Australian Terrier Considerations
Bred to alert settlers to snakes and intruders, they score 5/5 on watchdog ability. In modern settings, this means barking at delivery trucks, hallway footsteps, and leaves blowing across the patio. Often a dealbreaker for renters with noise restrictions.
Documented risk of aggression toward dogs of the same sex, particularly between two females. This often emerges at sexual maturity (18-24 months) and can escalate from posturing to serious fighting. They generally do best as the only dog or with a companion of the opposite sex.
Their prey drive is not a game; it is a job. They were engineered to kill rats and snakes. They cannot be trusted with hamsters, rabbits, or guinea pigs, and they may harass cats that run. This is a Full Predatory Sequence breed—they do not just chase; they grab and shake.
Flat-Coated Retriever Considerations
Unlike Golden Retrievers that settle around age 2-3, Flat-Coats retain high-octane, boisterous puppy energy well into their senior years (7+). Exuberant jumping and face-licking can be dangerous for small children or frail elderly owners.
This is a true 'velcro' breed with very low tolerance for isolation. Leaving a Flat-Coat alone for 8+ hours often results in severe destruction (chewing drywall, digging carpets) and distress vocalization.
Approximately 54% of Flat-Coated Retrievers die from cancer, with Histiocytic Sarcoma affecting up to 20% of the breed. Average diagnosis age is tragically young (8-9 years).
As a retriever, their solution to excitement is to grab something with their mouth. If a toy isn't available, they will grab your arm, sleeve, or pant leg. This 'soft mouth' hold requires consistent redirection training.
Multi-Species Compatibility
| Species | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| With Cats | Caution - safe only if raised together and the cat does not run | Usually good if raised together, though may try to play (which cats may not appreciate) |
| Small Mammals | Unsafe - high risk for hamsters, rabbits, guinea pigs, rodents | Moderate risk - supervision required |
| Birds / Reptiles | Unsafe - high risk | High risk - they are bird dogs, flying birds trigger hardwired response |
Advanced Behavior
| Trait | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Predatory Sequence Risk | Full | Arrested |
| Biddability | Medium | High |
| Noise Sensitivity | Low | Low |
| Territorial Barking | ||
| Same-Sex Aggression Onset | 18 months | N/A |
Australian Terrier: Full Predatory Sequence: Orient → Eye → Stalk → Chase → Grab-Bite → Kill-Bite. Bred to kill snakes and rats. You cannot 'train out' the desire to shake a rat; you can only manage it. Not 'will to please' dogs - they are 'what's in it for me?' dogs.
Flat-Coated Retriever: Eye -> Stalk -> Chase -> Grab (Soft). Kill/Dissect bred out to preserve game birds. Safe with poultry if trained. High biddability but add their own 'flair' to commands.
First Year & Life Stages
First Year Challenges
| Challenge | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Puppy Difficulty | ||
| Destructive Phase | 6-18 | 6-18 |
| House Training | Medium | Moderate |
| Crate Training | Medium | High |
| Adolescent Regression |
Australian Terrier: While small and portable, they are intense. House training is moderately difficult (terriers can be stubborn), and their sharp puppy teeth are used freely during play. Critical socialization window is 8-16 weeks - must socialize to handling and strangers to prevent natural wariness from turning into defensiveness.
Flat-Coated Retriever: Scores higher than Golden Retriever (6/10) due to slower maturation - essentially a puppy brain in a large, powerful adult body for 2-3 years. 'Happy peeing' when greeting is common.
Life Stages Timeline
| Stage | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Puppy Phase | 12 months | 18 months |
| Adolescence | 6-18 | 6-36 |
| Adult Years | 2-9 | 3-7 |
| Senior Onset | ~10 years | ~8 years |
| Peak Energy Age | 1-3 years | 1-5 years |
Size & Physical Characteristics
Physical Stats
| Measurement | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Height | 25-28 cm | 56-62 cm |
| Weight | Not enough data yet | Not enough data yet |
| Size Category | Small | Large |
| Lifespan | 11–15 years | 9–12 years |
| Litter Size | 4-6 | 4-8 |
Australian Terrier Coat
Flat-Coated Retriever Coat
Lineage & Origin
| Detail | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Original Purpose | Kill rats and snakes in gold mines and sheep stations, tend sheep, and alert owners to intruders | Retrieving shot game (pheasant, duck) from both land and water |
| Origin | Australia, 19th century | United Kingdom, mid-19th century |
Breeding Details
| Detail | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| C-Section Rate | Low | Low |
| Whelping Difficulty | Easy | Low |
| Puppy Mortality Rate | Low | Low |
Physical Risks
| Risk | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Bloat / GDV Risk | Low | High |
| Slippery Floor Risk | Low | Medium |
| Min Fence Height | 1.2m | 1.5m |
| Dig / Escape Risk | High | Low |
Health & Common Conditions
Australian Terrier Health Issues
Flat-Coated Retriever Health Issues
Australian Terrier Suggested Tests
- Annual blood glucose and urinalysis (starting at age 5)
- OFA Patella Evaluation
- CERF Eye Examination
- Family history of Diabetes inquiry
Flat-Coated Retriever Suggested Tests
- Hip Evaluation (OFA/BVA)
- Patella Evaluation
- Ophthalmologist Evaluation (Gonioscopy)
- Elbow Evaluation
Health Risk Overview
| Risk Factor | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Cancer Risk | Low | High |
| Cardiac Risk | Low | Low |
| Neurological Risk | Low | Low |
| CCL/ACL Tear Risk | Low | Medium |
| Vet Burden Tier | Medium | High |
Sensitivities & Allergies
| Sensitivity | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Skin Allergies | ||
| Environmental Allergies | ||
| Stomach Sensitivity | Low | Moderate |
| Food Allergies | General environmental allergens | Chicken, Grain |
Health Maintenance
| Care Item | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Nail Growth Rate | Fast | Fast |
| Eye Care Needs | Low | Low |
| Anal Gland Issues | Rare | Occasional |
Senior Care & Aging
Australian Terrier Senior Care
Common Senior Issues
- Diabetes Mellitus (watch for excessive thirst/urination)
- Cataracts
- Joint stiffness
Mobility usually remains good until very late life. Primary concern in seniors is monitoring for diabetes symptoms (excessive thirst, frequent urination, weight loss despite normal eating).
Flat-Coated Retriever Senior Care
Common Senior Issues
- Cancer (Histiocytic Sarcoma, Hemangiosarcoma)
- Arthritis
- Laryngeal paralysis
Decline can be sudden due to cancer - owners often report dog was 'fine yesterday' before diagnosis. Mental preparation for early loss is important.
Grooming & Care
Australian Terrier
medium maintenanceFlat-Coated Retriever
medium maintenanceLifestyle Compatibility
Australian Terrier Daily Life
Flat-Coated Retriever Daily Life
Housing & Legal Restrictions
| Restriction | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| BSL Restricted | ||
| Common Rental Ban | ||
| Insurance Blacklist | ||
| Weight Category | Under 25lbs | Over 50lbs |
Climate Tolerance
| Climate | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Heat Tolerance | ||
| Cold Tolerance | ||
| Water Affinity | Low | High |
Travel Compatibility
| Activity | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Car Travel | Good | Excellent |
| Camping | ||
| Beach Friendly | ||
| Hiking Rating | ||
| Cabin Flight Eligible | ||
| Hotel Friendly Size |
Niche Suitability
| Role | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Service Dog | Low | High |
| Therapy Dog | Medium | High |
| Deep Pressure Therapy | ||
| Canicross / Bikejoring | ||
| Apartment Adaptable | ||
| Tactile / Sensory Friendly | ||
| Livestock Guardian | ||
| Medical Alert | Low | High |
Costs & Expenses
Upfront Costs
| Cost | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Purchase Price | $1,200-2,500 | $1,500-3,000 |
| Initial Cost Range | $1,200–$2,500 | $1,500–$3,000 |
| Cost Tier |
Ongoing Costs
| Cost | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly Range | $120–$200 | $150–$250 |
| Yearly Range | $1,440–$2,400 | $1,800–$3,000 |
| Food / Month | $30-50 | $60-90 |
| Insurance / Month | $40-70 | $80-150 |
| Grooming / Session | $50-80 | $0-50 |
| Vet Routine / Year | $300-600 | $300-500 |
| Monthly Cost Tier |
Australian Terrier Lifetime Cost
$15,000-30,000
Flat-Coated Retriever Lifetime Cost
$20,000-50,000
Quirks & Fun Facts
Daily Quirks
| Quirk | Australian Terrier | Flat-Coated Retriever |
|---|---|---|
| Snoring | ||
| Flatulence | Rare | Occasional |
| Slobber Level | None | Light |
| Smell When Wet | Mild | Strong |
| Zoomies Frequency | Weekly | Daily |
| Counter Surfing | ||
| Digging Tendency | High | Low |
Australian Terrier Quirks
The Ruff
Distinctive ruff of hair around the neck (like a lion's mane) which was historically protective against snake bites
The Topknot
The soft, silky hair on their head contrasts with the wire body coat and needs gentle combing
Digging for Fun
They don't just dig to escape; they dig for fun. Provide a designated sandpit and bury toys in it to save your flowerbeds.
Bossiness
They will attempt to run the household. 'Nothing in life is free' training is recommended to maintain boundaries.
Flat-Coated Retriever Quirks
The Flattie Lick
Notorious face-lickers - this is an appeasement and affection behavior that is hard to train out
Carrying Objects
Will greet you with a shoe, pillow, or toy in their mouth - this is self-soothing behavior, trade for a toy instead of punishing
Mud Magnet
If there is one mud puddle in a 10-acre field, a Flat-Coat will find it and lie in it
Frequently Asked Questions
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