French Bulldogs For Sale In Washington, District of Columbia

The French Bulldog is a popular family choice in Washington, DC thanks to its calm, family-bonded temperament. This AKC registered companion dog reaches 16 to 28 pounds and stands 11 to 13 inches at the shoulder as an adult. The breed has a 10 to 12 year average lifespan. We work with strict health and genetic testing on every parent dog and select for character as well. Each puppy works through Early Neurological Stimulation on days three through sixteen. French Bulldog puppies for sale are listed on the site, and ground transport to DC is available. Families in Washington find the Frenchie an easy, all-season companion, snug in a little extra warmth on the coldest National Capital Region days.

French Bulldog Puppy Available In Washington, District of Columbia

Available French Bulldog Puppies For Washington, DC

All French Bulldog puppies displayed here can be delivered right to your door in Washington, DC.

Female

12 Weeks Old

Breed: French Bulldog

05/13/2026

$4595.00

Owning a French Bulldog in Washington

Daily life with a French Bulldog puppy in Washington, DC settles fast into a rhythm that fits city apartment life with very little space needed. Two short city walks plus indoor play cover the 20 to 30 minutes of activity the breed needs each day. Cold winter mornings call for a winter coat on the breed before walks, since Washington averages about 13.4 inches of snow a year. Cool-hour walks handle the warmest summer afternoons since the breed is heat-sensitive and flat-faced. Small when grown, the breed is an easy fit for apartments. The short coat's grooming needs come down to a weekly brush. The breed's face wrinkles need wiping out regularly.

Is a French Bulldog the Right Dog for Your Home?

The French Bulldog is a popular small companion breed, usually weighing between 16 and 28 pounds and standing roughly 11 to 13 inches at the shoulder. Despite the modest size, a Frenchie is solid and muscular, with a low, stocky build that makes it feel sturdier than the numbers suggest. Above everything else, this is a dog bred for human company. The Frenchie was developed to stay close to its owner and be part of whatever the household is doing, and families who want a constant companion tend to find the breed an easy fit. That one trait colors most of what daily life with a Frenchie looks like.

Temperament is what earns the French Bulldog its devoted following. Frenchies are affectionate, even-tempered, and quietly funny, with a knack for entertaining the people around them without seeming to try. They bark very little, which makes them well suited to apartments and shared walls, and they tend to be patient and gentle with children. A Frenchie settles into the rhythm of the home it lands in, content to nap through a quiet afternoon and just as ready to join in when the energy picks up.

Exercise needs are low, which is part of the appeal for busy households and city dwellers. A couple of short walks and some indoor play usually cover what an adult French Bulldog needs in a day. Heat is the real thing to plan around. Like all flat-faced breeds, the Frenchie has a shortened airway that makes it far less efficient at cooling itself, so warm weather combined with hard exertion can put one in real danger. Walks belong in the cooler parts of the day through the summer, and a Frenchie should never be pushed to exercise when it is hot. Frenchies are also poor swimmers and should be kept away from pools and open water unless someone is watching closely.

The coat is short and smooth, which keeps grooming simple. A weekly brushing and the occasional bath handle most of what a Frenchie needs, though the facial folds should be wiped clean and kept dry to prevent irritation. French Bulldogs do shed, often more than people expect from such a short coat, and they are not considered hypoallergenic. Color varies widely and includes brindle, fawn, cream, and pied, among others.

Health is worth being straight about, because it ties directly to why a well-bred French Bulldog costs what it does. The same flat-faced structure that gives the breed its signature look can bring breathing, spinal, and joint concerns, and the only real safeguard is careful breeding from parents who have been screened and genetically tested. Frenchies also rarely reproduce without veterinary help, since most litters are conceived and delivered with assistance, and that accounts for a large part of the breed’s price. A Frenchie from a breeder who tests, screens, and plans every pairing is a very different dog from a bargain puppy produced without any of that groundwork.

French Bulldogs also struggle with being left alone for long periods of time. They form deep attachments and can develop real separation anxiety when a house sits empty five days a week. The breed suits homes where someone is around for much of the day, whether that is a remote worker, a retiree, or simply a family with overlapping schedules. For those homes, a Frenchie returns the attention many times over, and with a typical lifespan of 10 to 14 years, that companionship runs long and steady.

Getting Outside in Washington With your French Bulldog

Region National Capital Region
Near mixed terrain
Elevation 79 ft
Local Climate four distinct seasons throughout the year
January Average High 42°F
July Average High 87°F
Sunny Days Per Year 207
Annual Rainfall 44.5 inches
Annual Snowfall 13.4 inches

Daily life with a French Bulldog puppy in Washington, DC settles fast into a steady rhythm of short walks plus indoor family time. Two short walks plus indoor play cover the 20 to 30 minutes of activity the breed needs daily through the year. Adults run 16 to 28 pounds at maturity. Shoulder height for the breed runs 11 to 13 inches. The breed fits apartments and condos comfortably across the city. The 10 to 12 year lifespan gives families a long stretch of life with the breed through steady vet care and good nutrition.

Four-season weather across National Capital Region reshapes outdoor time through the year. Bitter winter mornings mean a winter coat on the breed since the short single coat does not hold heat well through the cold months. Spring rain brings mud and damp coats handled by a towel at the door. Summer heat keeps walks short and at cool hours since the breed handles heat poorly. Checking the pavement before walks matters through the warm season. By fall, the easiest outdoor weather of the year settles in.

Local Dog Parks and Trails

French Bulldog families in Washington have a few options for daily walks and weekend outings together. Shaw Dog Park at 1651 11th St NW, Washington and Lincoln Park Dog Park at E Capitol St & 13th St NE, Washington suit short morning and evening walks. Theodore Roosevelt Island Trails at 703 George Washington Memorial Pkwy, Arlington handles weekend trails at a comfortable pace. The breed prefers steady routines, with two or three regular spots rotated through the week working better than constant change.

The temperament of a French Bulldog shows up clearest through the puppy and early adult months in Washington with the household. Calm, affectionate, family-bonded traits come through consistent daily routines plus regular exposure to the household and patient handling during the first year home.

Why Families Choose Blue Diamond Family Pups for Their French Bulldog

Seven People, Five Children, and Kimberly's Temperament Test of Every Puppy

Our household has seven people in it, and five of them are children. A French Bulldog puppy raised at Blue Diamond Family Pups spends its earliest weeks being held by toddlers, played with by grade-schoolers, and watched over by adults who have spent 14 years raising multiple breeds on our 10-acre property in Sugar Creek, Ohio. The puppies grow up in a climate-controlled kennel with generous indoor and outdoor space, and our kids are in with them every day from the time they are born. For a companion breed like the Frenchie, who loves to bond closely with people, all that early handling, noise, and ordinary family life builds something that cannot be added in later.

Before any French Bulldog puppy is listed on our website, a certified dog trainer named Kimberly works with it one-on-one and writes down what she actually observes. She notes how the puppy responds to being handled, how it reacts when something startles it, whether it moves toward new things boldly or hangs back to watch, how quickly it settles afterward, and the kind of home that will bring out its best. What she writes becomes the description you read on the listing. That description is not a coat color and a weight estimate, it is a documented read on that individual Frenchie’s personality, written by someone trained to interpret it.

That matters more than it might first appear, because two puppies from the same litter can be quite different to live with. A confident, outgoing Frenchie that meets every new face and sound head-on asks for a different household than a quieter littermate who would rather stay close and keep to a calm routine. Neither is the better dog, but the right pairing between puppy and family is what makes the years that follow easy. Kimberly’s assessment is how we make that match on purpose instead of leaving it to whichever puppy happened to photograph well.

Every puppy goes through Early Neurological Stimulation between day three and sixteen after being born. The ENS protocol applies gentle, controlled stimulation during this narrow window when a puppy’s nervous system is most responsive to it.  ENS is tied to lasting gains in stress tolerance, cardiovascular health, and immune function. Both parents in every pairing are health and genetically tested before they are ever bred, and we post those results on each parent’s profile so you can review them before you decide anything. Given how closely a French Bulldog’s health depends on responsible breeding, that testing is never a formality for us. Every puppy also receives a full veterinary exam at Sugar Creek Veterinary Clinic before leaving the farm and goes home current on vaccinations with a health certificate and a one-year health guarantee.

There is a limit to how many French Bulldog puppies we can raise this way in a single year, and we have never stretched past it. To keep healthy Frenchies available without cutting a corner anywhere, we work with a network of local Ohio breeders who meet our requirements on every litter. Each partner runs the same health and genetic testing, follows the same ENS protocol, and has every puppy evaluated by Kimberly before it is listed. No matter which breeder produced a given puppy, every French Bulldog on our site went through the same strict process from start to finish.

Nearby Cities

If you are not located directly in Washington, that is not a problem. Blue Diamond delivers and sells French Bulldog puppies to families throughout the National Capital Region.

We raise more than just French Bulldog puppies. See all of our breeds and puppies in Washington.

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Getting Your French Bulldog Puppy to Washington, District of Columbia

Getting a puppy from our farm in Sugar Creek, Ohio to your family in Washington is easier than most people expect. You are only 4 to 6 hours away, which makes both ground delivery and a quick farm visit genuinely convenient options. Ground deliveries depart every Tuesday, so reserve your puppy and have delivery scheduled by Monday and your puppy is on its way that week. Every puppy receives a full veterinary check before leaving our care, and all three delivery options get your puppy to you safely.

Ground Transport

For families in Washington, ground transport is one of the most convenient options we offer. Our ground transport partner specializes exclusively in puppy delivery and uses purpose-built, climate-controlled vehicles designed specifically for transporting pets safely. These are not standard cargo vans. The vehicles are temperature-regulated, properly ventilated, and built to keep puppies comfortable and calm for the duration of the trip. Because Washington is 4 to 6 hours from our farm, your puppy spends minimal time in transit. Every puppy travels in its own individual crate, so there is no contact with other animals during transport. The driver makes scheduled stops along the route for breaks and health checks, so your puppy is being actively looked after the entire way. You will receive updates throughout the journey so you always know where your puppy is and when to expect them. By the time they arrive at your door in Washington, they are healthy, calm, and ready to meet their new family. We deliver to all zip codes in Washington, including 20001, 20002, 20003, 20004, 20005, 20006, 20007, and all of the other 284 zip codes.

Farm Pickup

Because you are only 4 to 6 hours from Sugar Creek, a farm visit is one of the most popular choices for families in Washington. You are welcome to come meet your puppy in person and take them home the same day, by appointment only. Families who prefer to fly in and drive to the farm have three convenient options. Akron-Canton Regional Airport is the closest at just 40 miles away, about a 45-minute drive. John Glenn Columbus International Airport and Pittsburgh International Airport are both approximately 97 miles from the farm, roughly an hour and a half to two hours by car depending on which direction you are coming from. Any of the three makes for an easy fly-in trip. Please note that puppies picked up at the farm are subject to a 7% Ohio sales tax, which does not apply to either delivery option.

Flight Nanny

A dedicated flight nanny will fly with your puppy in-cabin from Ohio to your nearest airport. This is a professional puppy transport service, not a favor from a friend with a plane ticket. The flight nanny is experienced in handling puppies during air travel and stays with your puppy from the moment they leave our farm until you pick them up at the arrival gate. Your puppy rides in an approved carrier in the cabin the entire flight and never goes near the cargo hold. For Washington families, flight nanny delivery is available directly to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, and Washington Dulles International Airport. You will receive updates before and during the flight so you know exactly when to expect them, and the handoff at the airport is straightforward and personal.

See What Our Puppy Parents Have To Say Near You!

Frequently Asked Questions

Q:How does a French Bulldog handle the Washington climate?

A:Winters in Washington run cold. January highs around 42 degrees and yearly snowfall near 13.4 inches set the cold half of the year. A French Bulldog handles city life across four seasons with the right gear, with a winter coat on cold mornings and cool-hour walks through the warmest weeks. The small 16 to 28 pound size suits city apartment and condo life across Washington well. With around 207 sunny days yearly, families fit short walks into the comfortable stretches of the year. Local dog park visits happen at Shaw Dog Park at 1651 11th St NW, Washington.

Q:What does a French Bulldog coat look like and how much grooming does it need?

A:A French Bulldog has a short, smooth, single coat that comes in a range of colors across the breed. The single coat means moderate year-round shedding without seasonal blowouts the way double-coated breeds shed. A weekly brushing session with a rubber curry or soft bristle brush handles loose hair and keeps the coat tidy. The face wrinkles need a regular wipe to stay clean and dry, since skin folds hold moisture that can lead to irritation if left alone. Weekly attention is enough for most Frenchies. Bathing happens occasionally rather than on a schedule, since the short coat does not collect dirt the way longer coats do. Nail trims, ear cleaning, and basic dental care round out the routine. The breed is not hypoallergenic.

Q:Is Washington a good place to own a French Bulldog?

A:A French Bulldog fits Washington city families well. The breed's calm, steady disposition handles the four-season climate with the right gear, with cold winters spent close to family inside and warmer months on short city walks during cooler hours. Bringing the Frenchie around varied people during puppyhood builds the confident adult most owners want. C&O Canal Towpath, 1057 Thomas Jefferson St NW, Washington fits the local city Frenchie routine through warmer parts of the year. The small size suits Washington city homes from apartments up.

Q:What health testing does Blue Diamond Family Pups do on French Bulldog parent dogs?

A:Every French Bulldog parent dog at Blue Diamond Family Pups goes through genetic and health testing before any pairing happens. Testing covers the genetic conditions known in the breed. Health, structure, and temperament all factor into which pairs we breed, since these traits pass through generations and shape the puppies that grow up here. Each French Bulldog puppy heads home with a one-year health guarantee covering genetic and congenital conditions. Our vet examines every litter before any puppy leaves the farm. Puppies head home fully vaccinated, dewormed on schedule, and microchipped.

Q:How can I get a Blue Diamond French Bulldog puppy delivered to Washington?

A:Blue Diamond Family Pups delivers French Bulldog puppies to Washington, DC city families through three routes. Climate-controlled ground transport runs $300 to $500 with door-to-door service that handles city addresses. Flight nanny delivery brings the Frenchie puppy in-cabin with a professional flight nanny accompanying the puppy at a cost of $800 to $900. Farm pickup at our Holmes County kennel is available by appointment. Most Washington city families receive their puppy in roughly a week from the litter's ready date.

Q:What is Early Neurological Stimulation and why does Blue Diamond Family Pups use it?

A:Early Neurological Stimulation is a set of gentle handling exercises we do with each puppy from day three through day sixteen. This is the developmental window when the nervous system is still forming. The protocol came out of the US Military's working dog programs in the 1970s, and research has built on the original findings in the decades since. ENS puppies tend to handle stress more calmly and show stronger cardiovascular response than puppies who skipped it. Some of the early research also pointed to better immune function. Every French Bulldog puppy raised at Blue Diamond Family Pups goes through the ENS protocol. ENS puppies tend to react less to new sights and sounds in general, which keeps the first weeks at home calmer for everyone. With a calm, family-bonded breed like the Frenchie, that gentle start helps the bond with the new family come together fast. Ongoing socialization through the puppy weeks still matters, with ENS giving it a stronger foundation to build on. The protocol is part of why Blue Diamond puppies tend to settle into new homes quickly.

Q:How much grooming does a French Bulldog need?

A:Frenchie shedding runs moderate and steady through the year without seasonal blowouts. The breed is not hypoallergenic given the short single coat. Weekly brushing with a soft bristle brush keeps loose hair off furniture and floors in city apartments. Washington, DC households with cold city winters often see slightly heavier shedding in the spring as the breed transitions out of the heavier winter coat. Cold-weather climates suit the Frenchie with a winter coat added on the worst mornings.

Q:Does a French Bulldog have any breed-specific weather care needs?

A:A French Bulldog needs more weather-specific care than most breeds since the breed is both heat-sensitive and cold-sensitive. Hot weather is the biggest concern given the flat face, with summer walks shifting to dawn and dusk hours through the warmest weeks. AC time inside covers the peak afternoon heat. Pavement gets a quick palm check before stepping out, since hot asphalt burns paw pads fast on a flat-faced breed that overheats quickly. Water along on any outing handles hydration through the warm months. Cold weather calls for a winter coat on the breed since the short single coat does not hold heat well, with bitter mornings being the trickiest stretch. Damp returns from rainy walks need a quick towel at the door, with face wrinkles getting an extra wipe in humid or wet weather. Spring and fall tend to be the most comfortable outdoor stretches of the year for the breed.

Q:Can I visit Blue Diamond Family Pups before committing to a French Bulldog puppy?

A:Visits to our Sugarcreek farm run by appointment only. Send us a message and we'll find a time that works. Our 10-acre working family farm is in Holmes County, Eastern Ohio. During a visit you'll see our kennel and walk the outdoor play areas where the adult dogs and current litters spend their day. You'll also meet our family of seven. That's Dean and Esther along with our five children, who all help handle every puppy from birth through go-home day. Washington families who want a visit before picking a puppy can reach out to schedule one. If the drive isn't workable for your family, we can do video calls and send extra photos and videos of any puppy you are considering.

Q:What makes Blue Diamond Family Pups different from other French Bulldog breeders?

A:A few things define how we work at Blue Diamond Family Pups. We have raised French Bulldogs for years on our 10-acre family farm in Sugarcreek, Eastern Ohio. Every parent dog is genetic and health tested before any pairing, with structure and temperament both factoring into the selection. Each puppy goes through Early Neurological Stimulation from day three to day sixteen, and our family of seven handles every puppy from birth onward. Kimberly is our professional puppy trainer. She runs temperament testing and writes the individual description that helps match each puppy to the right family. Each puppy leaves with a one-year health guarantee, fully vaccinated, dewormed on schedule, and microchipped. Delivery is available across the country.