Cavapoo Puppies

Cavapoo Puppies for Sale

F1 and F1b Cavapoos Raised in Family Homes, Individually Temperament Tested by an Independent Trainer

Cavapoo puppies at Blue Diamond start life differently than most. A puppy trainer evaluates each dog individually, writes a full personality profile, and matches each pup to the right family based on documented temperament data. F1 and F1b generations. Starting at $2,995.

Cavapoo Puppy From Blue Diamond
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Our Available Cavapoo Puppies!

We Have More Puppies Coming Soon!

Upcoming Litters!

4 Weeks Old

Breed: F1 Cavapoo

07/18/2026

Male Puppies: 3
Female Puppies: 3

$2995.00

2 Weeks Old

Breed: F1b Cavapoo

07/28/2026

Male Puppies: 0
Female Puppies: 5

$2995.00

5 Weeks Old

Breed: F1b Cavapoo

07/11/2026

Male Puppies: 2
Female Puppies: 1

$2995.00

6 Weeks Old

Breed: F1b Cavapoo

07/06/2026

Male Puppies: 3
Female Puppies: 3

$2995.00

Some Adopted Cavapoo Puppies

Leo

Male

Adopted
Breed: F1b Cavapoo

Archie

Male

Adopted
Breed: F1b Toy Cavapoo

Milo

Male

Adopted
Breed: F1b Cavapoo

Erin

Female

Adopted
Breed: F1 Cavapoo

Gia

Female

Adopted
Breed: F1 Cavapoo

Jaide

Female

Adopted
Breed: F1 Cavapoo

What Is a Cavapoo?

A Cavapoo is a hybrid of the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel breed and the Miniature or Toy Poodle. The breed first appeared in Australia in the late 1990s, with breeders pairing the Cavalier’s gentle, affectionate nature with the Poodle’s intelligence and low-shedding coat. Cavapoos are among the most consistently people-oriented dogs in the designer breed category, and their low-shedding coats make them a workable choice for families with mild dog allergies.

Blue Diamond raises both F1 and F1b Cavapoos. The generation affects coat type, shedding level, and the extent to which Poodle energy comes through in the dog’s personality. These two breeds produce a dog that bonds deeply with its family, adapts well to apartment or house living, and does not need hours of outdoor exercise to stay content.

Cavapoos at a glance
Adult weight 12 to 20 lbs
Height at shoulder 9 to 12 inches
Lifespan 12 to 15 years
Generation at Blue Diamond F1 and F1b
Shedding Minimal (F1) to none (F1b)
Coat Wavy (F1) to curly (F1b)
Hypoallergenic Semi (F1) to yes (F1b)

Cavapoos sit in the medium-energy range, with a clear preference for being near their people over burning energy alone. They do well with 30 to 45 minutes of daily exercise. A morning walk and afternoon play session covers most of what an adult Cavapoo needs physically, and mental stimulation through training and puzzle toys handles the rest.

F1 and F1b Cavapoos - What Is the Difference?

The generation label tells you the breeding makeup of the dog, which predicts the coat type, shedding level, and how much Poodle influence comes through in energy and trainability.

An F1 Cavapoo has one purebred Cavalier King Charles Spaniel parent and one purebred Miniature or Toy Poodle parent. That makes the dog exactly 50% of each breed. F1 Cavapoos land in the wavy coat range most often, shed minimally, and are considered semi-hypoallergenic. The Cavalier temperament comes through strongly at 50%, which gives F1 Cavapoos their famously calm, sweet-natured personality. They’re the generation most likely to settle into a home with very low drama. 

An F1b Cavapoo has one F1 Cavapoo parent and one purebred Poodle parent, shifting the genetics to approximately 75% Poodle and 25% Cavalier. The coat trends curlier and sheds less, making F1b Cavapoos a better fit for families with more serious allergy concerns. The extra Poodle genetics also bring slightly more energy and a higher need for mental stimulation. 

Both generations are affectionate, trainable, and well-suited to family life. The choice usually comes down to allergy sensitivity and how much grooming time a family is willing to commit to. F1b coats need brushing more often and grooming appointments on a tighter schedule than F1 coats.

Cavapoo Temperament - What to Expect

Cavapoo Puppy From Blue Diamond

Cavapoos are gentle, affectionate, and deeply bonded to their people. The Cavalier side of their genetics contributes a calm, almost intuitive connection to human emotion. A rough day at home and your Cavapoo will be next to you. A playful afternoon and they’ll match that energy. That emotional attunement is one of the qualities that makes Cavapoos so sought after for therapy and emotional support work.

They do best in households where someone is home most of the day. Separation anxiety is a real tendency in the breed, not a myth. Cavapoos that spend long hours alone without a plan for that time are more likely to develop stress-related behaviors, such as excessive barking or destructive chewing. Early training that builds comfort with being alone, starting in the first weeks at home, reduces this risk considerably

With children, Cavapoos are patient and gentle. Their small size means very young children should be supervised during play. An excited 15-pound dog can still startle or knock a toddler. The breed itself is not prone to snapping or aggression, and families with kids who’ve learned how to handle dogs appropriately describe Cavapoos as nearly ideal companions.

Other pets are rarely a problem. Cavapoos that are introduced to cats and other dogs early tend to get along better. The Cavalier temperament is not territorial. The Poodle side adds social intelligence rather than aggression.

This breed is easy to train. Both parent breeds rank high for intelligence and willingness to please, and Cavapoos inherit both traits. Short, positive sessions work best. Ten to fifteen minutes twice a day, with varied drills, produces a well-trained dog faster than one long block. The Poodle side picks up commands fast and also gets bored fast with repetition, so keeping the session moving matters.

Cavapoo Size - How Big Will My Puppy Get?

Adult Cavapoos at Blue Diamond run between 12 and 20 pounds and stand 9 to 12 inches at the shoulder. Their size is dependent on the size of the Poodle parent, whether Miniature or Toy, which plays the largest role in where a specific puppy lands within that range. Blue Diamond provides a size estimate for each litter based on the dam and sire weights.

Growth & weight chart
Age Estimated weight range
8 weeks (go-home age) 2 to 4 lbs
3 months 4 to 8 lbs
6 months 8 to 14 lbs
12 months 11 to 18 lbs
Full grown (12 to 18 months) 12 to 20 lbs

Cavapoos reach full height around 12 months and finish filling out in body weight by 18 months. A 24-inch crate fits most adults comfortably. Their size makes them genuinely apartment-friendly, not just manageable in an apartment. A well-exercised Cavapoo is content in a smaller living space because they spend most of their time near their person rather than roaming independently.

Cavapoo Coat Colors and Types

Cavapoos have two distinct coat types, depending on generation. F1 Cavapoos tend to have a soft, wavy coat that reflects a balance of both parent breeds. F1b Cavapoos have a curlier coat because of the stronger Poodle breed. Both shed very little, but the F1b coat holds loose hair more tightly and releases less dander, which is why families with allergies choose it more often. The tradeoff is grooming effort: curlier coats mat faster and need more frequent brushing and professional attention.

Cavapoos come in many colors drawn from both parent breeds:

  • Blenheim is the most recognized Cavalier color. A warm chestnut and white pattern that comes through clearly in many F1 litters.
  • Ruby is a solid, deep red coat that can range from light gold to a rich mahogany depending on genetics.
  • Apricot comes from the Poodle side. A warm peachy-gold tone, among the most frequently requested colors in the designer breed market.
  • Tri-color shows black, white, and tan markings, reflecting the Cavalier’s classic tri-color pattern.
  • Black and tan displays a solid black base with tan points at the eyebrows, chest, and legs.
  • Chocolate ranges from medium brown to a deep cocoa and can appear in both solid and parti variations.
  • Phantom shows two distinct colors in a specific point pattern, most often black and tan or chocolate and tan.
  • Parti refers to a coat that is at best 50% white with patches of another color.

Full descriptions and photos go live on the website with each puppy’s listing at 7 weeks old.

Cavapoo Health - What We Test For

Cavapoos benefit from hybrid vigor, the tendency of first-generation crosses to be healthier than either purebred parent. Cavalier King Charles Spaniels carry a number of breed-specific conditions that cross-breeding reduces in prevalence. That reduction is not a guarantee, which is why pre-pairing parent health testing is the foundation of responsible Cavapoo breeding. Every Blue Diamond breeding dog undergoes genetic health testing before entering the program.

Mitral Valve Disease (MVD)

Mitral valve disease is the most important health consideration in any Cavapoo breeding program. MVD is known to be the leading cause of death in Cavalier King Charles Spaniels, with nearly all Cavaliers developing the condition by age ten. The disease involves the mitral valve of the heart deteriorating over time. This condition causes blood to leak backward rather than move forward. This eventually leads to congestive heart failure. Crossbreeding with Poodles reduces the prevalence compared to purebred Cavaliers, but it doesn’t eliminate the risk entirely. Responsible breeders cardiac-screen Cavalier parents before breeding. Annual vet checkups that include a cardiac listen are the way to catch early signs.

Syringomyelia

Syringomyelia is a neurological condition more common in Cavaliers than in most other breeds. It occurs when the skull is too small for the brain. These conditions lead to fluid buildup in cavities along the spinal cord near the brain. Affected dogs often show sensitivity around the neck, phantom scratching at the air, and progressive pain. The condition is difficult to detect without an MRI. Responsible breeding practices and selecting Cavalier parent dogs without a family history of the condition reduce the odds of producing affected puppies.

Progressive Retinal Atrophy (PRA)

Progressive retinal atrophy is a known inherited eye condition present in both Poodles and Cavalier King Charles Spaniels. It causes gradual vision loss over time and eventually leads to blindness. Genetic testing of parent dogs before pairing identifies carriers and prevents the production of affected puppies. Every Blue Diamond breeding dog is tested for PRA.

Patellar Luxation

Patellar luxation occurs when the dog’s kneecap slips out of its normal position, a common concern in small breeds. Mild cases cause occasional skipping or bunny-hopping after vigorous activity. Severe cases need surgical correction. Maintaining a healthy body weight for your puppy helps reduce stress on their joints. Genetic screening of parent dogs addresses the inherited component of the risk.

Ear Infections

Cavapoos inherit floppy ears from the Cavalier side, and those ears trap moisture more readily than upright-eared breeds. That moisture creates the possibility for yeast and bacterial infections. Checking ears weekly and cleaning with a vet-approved solution when needed are the most effective preventive measures. Some things to watch for include head shaking, ear scratching, redness inside the ear canal, and any unusual odor.

Dental Health

Small breeds have more teeth in a proportionally smaller jaw. Because of this it can cause crowding and increase the risk of periodontal disease earlier than in larger dogs. Daily tooth brushing slows plaque buildup. Dental chews between brushings help. A veterinary dental cleaning on the schedule your vet recommends catches problems before they become painful or require extractions.

What Every Puppy Goes Home With

Every Blue Diamond puppy goes home with a veterinary health certificate, age-appropriate vaccinations, a deworming record, and documentation of parent health testing. Blue Diamond’s health guarantee covers genetic health conditions for one year from the date of purchase.

How We Raise Our Cavapoo Puppies

Blue Diamond Cavapoo puppies don’t go through a standard whelping-box-to-go-home process. What happens between birth and 8 weeks determines how a puppy handles its first week in a new home. The months that follow depend on it too.

Early Neurological Stimulation (ENS)

ENS starts at day 3 and runs through day 16. Each puppy receives five specific handling exercises once per day during this window: tactile stimulation, thermal stimulation, head-up positioning, head-down positioning, and supine positioning. The research behind ENS, originally developed for military working dogs, shows that mild stimulation during the early neurological development window produces dogs with stronger cardiovascular systems, improved stress tolerance, and greater adaptability to new environments. A Cavapoo that’s been through ENS handles its first car ride, first vet visit, and first week in a new home with more confidence than one that hasn’t.

Kimberly’s Temperament Evaluation

Kimberly, Blue Diamond’s independent puppy trainer, evaluates every puppy at 7 weeks. She assesses each dog individually across multiple temperament dimensions, including energy level, response to handling, reaction to new people and other dogs, and comfort with being held. She writes a full personality description for each puppy. That report goes live on the website alongside the puppy’s listing. Families choosing a Cavapoo from Blue Diamond don’t get a generic breed description. They get a profile of the specific dog they’re considering.

Socialization Before Go-Home

Between ENS and Kimberly’s evaluation, each puppy spends weeks being handled by multiple people, exposed to household sounds, moved through different environments, and socialized with other dogs. By go-home day, these aren’t puppies that have only ever seen the inside of one room.

How to Get a Blue Diamond Cavapoo

Step 1: Browse available litters or join the newsletter.

Available puppies post on this page as soon as Kimberly completes temperament testing at 7 weeks. Sign up for the newsletter to get notified the moment a new litter goes live. Cavapoo litters fill quickly once listings go up.

Step 2: Reserve your puppy.

Puppies with a price listed are available now. Clicking Details on any listing opens Kimberly’s full temperament profile, covering the puppy’s energy level, how it responds to new people and other dogs, and what training approach she recommends for that specific animal. Reserving a puppy requires a deposit. Klarna is available at checkout for families who want to split the purchase over time. Credit card payments are preferred for deposits. Cash or card for full payments.

Step 3: Bring your puppy home.

Puppies go home at 8 weeks. No puppy leaves before that point, regardless of family request or scheduling preference. When a puppy reaches its 8-week developmental window, it is ready to separate from its litter. It is also the best time to begin building strong bonds with their new family. Eight weeks is our standard and we don’t make exceptions. Blue Diamond connects families living farther away with vetted transporters who safely deliver the puppies. Your puppy leaves with a health certificate, full vaccination record and their deworming documentation. Also, Kimberly’s written temperament profile along with the litter’s parent health testing paperwork.

Cavapoo Care Guide

Exercise

Adult Cavapoos only need 30 to 45 minutes of daily exercise. Taking the pup on a morning walk and an afternoon play session is all that is needed. Cavapoos are not highly active dogs, and they don’t need long runs to be satisfied. What they need is consistent daily movement paired with mental engagement. Without one or the other, boredom sets in quickly and often shows up as barking or chewing.

Puppies need far less planned exercise than adults. A common guideline for small-breed puppies is 5 minutes of leash walking per month of age, twice per day. This helps to protect developing joints. Skip the long runs and jumping until the dog is at least 12 months old.

Grooming

F1 Cavapoos need brushing two to three times per week and a professional grooming appointment every 10 to 12 weeks. Their wavy coats are lower-maintenance than the F1b, but they still mat without regular attention, particularly behind the ears and under the legs where friction is highest.

F1b Cavapoos need brushing three to four times per week and a professional grooming appointment every 6 to 8 weeks. The curlier coat holds loose hair rather than shedding it, which is good for allergy sufferers but means those tangles have nowhere to go unless you brush them out. Daily brushing is better for F1b coats. Using a slicker brush in combination with a metal comb is the two tools that work well. We recommend you introduce brushing during the first week at home. This also helps them tolerate being groomed far better as adults.

Ear care is required for this breed. Floppy ears trap moisture, creating ideal conditions for infection. Check ears weekly. Clean with a vet-approved solution when you notice wax buildup or any mild odor. If you notice redness in your puppy’s ears this could be a serious condition that requires a vet visit.

Feeding

Cavapoo puppies need a high-quality small-breed dog food. Small-breed puppy food supports healthy growth and appropriate calorie intake. After 12 months your dog can be transitioned to a small-breed adult dog food. We recommend you feed your adult dog two meals per day. A 15-pound adult Cavapoo eats approximately 1/2 to 3/4 cup of dry food daily, depending on the formula’s caloric density. Check the feeding guide on your specific food and adjust based on body condition. Cavapoos are prone to weight gain if portion sizes are not monitored, and excess weight can put stress on the dog’s small joints.

Training

Cavapoos are among the easier breeds to train. The Poodle’s intelligence and the Cavalier’s desire to please combine to create a dog that learns commands quickly and genuinely enjoys the training session. Short sessions beat long ones. Ten to fifteen minutes twice a day, with varied drills and positive reinforcement, works well for this breed. Training should begin on the first day home.

Cavapoos are known for their separation anxiety. So prevention should begin in the first week. Leave the puppy alone for short periods, gradually increasing duration over several weeks. Crate training helps because it gives the dog a defined, safe space rather than the run of a home that feels too large when you’re not in it.

What Cavapoo Families Are Saying

Cavapoo FAQs

Q:How much does a Cavapoo cost?

A:Blue Diamond Cavapoo puppies start at $2,995. That price reflects DNA genetic health testing of parent dogs, ENS training from day 3 through day 16, and Kimberly's individual temperament evaluation for every puppy. Klarna is available at checkout for families who want to split the cost over time.

Q:How big does a Cavapoo get?

A:Adult Cavapoos at Blue Diamond weigh 12 to 20 pounds and stand 9 to 12 inches at the shoulder. The size of the Poodle parent, Miniature or Toy, plays the largest role in where a specific puppy lands in that range. Full size is reached between 12 and 18 months.

Q:Are Cavapoos good for people with allergies?

A:Cavapoos are low-allergen dogs. F1 Cavapoos have a wavy coat that sheds minimally and is considered semi-hypoallergenic. F1b Cavapoos have a curlier coat with more Poodle genetics and are considered hypoallergenic. No dog is 100% allergen-free, but Cavapoos are among the better choices for families with mild to moderate dog allergies. If allergies are a real concern, spending time with an adult Cavapoo before purchasing is the best way to know if you will have a reaction.

Q:What is the difference between an F1 and F1b Cavapoo?

A:An F1 Cavapoo means the dog is 50% Cavalier King Charles Spaniel and 50% Poodle. An F1b Cavapoo is backcrossed with a Poodle. This means they are approximately 75% Poodle and 25% Cavalier. The F1b coat is curlier and lower-shedding. The F1b temperament carries slightly more Poodle energy and benefits from more mental stimulation. Both generations are affectionate family dogs. The choice usually comes down to allergy sensitivity and grooming preference.

Q:Do Cavapoos shed?

A:F1 Cavapoos shed minimally. F1b Cavapoos shed very little to none. The curlier the coat, the less hair ends up on furniture and clothing, because loose hair stays trapped in the surrounding coat rather than falling out. That trapped hair still needs to be brushed out regularly to prevent matting.

Q:How long do Cavapoos live?

A:Cavapoos have a typical lifespan of 12 to 15 years. Maintaining a healthy weight, feeding a quality small-breed diet, scheduling annual vet visits, and staying ahead of dental care are the factors most within an owner's control for reaching the upper end of that range.

Q:Are Cavapoos good with kids?

A:Cavapoos are gentle and patient with children. Their small size means interactions with toddlers and very young children should be supervised. A 15-pound dog can still knock a small child down if it gets excited. The breed is not prone to snapping or rough play, and with appropriate introductions and consistent manners training, Cavapoos are one of the better small-breed options for active family homes.

Q:Do Cavapoos have separation anxiety?

A:Separation anxiety is a real tendency in Cavapoos, not a breed myth. These dogs bond closely with their people and don't handle long periods alone particularly well without preparation. The fix is early training: start leaving your puppy alone for short periods in the first weeks at home and build from there. Crate training helps. A dog with a defined safe space handles being alone better than one with free run of an empty house.

Q:Are Cavapoos good apartment dogs?

A:Yes, because of their smaller size, moderate exercise needs, and calmer personality, Cavapoos are a better fit for apartment living. They don't need a yard. Daily walks and play sessions cover their physical needs. The one real consideration for apartment life is barking. Cavapoos aren't big barkers, but any dog with unaddressed separation anxiety or boredom will find ways to express it. Exercise and training keep that in check.

Q:Can Cavapoos be therapy dogs?

A:Yes. Cavapoos are one of the more natural fits for therapy work because of the Cavalier temperament. They're calm in unfamiliar environments, comfortable with strangers, and attuned to human emotion in a way that not all breeds are. To work as a certified therapy dog, a Cavapoo needs specific training and certification through a recognized therapy dog organization. Blue Diamond families have placed Cavapoos in therapy settings with good results.

Q:How often do Cavapoos need to be groomed?

A:F1 Cavapoos do well on a 10 to 12-week professional grooming schedule with brushing two to three times per week at home. F1b Cavapoos need professional grooming every 6 to 8 weeks and brushing three to four times per week at home. Skipping home brushing between appointments leads to matting that forces the groomer to shave the dog rather than trim it.

Q:What are the biggest health concerns for Cavapoos?

A:The most important health consideration is mitral valve disease, inherited from the Cavalier parent. Responsible breeders cardiac-screen Cavalier parent dogs before pairing. Other conditions to be aware of include syringomyelia, progressive retinal atrophy, patellar luxation, ear infections, and dental disease. Annual vet checkups that include a cardiac listen are the owner's primary tool for catching heart issues early.

Q:What age do Blue Diamond puppies go home?

A:Our standard is that puppies go home at 8 weeks. No puppy leaves before that, regardless of family preference or scheduling. Eight weeks is the age when puppies are ready to separate from the litter, process new environments, and begin building attachment to a new family without lasting stress. No exceptions.

Q:Do you offer transport or delivery?

A:Blue Diamond connects families outside driving range with vetted transporters who specialize in puppy delivery and have a track record of safe, low-stress travel for young dogs. Flight nanny options are available in some cases. Transport details and availability are confirmed when you reserve a puppy.

Q:Male or female - which should I choose?

A:Both make great companions, and the temperament difference between male puppies and females in this breed is less pronounced than in many others. Males tend to be slightly more openly affectionate. Females lean slightly more independent without being distant. Kimberly's individual temperament profiles give families far more useful information for this decision than the gender label alone. A highly affectionate female and a more reserved male can easily come from the same litter.

Ready to Bring Home a Cavapoo?

Browse the litters posted above or sign up for the newsletter to get notified the moment new puppies become available. Blue Diamond Cavapoo litters fill quickly once Kimberly’s temperament reports go live.

Starting at $2,995. Reach Blue Diamond through the contact page with any questions before reserving.

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