Puppies For Sale In South Carolina

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Finding puppies for sale in South Carolina is a decision that carries real weight in a state where people know their neighbors and a breeder's reputation moves faster than any advertisement. Families in Columbia, Charleston, Greenville, and Spartanburg are raising dogs through some of the hottest, most humid summers in the Southeast, where July heat in the Midlands regularly pushes into the low 90s and the coastal humidity along the Charleston area makes the heat index a factor well into September. South Carolina's mild winters mean cold-weather management is rarely the challenge here, but the summer heat and humidity shape which breeds settle in well and which ones struggle from the day they arrive. We deliver to families all across South Carolina. Our goal before any puppy leaves our farm in Sugar Creek is making sure the match is right for the specific household it's going into.

Available Puppies For South Carolina

All puppies displayed here can be delivered right to your door in South Carolina. See the rest of our puppies by selecting a breed below.

8 Weeks Old

Breed: Standard Bernedoodle

04/04/2026

$2995.00

8 Weeks Old

Breed: Standard Bernedoodle

04/04/2026

$2995.00

8 Weeks Old

Breed: Standard Bernedoodle

04/04/2026

$2995.00

8 Weeks Old

Breed: Standard Bernedoodle

04/04/2026

$2995.00

8 Weeks Old

Breed: Standard Bernedoodle

04/04/2026

$2995.00

8 Weeks Old

Breed: Standard Bernedoodle

04/04/2026

$2995.00

8 Weeks Old

Breed: Standard Bernedoodle

04/04/2026

$2995.00

8 Weeks Old

Breed: Standard Bernedoodle

04/04/2026

$2995.00

8 Weeks Old

Breed: Standard Bernedoodle

04/04/2026

$2995.00

10 Weeks Old

Breed: Bernese Mountain Dog

03/21/2026

$2995.00

10 Weeks Old

Breed: Bernese Mountain Dog

03/24/2026

$2995.00

10 Weeks Old

Breed: French Bulldog

03/23/2026

$4595.00

10 Weeks Old

Breed: F1 Cavapoo

03/20/2026

$2995.00

10 Weeks Old

Breed: F1 Cavapoo

03/20/2026

$2995.00

12 Weeks Old

Breed: F1 Cavapoo

03/10/2026

$2995.00

our breeds

Cavapoos

Cavapoos are a strong fit for South Carolina families across most of the state. Their low-shedding coats handle the state's summer humidity with normal air conditioning and shade during peak afternoon heat, and the mild winters from Columbia to Charleston don't present any real challenge for this breed. Social and adaptable, they settle comfortably into South Carolina households whether the home is active with children in the Upstate suburbs or quieter along the Lowcountry coast.

Mini Goldendoodles

Mini Goldendoodles are a practical choice for active South Carolina families who want a dog that participates in outdoor life without struggling through the summer heat. Their low-shedding coats manage South Carolina's humidity better than heavier double-coated breeds, and their size works well across the range of homes in this state, from neighborhood properties in Greenville and Spartanburg to larger lots in the rural Midlands counties. Outdoor time should stay to the cooler morning and evening hours when temperatures climb into the upper 80s and 90s.

Standard Goldendoodles

Standard Goldendoodles are built for active South Carolina families with outdoor access and the space this breed benefits from. The trails, parks, and open land across the Upstate and the Francis Marion National Forest corridor give this breed room to work, and their coats manage South Carolina's seasonal range without heavy maintenance. Columbia and Charleston's peak summer heat calls for morning and evening outdoor activity rather than midday, but this breed handles South Carolina's mild winters without any management at all.

Micro Bernedoodles

Micro Bernedoodles top out around 20 pounds and carry the Bernedoodle's calm, steady temperament in a compact frame that cools down more efficiently with air conditioning than the larger sizes do. Their low-shedding coats handle South Carolina's humidity with reliable indoor cooling and shade during the hottest stretches, and the mild winters across the state are well within this breed's comfortable range. This is a manageable breed that suits South Carolina households in both the urban neighborhoods and the rural county communities.

Mini Bernedoodles

Mini Bernedoodles are a workable fit for South Carolina families who keep their homes consistently cool through the summer months and manage outdoor time with some intention. Cold-weather tolerance is built into this line, which is less of a critical advantage in South Carolina's mild winters but remains a real asset for Upstate families in Greenville and Spartanburg where winter temperatures run noticeably cooler than the coast. During July and August, when Columbia regularly pushes above 93°F with sustained humidity, this breed needs reliable air conditioning and limited midday outdoor activity to stay comfortable.

Bernedoodles

Standard Bernedoodles are most viable in South Carolina's Upstate counties, where summer temperatures run somewhat cooler than the Midlands and coast and the winters are closer to what this breed was developed for. Families in Columbia and Charleston face sustained heat and humidity from June through September that requires serious air conditioning, shade management, and strictly limited outdoor time; the coastal humidity along the Charleston area is among the most demanding conditions in the state for this breed. Upstate families in Greenville and Spartanburg who commit to careful summer management are in the most realistic position in South Carolina to raise this breed successfully.

French Bulldogs

French Bulldogs are indoor dogs, and South Carolina's summer heat and humidity make that especially important to understand before bringing this breed home. Columbia averages July highs near 93°F and the coastal humidity around Charleston compounds the heat well into the evening hours; this breed's respiratory sensitivity means they need reliable air conditioning and very limited outdoor time from June through September across the state. Inside a well-cooled South Carolina home they are calm, low-maintenance companions, and the mild winters from the Upstate to the Lowcountry mean cold-weather management is rarely a concern.

Bernese Mountain Dog

Bernese Mountain Dogs require an honest conversation about South Carolina's climate before any family commits. Their thick double coats are built for sustained cold, and the summer heat and humidity that defines most of the state from June through September, with Columbia averaging July highs near 93°F and coastal humidity pushing heat indices well above that along the eastern half of the state, pushes above what this breed handles comfortably without significant management. Upstate families in Greenville and Spartanburg are the best-positioned households in South Carolina for this breed, where summer temperatures run somewhat more moderate; families in Columbia and Charleston should be clear-eyed about the air conditioning commitment and the strict outdoor limits that South Carolina summers require for this breed.

Why Blue Diamond Family Pups

South Carolina is a state where people do business with people they know, and a breeder who can't show their work doesn't last long in communities built on referrals and repeat families. Blue Diamond started with a single Bichon female and six puppies, and every placement since then has come from families who came back or families who sent someone they cared about our way. Every parent dog at our farm is health and genetic tested with documentation on file, and every mother receives a full veterinary physical every six months, records that any South Carolina family can review before making a decision. Farm visits are open by appointment, because families who want to see where their puppy was raised and meet the dogs before committing are exactly the kind of families we want to work with.

See What Our Puppy Parents Have To Say Near You!

Cities In South Carolina We Deliver Puppies to

Frequently Asked Questions

Q:How do you get a puppy from your farm in Ohio all the way to South Carolina?

A:South Carolina families have three options for getting a puppy home, and we go through all of them before anything is finalized. Ground transport brings the puppy door-to-door in a climate-controlled van, with drive times running roughly 9 to 10 hours to Greenville and Spartanburg in the Upstate, 11 to 12 hours to Columbia, and 12 to 13 hours reaching Charleston and the coast. Farm pickup at our property in Sugar Creek is also available, and South Carolina families who'd rather combine a Columbus flight with the trip can fly in and make the 1.5-hour drive to Sugar Creek rather than the full drive from the Carolinas. A flight nanny travels in-cabin with your puppy and meets you at Columbia Metropolitan Airport, and pickup at the farm carries a 7% Ohio sales tax that doesn't apply to either delivery option.

Q:Which of your designer breeds are a good fit for South Carolina summers?

A:South Carolina summers are legitimately hot and humid statewide, with Columbia averaging July highs near 93°F and coastal humidity around Charleston pushing heat indices well above the air temperature through July and August. Cavapoos and Mini Goldendoodles are the most consistently manageable choices through South Carolina's summer months, with low-shedding coats and sizes that respond well to air conditioning and morning and evening outdoor scheduling. French Bulldogs are well-suited to South Carolina homes as indoor companions as long as they have reliable air conditioning and very limited outdoor exposure from June through September, which their temperament supports naturally. Bernese Mountain Dogs require careful planning across most of the state; Upstate families in Greenville and Spartanburg have more flexibility than those in Columbia or Charleston, but statewide heat and humidity push above what this breed handles comfortably without consistent air conditioning and strictly managed outdoor time.

Q:Can South Carolina families come see the farm before choosing a puppy?

A:Visits are by appointment only, and South Carolina families who make the trip to Sugar Creek are welcome to see the operation in person before committing. Once you arrive, Dean and Esther's family walks you through the working farm, including Dean's beef cattle, a horse named Trigger, and the climate-controlled kennel where every litter is raised and socialized. You'll spend real time with the puppies and see firsthand how our kids are part of a normal day on the farm, not a staged introduction. Families along the coast near Charleston who'd rather not make the full drive can schedule a virtual tour that covers the same ground.

Q:How long does it take to drive a puppy to South Carolina?

A:Ground transport from Sugar Creek to South Carolina runs roughly 9 to 10 hours to the Upstate near Greenville and Spartanburg, 11 to 12 hours to Columbia, and 12 to 13 hours reaching Charleston and the Lowcountry. The transport vans are climate-controlled the entire route, which matters especially for summer deliveries when South Carolina heat makes a properly managed transport the difference between a puppy that arrives settled and one that arrives stressed. Families receive updates during transit so there's no uncertainty about where the puppy is or how the trip is going. Most South Carolina deliveries wrap up the same day they depart from Sugar Creek.

Q:What comes with a Blue Diamond puppy on go-home day?

A:Every puppy goes home with up-to-date vaccinations, deworming, a microchip, and a 1-year health guarantee. Those are standard on every placement we do. The Heartbeat Puppy Pal is an add-on families can purchase before go-home day; it's a comfort toy the litter plays with in the days before leaving so it carries the scent of mom and the other puppies, and South Carolina families bringing a puppy home through a hot summer often find it helps the dog settle through those first warm, unfamiliar nights in a new home. It's not included automatically, but it's worth asking about when you're finalizing your pickup or delivery.

Q:How do you know which puppy is the right fit for my family?

A:Every puppy at Blue Diamond is evaluated by a professional dog trainer before go-home day, and that evaluation covers the individual dog, not the litter. The trainer's findings on each puppy's personality, energy level, and behavioral tendencies become that dog's written profile on our website, so a South Carolina family reading about a specific puppy is reading a real professional's assessment of exactly that animal before it ever arrives. South Carolina households vary considerably, from active families with kids and outdoor space in the Upstate foothills to quieter households in the Columbia suburbs or along the coast, and those differences shape the placement conversation from the start. See FAQ #7 for the full picture of what goes into every Blue Diamond placement.

Q:Why do South Carolina families choose Blue Diamond over other breeders?

A:South Carolina families who research a breeder carefully tend to ask the same questions, and Blue Diamond is built to answer all of them with documentation rather than assurances. We're a licensed Ohio dog breeder; every parent dog is health and genetic tested with documentation on file, and every mother dog receives a full veterinary physical every six months. Every puppy goes through Early Neurological Stimulation from days 2 through 16, building confidence and adaptability during the window when that investment produces the most lasting results, while our kids are hands-on with every litter from birth through go-home day so socialization is continuous rather than staged. Our climate-controlled kennel maintains stable conditions year-round; we partner with a trusted network of family breeders who meet our same standards so all eight breeds are available without compromise; every puppy comes with a 1-year health guarantee; and every dog is individually assessed by a professional trainer before placement, the same process described in FAQ #6. ---