Puppies For Sale In Charleston, South Carolina

Families in Charleston, SC searching for puppies for sale find that the breed decision is more consequential here than it is in most cities, because the climate does not give much room for a mismatch to work itself out. Charleston is the kind of city where a dog becomes part of the daily rhythm fast, woven into routines built around city parks, leash walks, and the indoor hours that a a large city produces. The South Carolina Lowcountry is not a forgiving climate for dogs whose coats, energy levels, or respiratory systems are better suited to cooler or drier conditions, and families who work that reality into the breed decision from the start land in a better place than those who figure it out after the fact. We deliver to families throughout South Carolina.

Puppy For Sale

Available Puppies For Charleston, SC

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

Male

9 Weeks Old

Breed: Standard Bernedoodle

05/08/2026

$2995.00

Male

9 Weeks Old

Breed: Standard Bernedoodle

05/08/2026

$2995.00

Male

9 Weeks Old

Breed: Standard Bernedoodle

05/08/2026

$2995.00

Male

9 Weeks Old

Breed: Standard Bernedoodle

05/08/2026

$2995.00

Female

9 Weeks Old

Breed: Standard Bernedoodle

05/08/2026

$2995.00

Female

9 Weeks Old

Breed: Standard Bernedoodle

05/08/2026

$2995.00

Male

8 Weeks Old

Breed: F1 Cavapoo

05/15/2026

$2995.00

Male

8 Weeks Old

Breed: F1 Cavapoo

05/15/2026

$2995.00

Male

8 Weeks Old

Breed: F1 Mini Bernedoodle

05/11/2026

$2995.00

Male

8 Weeks Old

Breed: F1 Mini Bernedoodle

05/11/2026

$2995.00

Male

8 Weeks Old

Breed: F1 Mini Bernedoodle

05/11/2026

$2995.00

Male

8 Weeks Old

Breed: F1 Mini Bernedoodle

05/11/2026

$2995.00

Male

8 Weeks Old

Breed: F1 Mini Bernedoodle

05/11/2026

$2995.00

Male

16 Weeks Old

Breed: Bernese Mountain Dog

03/21/2026

$2595.00

Female

10 Weeks Old

Breed: Standard Bernedoodle

04/28/2026

$2995.00

our breeds

Cavapoo Puppy

Cavapoos

Cavapoos suit families across the South Carolina Lowcountry who want a dog whose temperament holds steady in the environments a large city produces on an ordinary day. Busy sidewalks, shared elevator spaces, leash-only parks, and the unpredictable noise and stimuli of dense urban living are conditions this breed navigates without needing active management through each encounter. Their moderate energy and genuine preference for being near people make them a practical fit for the summer ownership calendar here, when outdoor time concentrates into the early morning window and the rest of the day belongs indoors.

Mini Goldendoodles

Mini Goldendoodles suit the pace of a a large city well, scaling to apartment living while still carrying enough energy and personality to feel like a real dog rather than a low-maintenance compromise. A morning dog run or city park session before heat and humidity build handles most of their daily exercise needs, which keeps the summer schedule manageable compared to larger breeds with higher demands. Coat maintenance requires consistent attention in this climate regardless of trim length, because humidity works into the coat in ways that accumulate between sessions and create matting and skin issues that owners from drier regions typically don't anticipate.

Mini Goldendoodle Puppy
Goldendoodle Puppy

Standard Goldendoodles

Standard Goldendoodles suit Charleston families with the space and daily routine to support a larger, active breed, but the coat demands in this climate deserve honest consideration before committing. This city receives 44.5 inches of rainfall per year, and the sustained humidity that comes with that rainfall works into a Standard Goldendoodle's full coat in ways that accelerate matting and create skin conditions if the grooming schedule slips. Families who plan the maintenance commitment in from the start find this breed thrives; those who underestimate the humidity's effect on the coat tend to discover the problem during the first summer.

Micro Bernedoodles

Micro Bernedoodles bring the Bernese Mountain Dog's calm, people-oriented temperament into a frame sized for apartment living and the compact daily pace of a city with 139714 people, without the heat and space management challenges the larger sizes carry. Their smaller build handles indoor time well, which matters across the months when outdoor access stays limited to early morning windows before conditions climb. The hybrid coat still needs humidity-aware grooming, but the overall heat and space management challenge is considerably more tractable than it is for either Mini or Standard Bernedoodles in this climate.

Micro Bernedoodle Puppy
Mini Bernedoodle Puppy

Mini Bernedoodles

Mini Bernedoodles carry cold-weather heritage from the Bernese Mountain Dog side that shows up most directly in summer, when heat and humidity in a city built across Atlantic coastal area meet a breed built for conditions at the other end of the temperature spectrum. Outdoor time needs to stay concentrated in the early morning from late spring through early fall, and consistent air conditioning covers the other half of what responsible summer management requires. Families who plan both of those realities into their routine before bringing a Mini Bernedoodle home find it to be a loyal, adaptable companion for city life.

Standard Bernedoodles

Standard Bernedoodles require more deliberate climate planning than any other breed we raise, and the 220 sunny days this city logs annually do not change what summer actually demands of this breed. Their thick double coat holds moisture in humid air in ways that compound heat retention, which means outdoor time from late spring through early fall needs to stay limited to the early morning and reliable air conditioning is a practical health requirement rather than a comfort preference. Families who are clear-eyed about that commitment before they start tend to make it work; those who go in hoping the summer won't be as hard as described tend to find it harder.

Standard Bernedoodle Puppy
French Bulldog Puppy

French Bulldogs

French Bulldogs are among the most naturally suited breeds for daily life in Charleston-North Charleston, where most dogs spend their days in apartments, shared hallways, elevator rides, and on busy leash walks that don't leave room for a breed that needs space, extended outdoor sessions, or predictable quiet. Their preference for indoor living lines up directly with the ownership calendar this climate produces, where heat and humidity shrink outdoor access to the early morning for months at a stretch. Heat and humidity together create a harder respiratory environment for brachycephalic breeds than dry heat at the same temperature, which means reliable air conditioning is a genuine health consideration for this breed in Charleston rather than just a comfort.

Bernese Mountain Dog

Bernese Mountain Dogs are cold-weather dogs built for Alpine conditions, and summers that reach 88 degrees alongside persistent humidity represent the conditions this breed is least equipped to handle. Their thick double coat holds moisture in humid air in ways that compound heat stress rather than simply adding to it, and outdoor time from late spring through early fall needs to stay limited to the early morning hours before the heat index climbs. Families who choose a Bernese Mountain Dog here go in knowing that summer demands reliable air conditioning, significantly shortened outdoor sessions, and a management commitment that runs noticeably heavier than the rest of the year.

Bernese Mountain Dog Puppy
Blue Diamond Family Pups Raised Puppy

Why Blue Diamond Family Pups

Daily life with a dog in Charleston-North Charleston organizes around what the city offers rather than what a yard or quieter neighborhood might. City parks, designated dog runs, and leash-only paths carry most of the exercise load, and the volume of dogs, people, and unpredictable stimuli that come with a city this size mean breed temperament around strangers and other animals is not a secondary consideration but a primary one. Families who match the breed to the actual daily environment here, rather than an idealized version of it, find the routine clicks into place quickly; those who don't tend to spend months adjusting to a mismatch that doesn't resolve on its own.

January highs around 57 degrees mean winters here are mild and put almost no management pressure on dog ownership compared to what families in four-season cities navigate. The season that shapes ownership most directly is summer, when heat and humidity arrive early, stay for months, and push outdoor activity into the early morning window well before most families have finished their first cup of coffee. Afternoon and evening thunderstorms are a regular part of the summer calendar here rather than occasional disruptions, and breeds that handle indoor time with patience and calm are far easier to live with across those months than breeds that don't.

Charleston's population supports a depth of veterinary practices, grooming specialists, and training programs distributed across most neighborhoods that smaller markets in the South Carolina Lowcountry don't match. That infrastructure matters practically for dogs in this climate, where humidity-related coat conditions and heat-index health monitoring benefit from providers who work with these presentations regularly. Identifying the right groomer for a textured coat in humid conditions and a vet comfortable with brachycephalic breed care before the first summer is worth the effort rather than waiting until a problem develops.

Nearby Cities

If you are not located directly in Charleston, that is not a problem. Blue Diamond delivers and sells puppies to families throughout the South Carolina Lowcountry, including Seabrook Island SC, and Kiawah Island SC.

We also serve all of South Carolina, See our puppies for sale in South Carolina.

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How Puppy Delivery Works to Charleston, SC

Getting a puppy from our farm in Sugar Creek, Ohio to your family in Charleston is easier than most people expect. 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

Ground transport is a popular and straightforward choice for families in Charleston. 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 throughout a trip of 10 to 12 hours. 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 Charleston, they are healthy, calm, and ready to meet their new family. We deliver to all zip codes in Charleston, including 29401, 29402, 29403, 29405, 29406, 29407, 29409, and all of the other 14 zip codes.

Flight Nanny

For families who want their puppy to arrive as quickly as possible, a flight nanny is an excellent option. 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 Charleston families, flight nanny delivery is available directly to Charleston International Airport, and Hilton Head Airport. Families who choose this option often have their puppy in their arms within 24 hours of the puppy leaving our farm. 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.

Farm Pickup

Families who want to visit our farm and take their puppy home in person are welcome to do so, by appointment only. Our farm sits in Sugar Creek, Ohio. 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.

See What Our Puppy Parents Have To Say Near You!

Frequently Asked Questions

Q:How do Charleston families get a puppy from your farm in Ohio?

A:Three delivery options connect our farm in Sugar Creek, Ohio to Charleston, SC, and families use all three depending on timing and preference. Ground transport departs every Tuesday in purpose-built, climate-controlled vehicles with door-to-door delivery; flight nanny service brings your puppy in-cabin directly to Charleston International Airport, and Hilton Head Airport; and farm pickup is available by appointment only for families who want to see our operation in person before taking a puppy home. Pickup at the farm carries a 7% Ohio sales tax that does not apply to either delivery option.

Q:Which of your breeds are the best fit for Charleston's climate?

A:Summer heat and humidity are the dominant climate variables for breed selection in Charleston, and July highs averaging 88 degrees understate actual conditions once the heat index is factored in. French Bulldogs fit the indoor-weighted daily routine this climate produces as long as reliable air conditioning is in place, though the humid air adds respiratory load for brachycephalic breeds beyond what dry heat at the same temperature creates. Cavapoos and Mini Goldendoodles adapt well to a summer schedule built around early morning outdoor time and indoor hours for the rest of the day, while Bernese Mountain Dogs and Standard Bernedoodles require honest planning for a cold-weather breed spending summers in a humid city. January highs around 57 degrees keep winters mild and largely out of the breed decision entirely.

Q:How does the size of Charleston change what dog ownership actually looks like day to day?

A:A city of 139714 people concentrates dogs, owners, and shared outdoor spaces in ways that shape what breeds work well here and which ones don't. Dog runs fill during peak morning hours, sidewalks carry constant foot traffic and unpredictable encounters, and leash laws mean outdoor exercise happens on structure rather than open space, which rewards breeds whose temperament is calm and consistent in dense public environments. Summer layers another constraint on top of that, because heat and humidity reduce the outdoor window to the early morning, so families in Charleston need a breed that handles both the urban density and the indoor-heavy summer schedule without friction.

Q:What does year-round puppy care look like for families managing Charleston's climate?

A:The practical weight of dog ownership in Charleston concentrates in summer, when heat and humidity define the daily schedule for months. Across the South Carolina Lowcountry, those conditions arrive early, stay long, and make coat care, outdoor time windows, hydration, and for brachycephalic breeds, air conditioning requirements that cross into genuine health territory, the active management priorities from late spring through early fall. Mild winters make cold-weather management a non-issue by comparison, which means families can direct most of their planning energy toward summer preparation rather than splitting it across seasons.

Q:Can Charleston families visit the farm before choosing a puppy?

A:Farm visits are welcome and by appointment only, and families from across the South Carolina Lowcountry make the trip to Sugar Creek, Ohio each year to meet the dogs and walk through the kennel and play areas before committing. Dean and Esther's family runs the farm alongside cattle and the horse Trigger, so arriving means stepping onto a real working farm where five kids have grown up hands-on with every breed we raise. Families who prefer not to travel can request a virtual tour that gives a direct look at the kennel, the indoor and outdoor play areas, and the puppies themselves before making a decision.

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

A:Charleston families typically find Blue Diamond after searching closer to home first and running into the gap between what most breeders say and what they can actually demonstrate. All parent dogs are health and genetic tested, clear of hereditary diseases, and selected for temperament with the same care applied to physical health; every mother dog also receives a full veterinary physical every six months as a scheduled baseline rather than a response to a problem. Every puppy goes through Early Neurological Stimulation from day two through day sixteen, is evaluated by a professional dog trainer before being listed, and leaves our farm vaccinated, dewormed, microchipped, and backed by a one-year health guarantee. We're a licensed Ohio breeder running a climate-controlled kennel where five kids help socialize every litter from birth through go-home day, and our partner network of trusted family breeders means more breed options and better availability without compromising on how the puppies are raised.