Puppies For Sale In Spring, Texas

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Families searching for puppies for sale in Spring, TX are navigating a market where listings look more credible online than they turn out to be in person. Spring is the kind of place where a dog becomes part of the daily fabric quickly, fitting naturally into neighborhood walks, weekend routines, and the outdoor character that the Texas blackland prairie provides. Summer is a real factor in the breed decision here. July highs that regularly reach 94 degrees make heat tolerance something families need to think through before they choose a puppy, not after. We deliver to families throughout Texas, and all three of our delivery options are available to Spring.

Puppy For Sale

Available Puppies For Spring, TX

All puppies displayed here can be delivered right to your door in Spring, TX. 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

15 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 are built for exactly the kind of life most Spring families are already living. Gentle enough for households with young children and adaptable enough to shift their energy to the pace of the day, they settle into the rhythms of a a mid-sized city community without much friction. Coat care is a genuine commitment in a humid climate, and Spring families should plan on more frequent grooming appointments than they might need in a drier part of the country.

Mini Goldendoodles

Mini Goldendoodles have a strong track record with families who want a dog that keeps up outdoors when the weather cooperates and shifts comfortably to indoor life when it doesn't. The warm humid summers and mild winters here means real stretches where outdoor time gets shorter, and this breed handles that mix without losing its temperament. Humidity does accelerate coat matting, so a regular grooming schedule is less optional and more just part of ownership in this climate.

Mini Goldendoodle Puppy
Goldendoodle Puppy

Standard Goldendoodles

Standard Goldendoodles are a higher-energy breed, and they do best with families who have the space and schedule to give them consistent exercise year round. They manage the variable seasons in Texas reasonably well, though summer heat and humidity together mean early morning or evening walks become the practical standard for several months. Coat care is a real ongoing commitment in this climate, and families going in with that expectation tend to have a much smoother experience.

Micro Bernedoodles

Micro Bernedoodles carry the calm, affectionate personality of their Bernese heritage at a size that works well for families who want that temperament without the full-size commitment. In a community like Spring, where word travels and daily neighborhood contact is part of the rhythm, a dog this steady fits in naturally. Pay close attention to grooming in humid weather. Their coat mats more readily than it would somewhere drier, and staying ahead of it is far easier than catching up.

Micro Bernedoodle Puppy
Mini Bernedoodle Puppy

Mini Bernedoodles

Mini Bernedoodles are a natural fit for the a mid-sized city pace that defines most Spring neighborhoods. Social and steady, they're comfortable with the kind of daily routine that smaller community life tends to produce. A familiar walk, familiar faces, and a reliable family schedule make up the day. Summer heat does affect them, and limiting midday outdoor time during the warmest months, along with consistent access to shade and water, is practical management rather than overcaution.

Standard Bernedoodles

Standard Bernedoodles are striking dogs with a loyal, affectionate personality to match, but honest placement matters in this climate. Mountain-origin dogs feel the heat differently than breeds adapted to warm weather, and Spring's combination of summer heat and high humidity creates conditions that are truly challenging for a dog with this much coat. Families who bring a Standard Bernedoodle home need to commit fully to air conditioning, shaded outdoor areas, and careful management of outdoor exposure from late spring through early fall. Families who can do that get a deeply devoted companion. The breed earns the effort.

Standard Bernedoodle Puppy
French Bulldog Puppy

French Bulldogs

French Bulldogs are popular across the Gulf Coast Texas area, and the indoor-lifestyle fit is a big part of why they work here. Their brachycephalic airways make summer heat and humidity a medical concern, not just a comfort issue, and families need to plan their entire warm-weather routine around a dog that lives indoors from late spring through early fall. Air conditioning is not optional for this breed. Outdoor time happens in the cooler parts of the day and in the cooler months. Families who go in with that understanding find French Bulldogs an excellent match for the rest of the year.

Bernese Mountain Dog

Bernese Mountain Dogs are one of the most requested breeds we place, and the climate questions are worth addressing directly. Summer in a hot, humid climate is a real challenge for this breed, and the humidity compounds the heat in ways that matter for a dog with this much coat. Families in Spring need a clear plan before the puppy comes home. Full air conditioning, shaded outdoor space, and real discipline about limiting outdoor exposure during the warmest months are the baseline. Families who commit to that management get a calm, loyal, deeply affectionate dog. The breed delivers on every quality it's known for, but the climate reality here requires honest preparation.

Bernese Mountain Dog Puppy
Blue Diamond Family Pups Raised Puppy

Why Blue Diamond Family Pups

Raising a puppy in a a mid-sized city community has a rhythm that larger cities don't. The pace is steadier, the neighborhood is familiar, and the daily walk becomes part of both the dog's routine and the family's. What most Spring owners find is that a dog fits into that structure more naturally than they expected, and that the close-knit character of the community shapes everything from which green spaces they use to the neighbors they'll meet along the way. In a community this size, families tend to know each other, and a dog accelerates that process faster than almost anything else.

204 sunny days a year gives families and dogs real outdoor opportunity, but the picture in a hot, humid climate is more specific than just counting sunshine. The warmest months require deliberate management of when outdoor activity happens. Early morning and evening walks become the standard for much of the year, and the breeds that handle humidity well get far more outdoor time than those that don't. Matching a dog's tolerance to the actual conditions in Spring is one of the most practical decisions a family makes before the puppy arrives, and it pays off every single day through summer.

Community scale shapes the ownership experience in ways that aren't always obvious at first. Smaller communities like Spring often mean more time outdoors with a dog, with neighborhood contact, school drop-offs, and familiar routes all adding up to daily socialization that formal programs rarely match. The Gulf Coast Texas character of the area also means outdoor seasons have a clear rhythm, and a breed that fits the climate comfortably becomes a genuine part of how the family moves through each part of the year, not just the easy months.

Nearby Cities

If you are not located directly in Spring, that is not a problem. Blue Diamond delivers and sells puppies to families throughout the Gulf Coast Texas, including and Porter Heights TX.

We also serve all of Texas, See our puppies for sale in Texas and also find puppies in Houston, TX.

Find Puppies In Your Local Communites

How Puppy Delivery Works to Spring, TX

Getting a puppy from our farm in Sugar Creek, Ohio to your family in Spring is easier than most people expect. For families further from Ohio, our flight nanny service is the fastest and most personal way to get your puppy home, often delivering within 24 hours. Ground delivery is also available for families who prefer it. Every puppy receives a full veterinary check before leaving our care, and all three delivery options get your puppy to you safely.

Flight Nanny

For families in Spring, the flight nanny option is hard to beat. A dedicated flight nanny will fly with your puppy in-cabin from Ohio directly 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. There is no cargo hold, no layovers without supervision, and no uncertainty. For Spring families, flight nanny delivery is available directly to George Bush Intercontinental Airport, and William P. Hobby 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. We serve all zip codes in Spring, including 77373, 77379, 77380, 77381, 77382, 77383, 77386, and all of the other 5 zip codes.

Ground Transport

Ground transport is available to Spring and is a comfortable, well-managed option for families who prefer door-to-door delivery over an airport pickup. 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 full 20 to 22 hours journey. 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. Ground deliveries depart every Tuesday, so reserve your puppy and have delivery scheduled by Monday and your puppy is on its way that week. You will receive updates throughout the journey so you always know where your puppy is and when to expect them.

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 does puppy delivery work to Spring, TX?

A:Getting a puppy from our farm in Sugar Creek, Ohio to Spring is manageable through any of the three options we offer, and most families find the process easier than they expected going in. Ground transport is the option many Spring families in this part of Texas choose first. Our ground transport partner specializes exclusively in puppy delivery and uses purpose-built, climate-controlled vehicles where each puppy travels in its own individual crate. Drivers make scheduled stops along the route for breaks and health checks, and you receive updates throughout the trip so you always know where your puppy is and when to expect them. By the time they arrive at your door in Spring, they are healthy, calm, and ready to meet the family. Farm pickup is available for families who want to visit in person, and those visits are by appointment only. Puppies picked up at our farm in Sugar Creek, Ohio are subject to a 7% Ohio sales tax that does not apply to either delivery option. Flight nanny service is available for families who prefer a faster handoff. A dedicated flight nanny flies with your puppy in-cabin from Ohio to George Bush Intercontinental Airport, and William P. Hobby Airport. The puppy stays in the cabin the entire flight and never goes near the cargo hold, and you receive updates before and during the flight so you know exactly when to be at the airport. Every puppy receives a full veterinary check before leaving our care, regardless of which delivery option you choose.

Q:Which breeds do you recommend for families in Spring, TX?

A:Summer is the honest starting point for any breed conversation in this climate. July highs around 94 degrees combined with the region's humidity create conditions that go beyond warm. The effective temperature a dog experiences is higher than the thermometer shows, and that changes the breed conversation considerably. Cavapoos and Mini Goldendoodles handle the full-year picture in Spring well. Both breeds are adaptable, tolerate indoor living during the hottest months without losing their temperament, and get real outdoor time when the weather allows. French Bulldogs are popular here, and we place them regularly. Their brachycephalic airways make summer heat and humidity a genuine medical concern rather than a minor inconvenience, and families need to plan for a dog that lives indoors from late spring through early fall. Families who go in with that expectation find French Bulldogs a good match for the climate overall. Bernese Mountain Dogs require honest acknowledgment in this region. The breed was developed in mountain climates, and the combination of summer heat and high humidity is deeply difficult for them. Families who commit to full air conditioning, shaded outdoor areas, and strict management of warm-weather outdoor exposure can make it work, but it requires real planning and real discipline through the summer months. Winter tells a different story. When January highs average around 63 degrees, outdoor time opens back up considerably for nearly every breed, and the same neighborhood that required careful management in July becomes accessible and comfortable again.

Q:What is it like raising a dog in Spring, TX?

A:Spring is a a mid-sized city community, and the daily dog ownership picture reflects that. Most families have a yard or easy access to neighborhood green space, which means puppies get outdoor exposure from the start. The Texas blackland prairie that shapes the area gives dogs a real landscape to explore when the weather cooperates. Summer does require adjustment. The warmest months mean shorter outdoor windows, earlier morning walks, and more indoor time than many new owners anticipate. Families who plan for that shift before the puppy arrives find the routine natural rather than frustrating. The rest of the year opens up considerably, and a breed matched well to this climate becomes a genuine partner in whatever outdoor rhythm the family already has. The close-knit pace of a community like this one means the dog gets woven into daily life faster than owners usually expect.

Q:What should Spring families know about local dog ownership before bringing a puppy home?

A:Paw care deserves more attention in a climate with 49.7 inches of annual rainfall than most new owners think about ahead of time. Wet ground and mud are a persistent reality through much of the year, and building a short post-walk grooming routine from the start keeps things manageable. It is a small habit that prevents a larger problem. Vet access is worth researching before the puppy comes home. In a a mid-sized city community, the nearest full-service veterinary clinic may not be immediately local, and knowing which practice you will use, and how far that drive is, matters when something needs attention on short notice. Winter brings a genuine change of pace for dog ownership here. The warmer months require careful management of outdoor time, but the cooler season gives families and dogs back the outdoor access that summer restricts. Planning the full-year ownership picture before the puppy arrives makes the summer adjustment feel like a temporary season rather than a permanent limitation.

Q:Can we visit your farm before committing to a puppy?

A:Families from throughout the Gulf Coast Texas area are welcome to visit, and those visits are by appointment only. Our farm sits on 10 acres in Sugar Creek, Ohio, and what families see when they come is a working farm where puppies are raised by a real family, not a production operation. The kennel, the outdoor play areas, the cattle, and Trigger, our horse, are all part of the visit. Dean and Esther are usually the ones showing families around, along with whichever kids are home that day, and those conversations tend to answer questions that no website fully covers. Families who aren't able to make the trip in person can request a virtual tour that gives a real look at the farm, the kennel, and how puppies are raised here. Either way, the goal is the same. Families leave knowing exactly what kind of place their puppy came from and who raised them.

Q:What credentials does Blue Diamond Family Pups have?

A:For Spring families working through their breeder options, the specifics of what we do are the answer to that question. Blue Diamond is a licensed dog breeder in the state of Ohio. Every puppy goes through Early Neurological Stimulation from day 2 through day 16, a proven protocol that gently challenges a puppy's developing nervous system during the window when it is most receptive to stimulation. The result is a puppy that is more adaptable and more confident when they arrive in their new home. Our kennel is climate-controlled year round, with large indoor and outdoor play areas where puppies develop the social skills that make the transition into a family smoother. Every mother dog receives a full veterinary physical every six months, and all dogs see a vet whenever something needs attention outside of that schedule. All parent dogs are health and genetic tested, clear of hereditary diseases. Our five kids are hands-on throughout the entire raising process, from birth through go-home day, which means socialization is continuous rather than tied to a single milestone. Blue Diamond partners with a select network of trusted family breeders who meet our same standards, which allows us to offer more breeds and more litters without changing how puppies are raised. Every puppy comes home with current vaccinations, deworming, a microchip, and a one-year health guarantee already in place. Before any puppy is added to our website or made available for selection, a professional dog trainer evaluates that specific puppy individually, and their findings become the written profile families read when they are making their choice. It is not a generic litter description but a real professional assessment of the exact dog they are considering.