
Boxer
AKC · Working
View breedSide-by-side comparison from peer-reviewed sources. Lifespan and health figures draw on Royal Veterinary College VetCompass and AKC breed data.
The numbers that most change day-to-day care. A citrus border marks a meaningful advantage.
Top 3 prevalence-ranked conditions for each breed. See each breed's full health profile for screening schedules and source data.
Description and veterinary guidance for Degenerative Myelopathy land in Phase 4. Prevalence and onset-age figures above are drawn from https://ofa.org/diseases/disease-statistics/.
Description and veterinary guidance for Adult-Onset Cardiac Disease (Echocardiogram) land in Phase 4. Prevalence and onset-age figures above are drawn from https://ofa.org/diseases/disease-statistics/.
Description and veterinary guidance for Hypothyroidism land in Phase 4. Prevalence and onset-age figures above are drawn from https://ofa.org/diseases/disease-statistics/.
Description and veterinary guidance for Patellar Luxation land in Phase 4. Prevalence and onset-age figures above are drawn from https://ofa.org/diseases/disease-statistics/.
Description and veterinary guidance for Cataracts land in Phase 4. Prevalence and onset-age figures above are drawn from https://ofa.org/diseases/disease-statistics/.
Description and veterinary guidance for Congenital Cardiac Defect land in Phase 4. Prevalence and onset-age figures above are drawn from https://ofa.org/diseases/disease-statistics/.
The Yorkshire Terrier tends to live about 2.0 years longer on average than the Boxer (13.3 vs 11.3 years).
Size gap is meaningful: the Boxer is large and the Yorkshire Terrier is toy. Expect different considerations for housing, travel, and vet-care costs.
Both breeds have similar energy requirements — roughly 60 minutes of daily activity keeps either satisfied.
Boxers carry a heavier breed-specific health burden (1 high-prevalence conditions vs 0 for the Yorkshire Terrier). Budget for screening accordingly.