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Comparison

German Shorthaired Pointer vs Havanese

Side-by-side comparison from peer-reviewed sources. Lifespan and health figures draw on Royal Veterinary College VetCompass and AKC breed data.

At a glance

Side-by-side

The numbers that most change day-to-day care. A citrus border marks a meaningful advantage.

Large

German Shorthaired Pointer

Lifespan13.4 yrrange 13–14
SizeLarge
Weight45–70 lb20.4–31.8 kg
Height21–25 in53.3–63.5 cm
Senior at6 yrgeriatric at 10
AKC groupSporting
Energy5/590 min/day
Trainability5/5
Shedding3/5
With kids5/5
With other dogs4/5
Small

Havanese

Lifespan14.5 yrrange 14–15
SizeSmall
Weight7–13 lb3.2–5.9 kg
Height8.5–11.5 in21.6–29.2 cm
Senior at8 yrgeriatric at 12
AKC groupToy
Energy3/545 min/day
Trainability4/5
Shedding2/5
With kids5/5
With other dogs5/5
Health

Common health issues

Top 3 prevalence-ranked conditions for each breed. See each breed's full health profile for screening schedules and source data.

German Shorthaired Pointer

  • Low prevalencetypical onset ~2 yr

    Elbow Dysplasia

    Description and veterinary guidance for Elbow Dysplasia land in Phase 4. Prevalence and onset-age figures above are drawn from https://ofa.org/diseases/disease-statistics/.

  • Low prevalencetypical onset ~7 yr

    Cataracts

    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/.

  • Low prevalencetypical onset ~1 yr

    Congenital Cardiac Defect

    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/.

Havanese

  • High prevalencetypical onset ~5 yr

    Periodontal Disease

    Description and veterinary guidance for Periodontal Disease land in Phase 4. Prevalence and onset-age figures above are drawn from https://ofa.org/diseases/disease-statistics/.

  • Moderatetypical onset ~5 yr

    Hypothyroidism

    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/.

  • Moderatetypical onset ~6 yr

    Adult-Onset Cardiac Disease (Echocardiogram)

    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/.

Synthesis

Which is right for you?

The Havanese tends to live about 1.1 years longer on average than the German Shorthaired Pointer (14.5 vs 13.4 years).

Size gap is meaningful: the German Shorthaired Pointer is large and the Havanese is small. Expect different considerations for housing, travel, and vet-care costs.

Energy levels differ significantly. German Shorthaired Pointers need substantially more daily exercise than Havaneses — plan for 90+ active minutes per day with the German Shorthaired Pointer.

Havaneses carry a heavier breed-specific health burden (1 high-prevalence conditions vs 0 for the German Shorthaired Pointer). Budget for screening accordingly.