Cavoodle Colors, Coat Types & Generations Explained

Naja Yehia

Dog Love · Cavoodle Guide 2026

Cavoodle Colours, Coat Types, Generations & What Really Matters Before You Choose One

Cavoodles are one of Australia's most loved companion dogs for a reason. They're sweet, affectionate, clever, and ridiculously photogenic — but not every Cavoodle coat, colour, or generation is the same.

If you're trying to understand straight vs wavy vs curly coats, the difference between F1 and F1B Cavoodles, which colours are common, and whether there really is a "best" kind of Cavoodle, this guide breaks it down in simple language.

At Dog Love, we work hands-on with coats every day through grooming and daycare. So this isn't breeder fluff. It's the practical version — the one that actually helps owners choose a Cavoodle that suits their home, their brushing routine, and their tolerance for maintenance.

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Two dogs at Dog Love in Tranmere
Different coats, different upkeep — and Cavoodles are a perfect example

Quick Answer

What is the best kind of Cavoodle?

  • There is no one "best" Cavoodle — only the best fit for your home, lifestyle, and grooming effort.
  • Wavy fleece coats are often the sweet spot for owners who want the classic teddy-bear look.
  • Curlier coats can be lower shedding, but they usually need more brushing and professional grooming.
  • Straighter coats can be easier in some ways, but often shed more and look less like the fluffy Cavoodle image people expect.
  • The best breeder is not the one selling the rarest colour — it's the one prioritising health testing, structure, and temperament first.
Dog Love insight: Most people obsess over colour first, then get shocked by the grooming. Coat type matters more than colour if you actually want an easier day-to-day life.

Breed Basics

What is a Cavoodle?

A Cavoodle is a cross between a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel and a Poodle, usually Toy or Miniature. They became especially popular in Australia because they combine the affectionate nature of the Cavalier with the intelligence and lower-shedding coat influence of the Poodle.

That sounds simple — but the reality is that Cavoodles can vary a lot. Coat texture, size, shedding, face shape, and grooming needs can all differ depending on the parents, the generation, and what traits a breeder is selecting for.

That's why two Cavoodles can both be adorable and still be totally different to live with.

Cavoodle at Dog Love
Cavoodles are loved for their affectionate nature — but coat type changes everything

Coat Types

The 3 main Cavoodle coat types

When people say "I want a Cavoodle," what they usually mean is: I want that soft teddy-bear look. But Cavoodles don't all grow the same coat. In practical terms, most owners will come across three broad coat types.

Straight / smooth hair Often sits flatter on the body, can shed more, and may look less fluffy than the classic teddy-bear coat.
Wavy / fleece coat The look most people want. Soft, loose, fluffy, and usually the nicest balance between appearance and upkeep.
Curly / wool coat Usually the lowest shedding of the three, but often the highest maintenance if you let brushing slide.

The truth is simple: curlier doesn't automatically mean better. It often means more coat care. If you love that plush, cloud-like look, you need to be honest with yourself about brushing, combing, detangling, and grooming appointments.

Smooth hair Cavoodle coat example
Smooth or straighter Cavoodle coats can look flatter and often shed more than fleece or curly coats

Best Coat?

Which Cavoodle coat is the best?

For most owners, the wavy fleece coat is usually the sweet spot. It gives that soft Cavoodle look without being quite as high maintenance as a very dense curly coat.

Best for looks Wavy fleece coats usually give the classic teddy-bear finish most families picture.
Best for lower shedding Curly coats often win here, but they normally demand more effort at home.
Best for honesty The best coat is the one you can actually maintain without letting it matt up.

So no — there isn't one universally superior Cavoodle. The best Cavoodle is the one whose coat, size, and temperament suit your real life, not the one that looks cutest in a puppy photo.

Colours

What colours do Cavoodles come in?

Cavoodles can come in a huge range of colours because both parent breeds bring variety. You'll see shades and patterns like:

Apricot Cream Red / Ruby Chocolate Black Black & white Tricolour Black & tan Blenheim influence Phantom Parti Tuxedo

A lot of owners don't realise this, but some Cavoodles can also change colour as they mature. That deep puppy red may soften. Dark markings can fade. Cream coats can shift. So choosing purely on baby colour is a bit of a trap.

Colour is fun. Colour is part of the charm. But it should never matter more than health, structure, coat quality, and temperament.

Cavoodle colour and coat variation
Cavoodle colours can vary wildly — and some coats lighten or shift as they grow

Generations

F1 vs F1B vs F2 Cavoodle — what does it mean?

These labels are just shorthand for how a Cavoodle was bred.

  • F1 Cavoodle = first generation cross between a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel and a Poodle.
  • F1B Cavoodle = an F1 Cavoodle bred back to a Poodle, which usually increases curl and the chance of a lower-shedding coat.
  • F2 Cavoodle = Cavoodle crossed with Cavoodle, which can bring more variation across a litter.

The mistake people make is assuming one generation is automatically superior. It isn't that simple. An F1B may suit a home wanting more Poodle influence in the coat. An F1 may appeal to families who love a softer, classic Cavoodle balance. What matters most is the actual parents, their health testing, and what traits are consistently being produced.

Responsible Breeding

What should and shouldn't be bred together?

This is where things need to stay honest. The goal should never be "how do I make the cutest colour?" The goal should be healthy, sound puppies from properly screened parents.

What good breeders do Health test their breeding dogs, understand both parent breeds, and breed for temperament, soundness, and long-term welfare first.
What bad breeders do Sell on rare colour hype, avoid proper testing, and act like coat colour matters more than health.
What buyers should ask What health screening has been done on the Cavalier side and the Poodle side, and can I verify it?

Cavaliers have known health concerns that ethical breeders should take seriously, especially around mitral valve disease and CM/SM (syringomyelia / Chiari-like issues). On the Poodle side, breeders should also be transparent about relevant screening for things like eye disease, patella issues, and hips depending on the Poodle size involved.

Also: merle-to-merle should never be treated casually. If a breeder is chasing rare colour without explaining the genetics and health risks properly, that's a red flag — not a flex.

Cavoodle at Dog Love with fluffy coat
Pretty coat aside — health, temperament, and structure should always come first

Coat Care

Which Cavoodles need the most brushing?

Usually the dense wavy-to-curly coats. They can look incredible, but they tangle faster, hold more friction, and matt more easily around the ears, collar line, chest, armpits, legs, tail, and sanitary areas.

  • Straighter coats can still knot, but often not as aggressively.
  • Wavy fleece coats usually need very regular brushing and comb-throughs to stay soft and open.
  • Curly coats often need the most consistency because mats can hide deep in the coat before owners notice them.

This is exactly why coat education matters. The coat you think is the cutest can also be the one that punishes you hardest if your home routine is weak.

Dogify Oodle Kit

Built for the coats that look beautiful — and matt up fast

Different Cavoodle coats need different levels of brushing, combing, slip, and day-to-day maintenance. Our upcoming Oodle Kit was created for the real pain points owners actually deal with between grooms.

Cavoodle with plush teddy bear coat
The fluffier the coat, the less you can get away with winging the home care

FAQs

Common Cavoodle questions

Are Cavoodles always low shedding?

Not always. Many are low shedding, but not all. Straighter coats can shed more, and coat outcome still depends on the parents and the generation.

Is F1B always better than F1?

No. F1B often means more Poodle influence in the coat, but "better" depends on what you want and how much maintenance you're prepared for.

What colour Cavoodle is the best?

There isn't one best colour. Choose the colour you love, but don't let colour distract you from health testing, coat type, and temperament.

What is the easiest Cavoodle coat to maintain?

Usually a less dense, softer wavy coat is easier than a very thick curly one — but every dog is individual, and routine matters more than labels.

Cavoodle at Dog Love in Tranmere
The best Cavoodle is not the rarest one — it's the one bred and cared for properly

Choosing a Cavoodle? Think beyond the puppy photo.

The best Cavoodle isn't just about a cute colour or a fluffy face. It's about health, temperament, coat type, ethical breeding, and whether you can actually maintain the coat you fall in love with.

And if you're bringing home a coat that knots easily, mats fast, or needs proper upkeep between grooms, the right home-care tools make a massive difference.

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