
On Tails: Why We Leave Them Whole
If you’ve spent any time around Australian Shepherds, you’ve probably noticed that most of them don’t have full tails. Seeing a short stub where a tail should be is so common in the breed that a lot of people assume Aussies are just born that way.
Most aren’t. That stub is a choice someone made when the puppy was three days old.
We don’t make that choice. Here’s why.

Why do Australian Shepherds get their tails docked?
“Why do Aussies not have tails?” is one of the most common questions prospective Aussie owners ask. The history behind it is older and stranger than most people realize.
Australian Shepherd tail docking, and tail docking in many breeds of dogs, have been practiced for centuries, with rationales that shifted over time: superstition, taxation, aesthetics, and eventually injury prevention arguments. None of them hold up especially well under scrutiny.
The Romans believed that removing a portion of a dog’s tail could prevent rabies, a disease that was poorly understood and widely feared at the time. That belief ended when Louis Pasteur identified the actual cause and developed a vaccine in 1885. The docking continued anyway.
In 1786, England levied a tax on non-working dogs. Dogs with docked tails were designated as working animals and exempt from it. The short tail became, in effect, a tax receipt: proof that a dog earned its keep. Working herding dogs, ratters, and some hunting breeds were docked on that basis. The tax was repealed in 1796. The docking continued anyway.
When Basque shepherds brought their herding dogs to the American West in the early 1800s, they brought their traditions with them. The Australian Shepherd descended from Pyrenean herding dogs brought by those Basque settlers, who had already been docking working dogs for generations. By the time the breed developed its distinct American identity, Australian Shepherd tail docking was simply part of the culture. As U.S. pedigree show rules later formalized breed appearances, both the ASCA and AKC codified the standard: a tail straight, not to exceed four inches, natural bobtail or docked. Breeders who want their dogs competitive in the show ring dock accordingly. The cycle continues.
Why Australian Shepherd tails are docked: the working dog argument
The most defensible case for Australian Shepherd tail docking is practical. A long tail on a working ranch dog is a genuine liability, the argument goes: stepped on by livestock, slammed in a gate, torn on wire. A serious tail injury is painful, and ranchers who depended on their dogs couldn’t afford to sideline them.
It’s a real argument, and we don’t dismiss it entirely.
But the evidence doesn’t support it as a broad preventive justification. A large study cited by the AVMA found that tail injuries in dogs are rare overall, that working dogs are at no greater risk of tail injury than non-working dogs, and that approximately 500 dogs would need to be docked to prevent a single injury. Interestingly, the breeds at greatest risk of tail injury in that study were Lurchers, Whippets, and Greyhounds — none of which are routinely docked.
The Border Collie comparison is worth addressing directly, because it comes up often. Border Collies herd differently from Aussies: they work at a distance, using a low stalking approach, while Aussies tend to work closer and with more physical contact. That’s a fair distinction. But Border Collies had a tail injury risk estimate of just 0.08% in the same study. Close contact with livestock doesn’t appear to translate into meaningful tail injury rates.
For the vast majority of Aussies alive today, the question is largely academic anyway. Most will spend their lives as family dogs, hiking, playing in backyards, sleeping on couches. The ranch scenario that gave the practice of Australian Shepherd tail docking its original logic simply doesn’t apply to them. We’re not going to remove part of a dog’s body to guard against something that will almost certainly never happen.

Can Australian Shepherds be born without a tail? The genetics of the natural bobtail
Before docking became standard practice, the short tail was already appearing in the breed naturally.
Natural bobtail in Australian Shepherds results from a mutation in the T-box transcription factor T gene. The mutation is autosomal dominant, meaning a puppy needs only one copy to be born with a shortened tail. According to ASHGI’s breed health survey, roughly one in five Aussies carries it. Historically these dogs were prized precisely because they didn’t need the procedure, and early breeders selected for the trait.
There’s an important caveat. Inheriting two copies of the mutation is lethal in utero in most cases, with surviving puppies at risk of serious spinal defects. A N/BT x N/BT mating is predicted to produce 25% homozygous-affected offspring, representing a potential 25% reduction in litter size. This is why breeding two natural bobtail dogs together carries real risk, and why genetic testing is advisable before making those pairings.

The gene also doesn’t produce a uniform result in dogs that carry it. ASHGI’s survey data found that around 47% of NBT Aussies have tails that are quarter-length or longer, and about 10% have kinked tails. There’s no single natural bobtail look.
Roughly 80% of Aussies are born with full-length tails. Left alone, those tails are exactly what they’re supposed to be.
Why We Raise Australian Shepherds With Natural, Undocked Tails
A tail is not decorative. It’s how a dog communicates — with other dogs, with people, with the world around them. The full arc of a wag, the low tuck of anxiety, the stiff flag of alertness: these are meaningful signals. Animal welfare scientist David Mellor found that the tail’s role in canine communication has been seriously underestimated, and that Australian Shepherd tail docking can markedly impede interaction between dogs and between dogs and people across a full range of emotions and intentions, for the dog’s entire life.

The science on acute pain during Australian Shepherd tail docking is more nuanced than it’s sometimes presented. Mellor’s research suggests that puppies in the first week of life may not consciously experience acute pain the way older animals do, due to neurological immaturity at that age. What the evidence does support clearly is the long-term picture. A significant proportion of dogs docked as puppies may go on to experience persistent chronic pain and heightened pain sensitivity — consequences that stay with the animal for life. The BVA describes docking as an outdated procedure that inflicts significant pain and deprives dogs of a vital form of expression, and the AVMA notes that neonatal procedures can result in negative long-term changes to how pain is processed. Most major veterinary associations have reached the same conclusion.
The question the AVMA asks regarding Australian Shepherd tail docking is a useful one: not “how harmful is the procedure” but “is there sufficient justification for performing it?” For a companion dog that will never work livestock, no justification holds. A tail isn’t a liability or a styling choice. It’s part of the animal, and our puppies leave here with theirs.
Australian Shepherd Tail Docking Laws by Country: A Quick Reference
The legal landscape has shifted considerably over the past two decades. Here’s where things currently stand.

United States: No federal law restricts tail docking, and the vast majority of states have no prohibitions. Maryland requires a veterinary license and anesthesia; Pennsylvania prohibits non-veterinary docking after five days of age. The AVMA opposes cosmetic tail docking, while the AKC continues to include docked or natural bobtail in the Australian Shepherd breed standard.
United Kingdom: Cosmetic tail docking is a criminal offense under the Animal Welfare Act 2006 in England and Wales, with equivalent legislation in Scotland and Northern Ireland. The only exemptions apply to a narrow category of working dogs under five days old, certified by a veterinarian. Docked dogs cannot be shown at any event where the public pays to enter, unless demonstrating working ability. Penalties include unlimited fines and up to five years imprisonment under the Animal Welfare (Sentencing) Act 2021.
Australia: Cosmetic tail docking was banned nationwide in 2004, with all states and territories implementing the prohibition. Therapeutic docking may only be performed by a registered veterinarian. Official guidance is available from Queensland and Victoria.
Germany: Tail docking has been prohibited under the German Animal Welfare Act for over two decades, with exceptions only for medical necessity. Ear cropping has been banned since 1987.
Scandinavia and Northern Europe: Denmark and Finland enacted bans in 1996 — Denmark retaining narrow exceptions for five hunting breeds, Finland with a full prohibition including a ban on showing docked dogs. Norway prohibits the procedure except for genuine medical need.
Rest of Europe: Austria, Switzerland, Luxembourg, Cyprus, Italy, Poland, Slovenia, and others have enacted full or near-full bans, many through ratification of the European Convention for the Protection of Pet Animals. The AVMA identifies most EU member states as having prohibited or heavily restricted the practice.
New Zealand: Routine tail docking is prohibited under the Animal Welfare (Care and Procedures) Regulations 2018. The only defense is a veterinarian performing the procedure for therapeutic reasons with pain relief. Individual fines reach NZ$3,000.
Laws change. This data is informational — verify current local law before making decisions.

Frequently Asked Questions
Does tail docking affect a dog’s balance or communication?
Research suggests the tail plays a meaningful role in canine communication. A 2008 study by Leaver and Reimchen found that longer tails conveyed social signals more effectively than shorter ones — larger dogs responded differently to a long wagging tail but showed no difference in response to a short one, suggesting the signal is reduced when the tail is docked. On balance specifically, research indicates tails contribute to stability during locomotion, though docked dogs are not grossly impaired in everyday movement. The clearer cost is communicative: a dog that can’t signal its intentions clearly may have more fraught interactions with other dogs throughout its life.
Can I find Australian Shepherd puppies with full tails?
Yes, though in the US it takes some searching. Most American breeders dock to align with AKC and ASCA standards. Breeders who don’t practice Australian Shepherd tail docking tend to be deliberate about it and say so upfront. Our puppies all leave here with their full tails.
Is Australian Shepherd tail docking painful for puppies?
The procedure is performed during the first five days of life, without general anesthesia. Research by Mellor suggests puppies at that age may not consciously experience acute pain the way older animals do, due to neurological immaturity. What the evidence does support is the long-term picture: a significant proportion of docked dogs may go on to experience chronic pain and heightened pain sensitivity related to neuroma development at the stump. The AVMA opposes cosmetic tail docking on these welfare grounds.
Are Australian Shepherds born with short tails?
Some are. According to ASHGI’s breed health survey, roughly one in five Aussies carries the natural bobtail gene and is born with a shortened tail. The remaining majority are born with full-length tails. The short tail seen on most US Aussies is the result of docking, not genetics.
Does an undocked tail affect an Aussie’s temperament or working ability?
Tail length is not known to determine temperament, trainability, or herding instinct. What a full tail does change is expressiveness — you get a much clearer read on how your dog is feeling, which most owners find genuinely useful day to day.
If you have questions about our breeding practices or want to know more about our puppies, we’re always happy to talk.