THE GERMAN SHEPHERD STANDARD
General Appearance: The first impression of a good German Shepherd Dog is that of a strong,
agile, well-muscled animal, alert and full of life. It should both be and appear to be well balanced,
with harmonious development of the forequarter and hindquarter. The dog should appear to the eye,
and actually be, longer than tall; deep bodied, and present an outline of smooth curves rather than
corners. It should look substantial and not spindly, giving the impression both at rest and in motion
of muscular fitness and nimbleness without any look of clumsiness or soft living.
The Shepherd should be stamped with a look of quality and nobility, difficult to define but
unmistakable when present. The good Shepherd Dog never looks common.
Secondary sex characteristics should be strongly marked, and every animal should give a definite
impression of masculinity or femininity, according to its sex. Dogs should be definitely masculine in
appearance and deportment; bitches, unmistakably feminine, without weakness of structure or
apparent softness of temperament.
The condition of the dog should be that of an athlete in good condition, the muscles and flesh firm
and the coat lustrous.
Temperament: The breed has a distinct personality marked by a direct and fearless, but not
hostile, expression, and self-confidence and a certain aloofness which does not led itself to
immediate and indiscriminate friendships. The Shepherd Dog is not one that fawns upon every new
acquaintance. At the same time, it should be approachable, quietly standing its ground and showing
confidence and a willingness to meet overtures without itself making them. It should be poised, but
when the occasion demands, eager and alert, both fit and willing to serve in any capacity as
companion, watch dog, blind leader, herding dog or guardian, whichever the circumstances may
demand.
The Shepherd Dog must not be timid, shrinking behind its master or handler; nervous, looking about
or upward with anxious expression or showing nervous reactions to strange sounds or sights, or
lackadaisical, sluggish, or manifestly disinterested in what goes on about him. Lack of confidence
under any surroundings is not typical of good character; cases of extreme timidity and nervous
imbalance sometimes give the dog an apparent, but totally unreal, courage and it becomes a "fear
biter," snapping not for any justifiable reason but because it is apprehensive of the approach of a
stranger. This is a serious fault subject to heavy penalty.
Size: The ideal height for dogs is 25 in. (64 cm), and for bitches, 23 in. (58 cm.) at the shoulder.
This height is established by taking a perpendicular line from the top of the shoulder blade to the
ground with the coat parted or so pushed down that this measurement will show only the actual
height of the frame or structure of the dog. The working value of dogs above or below the indicated
height is proportionately lessened, although variations of an inch (3 cm.) above or below the ideal
height are acceptable, while greater variations must be considered as faults. Weights of dogs of
desirable size in proper flesh and condition average between 75 and 85 lb. (34 and 39 kg); and of
bitches, between 60 and 70 lb. (27 and 32 kg).
Coat: The Shepherd is normally a dog with a double coat, the amount of undercoat varying with the
season of the year and the proportion of the time the dog spends out of doors. It should, however,
always be present to a sufficient degree to keep out water, to insulate against temperature extremes,
and as a protection against insects. The outer coat should be as dense as possible, hair straight,
harsh and lying close to the body. A slightly wavy outer coat, often of wiry texture, is equally
permissible. The head, including the inner ear, foreface, and legs and paws are covered with short
hair, and the neck with longer and thicker hair. The rear of forelegs and hind legs has somewhat
longer hair extending to the pastern and hock respectively. Faults in coat include complete lack of
any undercoat, soft, silky or too long outer coat and curly or open coat.
Colour: The German Shepherd Dog differs widely in colour and all colours are permissible.
Generally speaking, strong, rich colours are to be preferred, with definite pigmentation and without
the appearance of a washed-out colour. White dogs are to be disqualified.
Head: Clean-cut and strong, the head of the Shepherd is characterized by nobility. It should seem
in proportion to the body and should not be clumsy, although a degree of coarseness of head,
especially in dogs, is less of a fault than over-refinement. A round or domey skull is a fault. The
muzzle is long and strong with eh lips firmly fitted, and its topline is usually parallel with an imaginary
elongation of the line of the forehead. Seen from the front, the forehead is only moderately arched
and the skull slopes into the long wedge-shaped muzzle without abrupt stop. Jaws are strongly
developed. Weak and too narrow underjaws, snipey muzzles, and no stop are faults.
Teeth: the strong teeth - 42 in number, 20 upper and 22 lower - are strongly developed and meet
in a scissors grip in which part of the inner surface of the upper teeth meets or engages part of the
outer surface of the lower teeth. This type of bite gives a more powerful grip than one in which the
edges of the teeth meet directly, and is subject to less wear. The dog is overshot when the lower
teeth fail to engage the inner surfaces of the upper teeth. This is a serious fault. The reverse condition
- an undershot jaw - is a very serious fault. While missing premolars are frequently observed,
complete dentition is decidedly to be preferred. So-called distemper teeth and discoloured teeth are
faults whose seriousness varies with the degree departure from the desired white, sound colouring.
Teeth broken by accident should not be severely penalized but worn teeth, especially the incisors,
are often indicative of the lack of a proper scissors bite, although some allowance should be made
for age.
Eyes of medium size, almond shaped, set a little obliquely and not protruding. The colour as dark
as possible. Eyes of lighter colour are sometimes found and are not a serious fault if they harmonize
with the general colouration, but a dark brown eye is always to be preferred. The expression should
be keen, intelligent, and composed.
The ears should be moderately pointed, open towards the front, and are carried erect when at
attention, the ideal carriage being one in which the centre lines of the ears, viewed from the front, are
parallel to each other and perpendicular to the ground. Puppies usually do not permanently raise
their ears until the fourth or sixth month, and sometimes not until later. Cropped and hanging ears
are to be discarded. The well-placed and well-carried ear of a size in proportion to the skull
materially adds to the general appearance of the Shepherd. Neither too large nor too small ears are
desirable. Too much stress, however, should not be laid on perfection of carriage if the ears are fully
erect.
Neck: The neck is strong and muscular, clean-cut and relatively long, proportionate in size to the
head and without loose folds of skin. When the dog is at attention or excited, the head is raised and
the neck carried high, otherwise typical carriage of the head is forward rather than up and but little
higher than the top of the shoulder, particularly in motion.
Body: The Whole structure of the body gives an impression of depth and solidity without bulkiness.
Forechest, commencing at the prosternum, should be well filled and carried well down between the
legs with no sense of hollowness. Chest: deep and capacious with ample room for lungs and heart.
Well carried forward, with the prosternum, or process of the breastbone, showing ahead of the
shoulder when the dog is viewed from the side. Ribs should be well sprung and long, neither barrel
shaped nor too flat, and carried down to a breastbone which reaches to the elbow. Correct ribbing
allows the elbow to move back freely when the dog is at a trot, while too round a rib causes
interference so that loin and flank are relatively short. Abdomen firmly held and not paunchy. The
bottom line of the Shepherd is only moderately tucked up in flank, never like that of a Greyhound.
Legs: The bone of the legs should be straight, oval rather than round or flat, and free from
sponginess. Its development should be in proportion to the size of the dog and contribute to the
overall impression of substance without grossness. Crooked leg bones and any malformation such
as, for example, that caused by rickets, should be penalized. Pastern should be of medium length,
strong and springy. Much more spring of pastern is desirable in the Shepherd Dog than in many
other breeds, as it contributes to the ease and elasticity of the trotting gait. The upright terrier
pastern is definitely undesirable.
Metatarsus (the so-called "hock"): short, clean, sharply defined, and of great strength. This is
the fulcrum upon which much of the forward movement of the dog depends. Cowhocks are a
decided fault, but before penalizing for cowhocks, it should be definitely determined, with the animal
in motion, that the dog has this fault, since many dogs with exceptionally good hindquarter angulation
occasionally stand so as to give the appearance of cowhockedness which is not actually present.
Feet: rather short, compact, with toes well arched, pads thick and hard, nails short and strong. The
feet are important to the working qualities of the dog. The ideal foot is extremely strong with good
gripping power and plenty of depth of pad. The so called cat-foot, or terrier foot, is not desirable.
The thin, spread or hare-foot is, however, still more undesirable.
Topline: The withers should be higher than, and sloping into, the level back to enable a proper
attachment of the shoulder blades. The back should be straight and very strongly developed without
sag or roach, the section from the wither to the croup being relatively short. (The desirable long
proportion of the Shepherd Dog is not derived from a long back but from over-all length with
relation to height, which is achieved by breadth of forequarter and hindquarter viewed from the
side.) Loin: Viewed from the top, broad and strong, blending smoothly into the back without undue
length between the last rib and the thigh, when viewed from the side. Croup should be long and
gradually sloping. Too level or flat a croup prevents proper functioning of the hindquarter, which
must be able to reach well under the body. A steep croup also limits the action of the hindquarter.
Structure: A German Shepherd is a trotting dog and his structure has been developed to best meet
the requirements of his work in herding. That is to say, a long, effortless trot which shall cover the
maximum amount of ground with the minimum number of steps, consistent with the size of the
animal. The proper body proportion, firmness of back and muscles and the proper angulation of the
forequarters and hindquarters serve this end. They enable the dog to propel itself forward by a long
step of the hindquarter and to compensate for this stride by a long step of the forequarter. The high
withers, the firm back, the strong loin, the properly formed croup, even the tail as balance and
rudder, all contribute to this same end.
Proportion: The German Shepherd Dog is properly longer than tall with he most desirable
proportion as 10 is to 81/2. We have seen how the height is ascertained; the length is established by
a dog standing naturally and four-square, measured on a horizontal line from the point of the
prosternum, or breastbone, to the rear edge of the pelvis, the ischium tuberosity, commonly called
the sitting bone.
Angulation: Forequarter: the shoulder blade should be long, laid on flat against the body with its
rounded upper end in a vertical line above the elbow, and sloping well forward to the point where it
joins the upper arm. The withers should be high, with shoulder blades meeting closely at the top,
and the upper arm set on at an angle approaching as nearly as possible a right angle. Such an
angulation permits the maximum forward extension of the foreleg without binding or effort. Shoulder
faults include too steep or straight a position of either blade or upper arm, too short a blade or
upper arm, lack of sufficient angle between these two members, looseness through lack of firm
ligamentation, and loaded shoulder with prominent pads of flesh or muscles on the outer side.
Construction in which the whole shoulder assembly is pushed too far forward also restricts the stride
and is faulty.
Hindquarters: The angulation of the hindquarter also consists ideally of a series of sharp angles as
far as the relation of the bones to each other is concerned, and the thigh bone should parallel the
shoulder blade while the stifle bone parallels the upper arm. The whole assembly of the thigh,
viewed from the side, should be broad, with both thigh and stifle well muscled and of proportionate
length, forming as nearly as possible a right angle. The metatarsus (the unit between the hock joint
and the foot commonly and erroneously called the hock) is strong, clean and short, the hock joint
clean-cut and sharply defined.
Tail: Bushy, with the last vertebra extended at least to the hock joint, and usually below. Set
smoothly into the croup and low rather than high, at rest the tail hangs in a slight curve like a sabre.
A slight hook - sometimes carried to one side - is faulty only to the extent that it mars general
appearance. When the dog is excited or in motion, the curve is accentuated and the tail raised, but is
should never be lifted beyond a line at right angles with the line of the back. Docked tails, or those
which have been operated upon to prevent curling, disqualify. Tails too short, or with clumpy ends
due to the ankylosis or the growing together of the vertebrae, are serious faults.
Gait: General Impression: the gait of the German Shepherd Dog is outreaching, elastic, seemingly
without effort, smooth and rhythmic, At a walk it covers a great deal of ground, with long step of
both hind leg and foreleg. At a trot, the dog covers still more ground and moves powerfully but
easily with a beautiful co-ordination of back and limbs so that, in the best examples, the gait appears
to be the steady motion of a well-lubricated machine. The feet travel close to the ground, and
neither fore nor hind feet should lift high on either forward reach or backward push.
The hindquarter delivers, through the back, a powerful forward thrust which slightly lifts the whole
animal and drives the body forward. Reaching far under, and passing the imprint left by the front
foot, the strong arched hind foot takes hold of the ground; then hock, stifle, and upper thigh come
into play and sweep back, the stroke of the hind leg finishing with the foot still close to the ground in
a smooth follow-through. The overreach of the hindquarter usually necessitate some hind foot
passing outside and the other hind foot passing inside the track of the forefeet and such action is not
faulty unless the locomotion is crabwise with the dog's body sideways out of the normal straight line.
In order to achieve ideal movement of this kind, there must be full muscular co-ordination
throughout the structure with the action of muscles and ligaments positive, regular and accurate.
Back Transmission: the typical smooth, flowing gait of the Shepherd Dog cannot be maintained
without great strength and firmness (which does not mean stiffness) of back. The whole effort of the
hindquarter is transmitted to the forequarter through the muscular and bony structure of the loin,
back, and withers. At full trot, the back must remain firm and level without sway, roll, whip or
roach. To compensate for the forward motion imparted by the hindquarter, the shoulder should
open to its full extent - the desirability of good shoulder angulation now becomes apparent - and the
forelegs should reach out in a stride balancing that of the hindquarter. A steep shoulder will cause
the dog either to stumble or to raise the forelegs very high in an effort to co-ordinate with the
hindquarter, which is impossible when shoulder structure is faulty. A serious gait fault results when a
dog moves too low in front, presenting an unlevel topline with the wither lower than the hips. The
Shepherd Dog does not track on widely separated parallel lines as does the terrier, but brings the
feet inward toward the middle line of the body when at trot in order to maintain balance. For this
reason a dog viewed from the front or rear when in motion will often seem to travel close. This is
not a fault if the feet do not strike or cross, or if the knees or shoulders are not thrown out, but the
feet and hocks should be parallel even if close together. The excellence of gait must also be
evaluated by viewing from the side the effortless, properly co-ordinated covering of ground.
Summary: It should never be forgotten that the ideal Shepherd is a working animal which must
have an incorruptible character combined with body and gait suitable for the arduous work which
constitutes its primary purpose. All its qualities should be weighed in respect to their contribution to
such work, and while no compromise should be permitted with regard to its working potentiality,
the dog must nevertheless possess a high degree of beauty and nobility.
Evaluation of Faults: NOTE: Faults are important in the order of their group, as per group
heading, irrespective of their position on each group.
Very Serious Faults: Major faults of temperament; undershot lower jaw.
Serious Faults: Faults of balance and proportion; poor gait, viewed either from front, rear or side;
marked deficiency of substance (bone or body); bitchy male dogs; faulty backs; too level or too
short croup; long and weak loin; very bad feet; ring tails; tails much too short; rickety condition;
more than four missing premolars or any other missing teeth, unless due to accident; lack of nobility;
badly washed-out colour; badly overshot bite.
Faults: Doggy bitches; poorly carried ears; too-fine head; weak muzzles; improper muscular
condition; faulty coat, other than temporary condition; badly affected teeth.
Minor Faults: Too coarse hair; hooked tails; too light, round or protruding eyes; discoloured teeth;
condition of coat, due to season or keeping.
Disqualifications: Albino characteristics; cropped ears; hanging ears (as in a hound); docked tails;
male dogs having one or both testicles undescended (monorchids or cryptorchids); white dogs.
