Harness vs. Collar

Article signalsWritten by Best French Puppies Team Reviewed by Best French Puppies breeder standards team Updated May 31, 2026

When it comes to walking your French Bulldog, the choice between a harness and a collar is not about fashion – it is about health. For this breed, a harness is the only safe option.

Why We Say “NO” to Collars

French Bulldogs are a brachycephalic, flat-faced breed with a unique neck and airway structure. Using a collar with a leash can lead to serious medical issues.

  • Respiratory Stress: Any tension on a collar puts direct pressure on the trachea, or windpipe. This can cause gasping, chronic coughing, and long-term breathing difficulties.
  • Spinal Protection: Frenchies have compact spines. A harness distributes the pull across the strongest part of the body, the chest, rather than the fragile cervical vertebrae in the neck.
  • The “Escape Artist” Factor: Because a Frenchie’s neck is often as wide as their head, they can easily slip out of a collar if they get scared or stubborn. A well-fitted harness keeps them secure.

Sizing Your Puppy (2 Months +)

Finding the right fit is crucial for a growing puppy. If a harness is too tight, it restricts bone development. If it is too loose, they can trip or escape.

AgeRecommended Harness SizeRecommended Collar Size (ID Tags Only)
8-10 Weeks (2 Months)Size XS (Extra Small)Size XS
3-4 MonthsSize S (Small)Size S

The Two-Finger Rule

You should always be able to fit two fingers between the harness and your puppy’s body. This ensures it is snug enough to be secure but loose enough for comfortable breathing and movement.

Important Note on Collars

We recommend using a collar only for carrying an ID tag with your contact information. Never attach a leash to a collar for walking or training your Frenchie puppy.

Helpful care steps buyers should review next

Care-focused articles often attract families who are already comparing daily routines, vet planning, feeding decisions, or first-week setup before they bring home a puppy. These posts work better when they also connect readers to breeder standards, available puppies, and the core care resources that answer the next question.

  • Use care posts to understand the routine, but confirm how breeder support, feeding transition, and health preparation are handled before a puppy comes home.
  • Move from general care reading into the main care guide when you want one cleaner checklist instead of scattered tips.
  • Connect care planning with the breeder and available-puppy pages so the buyer journey stays practical, not purely informational.

These related pages help readers move from care research into the pages that matter most before reservation or delivery.

What should families confirm after reading a French Bulldog care article?

Most families want breeder support, feeding or routine-care guidance, health-focused preparation, and where to get direct answers confirmed before a puppy comes home.

Why should care articles link into breeder and availability pages?

Care research often happens close to the buying decision, so these articles work better when they connect routine guidance with breeder standards, current availability, and the real next-step pages buyers need.

Which pages should readers review after a care-intent article?

The strongest next steps are the main care guide, breeder trust page, available puppies page, and direct contact page so care planning stays connected to the actual reservation journey.