Dog breed
Yorktese
Small designer crossbreed combining Yorkshire Terrier and Maltese traits, known for its silky, low-shedding coat, spirited personality, and delicate build
- Life span
- 12–15 years
- Origin
- United States
Dog breed
Small designer crossbreed combining Yorkshire Terrier and Maltese traits, known for its silky, low-shedding coat, spirited personality, and delicate build
Profile
About
Small designer crossbreed combining Yorkshire Terrier and Maltese traits, known for its silky, low-shedding coat, spirited personality, and delicate build
The Yorktese, also known as Morkie, is a modern designer crossbreed developed by intentionally crossing Yorkshire Terrier and Maltese to combine the low-shedding, silky coat of both breeds with a friendly and spirited temperament. Not recognized by major kennel clubs
A breed profile is a useful starting point. It cannot tell you how each pet will act. Genes play a role, but so do health, early life, training, and the home. Age can also change a pet's needs. Use this dog profile to plan what to ask and check.
People often describe the Yorktese as Affectionate, playful, alert, intelligent, gentle. These words are broad clues, not firm facts. A bold pet may still need slow introductions. An active pet also needs calm time, good sleep, and play that fits its age.
Size and life span can vary between sources and groups. A pet's weight and health can change with age. Ask the right experts about food, movement, routine care, and known health risks. Keep notes so you can spot a change early.
Think about the whole life of the pet. Young pets often need more time for safe social skills and house rules. Adult pets need a steady care plan. Older pets may need shorter walks, softer rest areas, or more health checks.
Start with your normal week. Count the hours that a pet may be alone. Plan time for meals, play, rest, grooming, and training. Be honest about the space, time, and funds you can give for many years.
Meet the same pet more than once when you can. Watch how the pet acts in a calm place. Ask the breeder, rescue group, or foster home for clear examples. Ask what the pet enjoys, fears, and finds hard. Direct facts are more useful than a breed label.
Plan a simple first week before the pet comes home. Set up food, water, a quiet bed, safe gates, and a way to travel. Pick a vet and save the clinic number. Give the pet time to learn the new sounds, people, and daily plan.
A good match depends on both the home and the pet. Needs can change with age, health, and life at home. Review the plan from time to time. If a problem starts, get kind and skilled help before it grows.
Do not use harsh tools or force to fix fear. They may hide warning signs and harm trust. Reward calm choices, keep each step small, and stop when the pet is upset. A qualified trainer can help with behavior. A vet can check for pain or illness.
It is general educational guidance for dog and cat families researching Yorktese. Individual pets may have different needs.
Contact a qualified veterinarian or humane training professional whenever health, behavior, safety, or welfare is a concern.
The PawNido Editorial Team checks public content for clarity, usefulness, safety language, and appropriate educational scope. Material updates change the visible last-updated date.
The Yorktese profile is a starting point for responsible research. Consider the individual animal’s health, temperament, history, and daily needs before making care decisions.
Temperament
PawNido app
Keep routines, reminders, logs, care notes, and training progress organized in one privacy-first place.
Related content
weekly checkup can help you notice changes in your dog's normal patterns. Track appetite, water, energy, bathr...
This is general information only and is not a veterinary diagnosis. Do not give medicine or change treatment without consulting a veterinarian. Health generaltravel preparation can help you notice changes in your dog's normal patterns. Track appetite, water, energy, b...
This is general information only and is not a veterinary diagnosis. Do not give medicine or change treatment without consulting a veterinarian. Health generalcold weather plan can help you notice changes in your dog's normal patterns. Track appetite, water, energy, ba...
This is general information only and is not a veterinary diagnosis. Do not give medicine or change treatment without consulting a veterinarian. Health generalrainy day plan can help you notice changes in your dog's normal patterns. Track appetite, water, energy, bathr...
This is general information only and is not a veterinary diagnosis. Do not give medicine or change treatment without consulting a veterinarian. safetyUse weekly checkup to reduce avoidable risk for your dog. Check the home setup, storage, weather, travel gear,...
behaviorhot weather plan works best when your dog has predictable routines, enough rest, and reward-based guidance. No...
groomingMake hot weather plan part of a calm grooming rhythm for your dog. Keep sessions short, reward relaxed behavio...
feedingUse hot weather plan as a simple feeding checkpoint for your dog. Keep meals predictable, provide fresh water,...
advancedA advanced dog lesson for sit using short, reward-based practice.
advancedA advanced dog lesson for stay using short, reward-based practice.
advancedA advanced dog lesson for recall using short, reward-based practice.
advancedA advanced dog lesson for leash walking using short, reward-based practice.