English Springer Spaniel Breed Guide UK 2026: Show vs Working Lines, PFK Deficiency, PRA & Full Care

🔄Last Updated: 6 March 2026

The English Springer Spaniel is one of the UK’s oldest and most versatile gundogs — developed to “spring” game from cover for hunters, producing a dog that combines athleticism, scenting ability, and an enthusiastic, biddable nature. They are among the most popular family dogs in the UK for good reason: well-trained Springers are joyful, loyal, and rewarding companions. However, the breed has developed a significant split into two distinct types — show and working — and choosing between them has major implications for your experience as an owner.

Quick Facts

Characteristic Detail
Size Medium (males: 51 cm / 20–25 kg; females slightly smaller)
Coat Wavy or flat, dense, water-resistant — liver & white, black & white, or tricolour
Exercise 90 minutes per day minimum — considerably more for working lines
Lifespan 12–14 years
Good for families? Excellent for active families — both types if exercise needs met
Puppy cost (UK 2026) £800–£1,500
KC group Gundog

The Show vs Working Line Split — The Most Important Decision

This is the single most important factor in choosing an English Springer Spaniel. Over decades of selective breeding for different goals, the breed has diverged into two distinct types:

Feature Show Lines Working Lines
Build Larger, longer-eared, heavier coat Lighter, more compact, shorter coat
Energy level High Extreme — bred to work all day
Exercise need 90 minutes/day 2+ hours vigorous off-lead activity
Trainability Eager to please, good for sport Highly trainable for complex tasks; needs clear purpose
Best suited to Active families, dog sport enthusiasts Hunters, working dog sport, very experienced active owners
Risk of problems Lower risk in active family Can become hyperactive, destructive without adequate work

If in doubt, choose from a show line breeder — the working line’s energy and drive is genuinely beyond what most pet homes can adequately manage.

Health — Key Conditions

PFK Deficiency — Phosphofructokinase Deficiency

PFK Deficiency is a hereditary metabolic disorder where a cellular enzyme needed to convert glucose to energy is deficient:

  • Symptoms: exercise intolerance, weakness after exertion, muscle cramping, dark urine (haemoglobinuria), pale gums, jaundice in severe cases
  • Symptoms may be subtle or severe depending on the degree of deficiency
  • DNA test available — both parents should be tested clear or carrier. Responsible breeders test all breeding dogs
  • Management for affected dogs: avoiding over-exertion, monitoring for episodes, supportive veterinary care during acute episodes

Progressive Retinal Atrophy (PRA)

PRA causes gradual degeneration of the retina, leading initially to night blindness and progressing to complete blindness:

  • Onset in Springers typically 2–6 years
  • DNA tests available for the most common forms — both parents should be DNA tested or eye-tested clear
  • There is no treatment for PRA; dogs adapt well to progressive blindness when managed in familiar environments

Rage Syndrome

The honest reality: Rage Syndrome in English Springer Spaniels is real but extremely rare. It is characterised by sudden, unprovoked explosive aggression directed at family members with no apparent warning signals, followed by immediate resumption of normal behaviour. It is believed to be hereditary and has been associated historically with certain show-line bloodlines. The vast majority of aggression in Spaniels has identifiable triggers — pain, resource guarding, fear — and is not true Rage Syndrome. If concerned about aggression in a Springer, seek specialist veterinary and behavioural assessment. True Rage Syndrome cannot be effectively treated; affected dogs are typically euthanised.

Ear Care

The English Springer Spaniel’s pendulous ears trap moisture and debris, creating recurrent ear infection risk — particularly in dogs that swim or retrieve from water:

  • Weekly ear inspection minimum; clean with veterinarian-recommended ear cleaner
  • Dry ears thoroughly after every swim or bath
  • Allergies (environmental or food) are a common underlying cause of recurrent otitis — investigate and manage the root cause

FAQs

What is the difference between an English Springer and a Welsh Springer Spaniel?

They are distinct breeds. The Welsh Springer is exclusively red and white, slightly smaller than the English Springer, generally calmer in temperament, and has its own health profile (PRA, hip dysplasia, entropion). Welsh Springers are rarer in the UK and more consistently bred as companion/show dogs with fewer working-line extremes. Both are excellent dogs — the English Springer offers slightly more energy and variety; the Welsh Springer is perhaps marginally more manageable for a moderately active family.

Written by

✍️ Pet Care Writer

Expert pet care writer at Petz. Dedicated to providing accurate, vet-reviewed advice and independent product reviews for UK pet owners.

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