04/08/2026
This is not ok…please take the time to read this post if you are considering adding a puppy to your family.
🚫 “Pink” Dachshunds: Why This Trend Is DEEPLY Unethical 🚫
You may have seen “pink” or “caramel pink” Dachshunds being advertised for outrageous prices and called “rare.” These are not a special color. They are albino Dachshunds, and albinism is a genetic defect that comes with serious health problems—not a fad for breeders to cash in on.
Albinism means the dog’s body can’t make normal melanin, the pigment that protects the skin and eyes.
Because of this, albino dogs:
⭕️Burn very easily and are at higher risk for skin cancers and other UV‑related skin damage, even in ordinary daylight.
⭕️Are extremely light‑sensitive; bright light can actually be painful and they often have lifelong vision issues from abnormal eye development.
⭕️Usually need strict sun management just to stay comfortable: shade, protective clothing, careful outdoor time, and frequent vet and eye checks.
Ethical breeders work to reduce health risks in their lines—not deliberately create puppies that are more likely to struggle from day one. Albinism is a recessive mutation, so producing “pink” Dachshunds means knowingly pairing carriers or affected dogs to get this look, even though the health issues are well known.
If someone is marketing “pink” Dachshunds as rare or “one of a kind” and attaching a huge price tag, they are not prioritizing the dogs or the breed—they are prioritizing profit. This is textbook unethical, backyard breeding. Our Dachshunds deserve better than being the next money‑making trend after other breeds, like bullies, have already been exploited this way.
Puppy parents: please do your research. If you love a pale, soft look, you can choose healthy, fully pigmented options—like well‑bred creams—from breeders who fully health test, follow breed‑club ethics/standards, and refuse to use albinism for profit.
Breeders: we have an obligation to protect this breed. Do not support, promote, or breed “pink”/albino Dachshunds. Refuse to use these dogs in your programs, no matter how trendy or lucrative they seem.
Our job is to put the dogs first—ALWAYS ❤️
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EDIT: Since those who are in support of breeding for this visual appearance are all up in arms over the fact I've only educated on Albinism...let me make this clear—albinism is ONE way breeders are achieving this “pink” visual in Dachshunds. There ARE other genetic combinations that can create a very similar look to albinism. It does not matter which genetic pathway a breeder uses in any breed; the fact remains that dogs produced this way all have an extreme depletion of melanin to achieve this lack of pigment, and the same core health risks remain as with true albinism (sunburn, increased skin‑cancer risk, severe light sensitivity, and lifelong eye issues). In the case of those breeding dilute dogs to achieve this visual appearance, you can also add in CDA to the health risks.
No matter your argument FOR this breeding practice, breeding intentionally for this appearance remains unethical.