Poodle Coat Color Genetics Predictor
Estimate your litter’s coat colors based on real canine genetics — eumelanin, phaeomelanin, and the B/E/G loci — in seconds. Trusted by breeders worldwide.
Predict Your Poodle’s Puppy Colors
Select both parent coat colors below. Our genetics model cross-references dominant and recessive allele patterns to estimate probable litter outcomes.
Parent Colors
Predicted Results
Select both parent colors, then tap Calculate to see your litter’s likely coat shades.
Three Steps to Your Litter’s Palette
Our predictor simplifies canine color genetics into a clear, visual workflow.
Pick Parent 1
Select the coat color of your first poodle from our visual swatch palette.
Pick Parent 2
Do the same for the second parent. You can mix any two recognized shades.
View Results
Click Calculate and get a ranked list of probable puppy coat colors instantly.
Plan Your Breeding
Use the probability breakdown to inform your next litter’s color goals.
The Science Behind Your Poodle’s Shade
Color is far more than aesthetics — it’s a window into your poodle’s genetic blueprint.
Two Core Pigments
All poodle coat colors derive from just two pigments: eumelanin (producing black and brown shades) and phaeomelanin (producing red, apricot, and cream). Every shade you see is a variation or combination of these two.
Dominant vs. Recessive Genes
Black is dominant — a single copy of the B allele produces a black coat. Red and apricot are recessive, requiring both parents to carry the phaeomelanin-only (ee) genotype. This is why two black poodles can sometimes produce apricot puppies.
2022 Research Discovery
A 2022 genome-wide study published in PubMed identified an SNN retrocopy insertion (SNNL1) on chromosome 18, uniquely linked to dark red coat intensity in poodles — a breakthrough that explains why some reds are richer than others despite identical visible genotypes.
The Fading Gene
Many poodles are born one color and mature into another. The G locus (graying gene) causes black poodles to silver and blue with age. Silver poodles are always born black and only begin clearing at the roots from 6 weeks onward — fully silvering by 18–24 months.
AKC Recognized Colors
The American Kennel Club officially recognizes 11 standard poodle colors including black, white, apricot, red, silver, blue, gray, brown, café au lait, cream, and silver beige. Red was officially added in 1980, developed largely through Ilse Konig’s selective breeding of deep apricot lines.
Pattern Complexity
Parti, phantom, sable, and brindle poodles follow separate inheritance rules from solid colors. Parti requires two copies of the parti gene (sp allele). Phantom patterns — tan points on a dark base — are controlled by the at allele and require specific genotype combinations to express.
Understanding the Genetic Loci
Each locus (gene location) independently controls a different aspect of your poodle’s final coat color. Here’s what each one does.
| Locus | Controls | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| B | Pigment type | B = black eumelanin; b = brown (chocolate) eumelanin |
| E | Color expression | E = eumelanin expressed; ee = only phaeomelanin (red/apricot/cream) |
| G | Progressive graying | G = graying (silver/blue/café au lait); g = non-graying solid color |
| A | Pigment pattern | Ay = sable; aw = wild sable; at = tan points (phantom); a = recessive black |
| K | Dominant black | KB = dominant black (masks A locus); kbr = brindle; ky = allows A expression |
| S | White spotting | S = solid; sp = parti (white patches); requires two copies to express |
🔬 Peer-Reviewed Research
A 2022 genome-wide association study published by the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) identified a novel SNN retrocopy insertion (SNNL1) on chromosome 18, uniquely associated with deeper red and apricot pigment intensity in poodles. The study found higher melanin content in darker poodles despite equal numbers of melanocytes — confirming that pigment density, not cell count, drives color depth.
How Dominant × Recessive Works
Think of each gene like a light switch. Dominant alleles (capital letters) override recessive ones (lowercase) — but you need two copies of a recessive gene for it to show.
Key Insight: Hidden Carriers
A solid black poodle can carry recessive genes for red, brown, or even parti coloration without showing any visible signs. DNA color testing (available from Embark, Wisdom Panel, or UC Davis Veterinary Genetics Laboratory) is the only reliable way to know what recessive genes your poodle carries.
All Recognized Poodle Coat Colors
From classic blacks to rare phantoms — every officially recognized poodle shade, at a glance.
Frequently Asked Questions
The most common questions about poodle coat color genetics — answered clearly.






