The Belgian Malinois was named after the Belgian city of Malines. While the Belgian Malinois is still rare in the USA, it is popular in Belgium, its country of origin. It is one of the four varieties of Belgian sheepdogs, the Belgian Malinois, Belgian Tervuren, Belgian Groenendael, and the less popular Belgian Laekenois, which all share a common foundation. In most countries and breed clubs all four dogs are considered the same breed with different varieties in coat types. All four dogs share a breed standard in all countries except for the AKC, which since 1959 recognizes them as separate breeds and does not recognize one of the four (the Laekenois), whereas the UKC, which is also a U.S. registry does recognize all four varieties as one breed. Versatile and highly intelligent, all four varieties of the Belgian sheepdog excel at a variety of talents, including but not limited to, police work such as, narcotics and bomb detection, protection and Schutzhund, search and rescue, also obedience, agility, tracking, herding, sled and cart pulling and as a guide for the blind and assistant to the disabled. These high energy, extremely intelligent dogs need leadership, to be challenged, and well exercised daily and therefore are not for everyone, but can make an excellent family companion with the right owners. The Belgian Malinois was the first of the four sheepdogs to establish type. Until the other four were established in type they were called “Berger Belge a poil court autre que Malinois,” which means “Belgian short-coated Sheepdog who is not the Malinois.” Today all four sheepdogs are popular in Belgium, with the Laekenois and Malinois more often used as working type dogs, than the Belgian Groenendael and Tervuren but all types still making excellent workers.

23 Comments

  1. wow thanks for the photos awesome….if you love these dogs check out …solider adopts dog that saved hes life….then you will see this breed it will make you cry ….my gift to you petsland

  2. The Photo with the two dogs together the one on the left is a German Shepherd and the one on the right is a Belgian malinois

  3. From what I have read that extreme high energy dominate personality is what makes them so good for demanding potentially risky physical work. Like Military work. And I'm guessing herding can be demanding work to.

  4. Irritating that this computer generated female voice pronounces the "ois" at the end as the "s" sound instead accurately as the french ois as wah. "mal in wah"

  5. I have a Malinois at about 7 months of age is already doing a great job helping with the sheep.
    Only the slightest influence of training and it works with me.
    There are other dogs in this environment to burn off extra energy. = essentially

Leave A Reply