Owner Guides

Are Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retrievers rare?

Despite their striking appearance and intelligence, Tollers are still a rare sight in most neighborhoods. Their scarcity is a result of specialized history, small breeding pools, and responsible placement.

Part of our complete care guide for the Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever.

Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever portrait
Scarcity snapshot
  • Rare vs. Labs and Goldens
  • Small breeding pools
  • Strict breeder screening
  • Waitlists are common

The quick answer

Yes — Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retrievers are considered a rare breed. They are far less common than Labradors or Golden Retrievers, with regional clusters in Canada, Scandinavia, and the Northeastern United States.

What “rare” means

Fewer litters each year, longer waitlists, and limited breeder availability compared with mainstream retrievers.

Why Tollers are rare

Limited breeding pools

Ethical breeders protect genetic diversity and produce fewer litters to avoid inbreeding.

Specialized purpose

Tollers stayed localized in Nova Scotia for decades due to their unique tolling hunting role.

Strict placement

High drive and vocal traits mean responsible breeders screen homes carefully.

Popularity compared to other retrievers

AKC rankings typically place Tollers around #80–#90.

Breed
Popularity level
Search frequency
Labrador Retriever
Extremely common
Very high
Golden Retriever
Very common
Very high
Flat‑Coated Retriever
Uncommon
Moderate
NS Duck Tolling Retriever
Rare
Growing / niche

Where Tollers are most common

You’ll find the largest Toller communities in Canada, Northern Europe, and coastal regions with strong waterfowl traditions.

Common regions

  • Canada (Nova Scotia, Ontario)
  • Northern Europe (Sweden, Finland, Norway)
  • Coastal regions (PNW, New England)

The waitlist reality

Because the breed is rare, expect a waiting list of 6–24 months and a detailed screening process.

What to expect

  • Application and interview
  • Health clearances and contracts
  • Higher costs due to genetic testing

Why rarity is a benefit

Many popular breeds suffer from overbreeding. Tollers remain a niche community, preserving working drive, health transparency, and strong breeder networks.

Traits preserved

  • Working drive
  • Genetic health oversight
  • Strong community connections

Identifying a responsible breeder

A responsible breeder will

  • Show OFA/eye clearances
  • Compete in sports or field work
  • Ask you more questions than you ask them
  • Take the dog back if needed

Red‑flag breeder will

  • Have puppies “ready to go” immediately
  • Advertise rare colors (not standard)
  • Skip registration or health guarantees

Take your time

A rare breed is worth waiting for. Patient buyers usually end up with healthier dogs and stronger support networks.

Plan for a Toller lifestyle

If you’re ready to wait and work for the right breeder, the reward is a high‑drive companion unlike any other.

Explore owner guides

Related resources

Complete breed guide

History, temperament, training, and care in one place.

Read the guide

Exercise needs

See if you can meet the breed’s activity requirements.

Read the guide

Family fit

Understand if a Toller fits your household and lifestyle.

Read the guide

Final verdict

Tollers are rare, and that rarity helps preserve their working drive, health focus, and community culture. If you are patient enough to wait for the right breeder, you will join an exclusive group of owners who value the breed’s intensity and intelligence.

Sources

Trusted references for breed standards and health guidance.

Organization
Link
American Kennel Club (AKC)
Canadian Kennel Club (CKC)
Orthopedic Foundation for Animals (OFA)
AKC Canine Health Foundation