What Is a Multigen Australian Labradoodle

What They Really Are (And Why Your Breeder Matters)

At NorthStar Labradoodles in Bend, Oregon, every puppy we raise is a true multigenerational Australian Labradoodle — ALAA-registered, guardian-home raised, and bred to the full ALAA standard.

But what does “multigenerational” actually mean? And why does the breeder behind it make all the difference?

What Is a Multigenerational Australian Labradoodle?

The Australian Labradoodle started in the 1980s as a cross between a Labrador Retriever and a Poodle. Early generations (F1, F1B) were unpredictable — shedding, inconsistent coats, and variable temperaments.

Multigenerational means F3 and beyond — at least three generations of Labradoodle-to-Labradoodle breeding. The ALAA requires a minimum of F3 for registration.

This selective breeding stabilizes three key traits:

  • Coat: Truly non-shedding, allergy-friendly fleece (wavy or curly) — no surprise shedding at 18 months
  • Temperament: Calm, intuitive, therapy-quality — the famous “Labradoodle personality” you expect
  • Health: Predictable size and lower genetic risks through careful line breeding

F1 or F1B crosses are not multigenerational — they’re just first-generation mixes with 50 % chance of shedding and unpredictable traits.

Why Your Breeder Makes All the Difference

Any breeder can call a puppy a “Labradoodle.” Only an ethical, ALAA-registered breeder can deliver a true multigenerational Australian Labradoodle.

Typical Breeder NorthStar Labradoodles
F1/F1B crosses F3+ multigenerational only
Basic vaccines Full ALAA health testing (OFA/DNA/eyes)
Kennel or backyard Guardian homes (no kennels ever)
No support Lifetime return policy + ongoing help

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