Carolina Dog (American Dingo) puppies for sale across Canada
Browse current listings and join the waitlist for Carolina Dog (American Dingo) puppies across Canada.
Also known as: American Dingo, Carolina Dingo, Dixie Dingo

Browse current listings and join the waitlist for Carolina Dog (American Dingo) puppies across Canada.
Also known as: American Dingo, Carolina Dingo, Dixie Dingo

Paction lists dogs for sale from ethical, health-tested breeders across Canada. You can search by breed and province to find your ideal companion.
Yes. Paction connects you with dogs for adoption from trusted breeders across Canada, including puppies that are ready for rehoming. Browse current listings or join a waitlist to be notified when a new litter is ready.
Yes. Alongside purebreds, you can find mixed breed pups from responsible breeders across Canada. Use the breed filter or browse all listings to explore what is currently available.
Every breeder on Paction is vetted before joining the platform. Paction breeders commit to health testing, transparent practices, and lifetime support for the dogs they place. You can read breeder profiles, view available puppies, and message breeders directly before making any decisions.
Puppy prices vary by breed, breeder, and location. Beyond the purchase price, budgeting for ongoing costs — vet care, food, grooming, and training — is equally important. Paction has built the Ultimate Dog Cost Calculator to help you plan for the full lifetime cost of your dog.

The Carolina Dog (American Dingo), often called the American Dingo or Carolina Dingo, is a beloved breed with a rich history.
The Carolina Dog, often called the American Dingo, is one of the few remaining primitive dog breeds still living in the United States. These dogs are believed to be descendants of ancient pariah dogs that migrated from Asia with humans across the Bering Land Bridge thousands of years ago. For centuries, they survived as semi-wild dogs in the southeastern United States, especially in the Carolinas and Georgia, living near swamps and pine forests. Rediscovered in the 1970s by Dr. I. Lehr Brisbin, who studied them in South Carolina, the breed was found to have genetic links to ancient East Asian and Australian dingoes. Today, the Carolina Dog is recognized by several kennel clubs as a natural, primitive breed, admired for its intelligence, adaptability, and unspoiled instincts.