Best Dog Breeds for Digital Nomads Who Travel With Their Dog
I brought Mochi home in Mexico City on a Tuesday. By Friday, I was Googling "can a Toy Poodle fly cabin on Aeromexico" at 1am in my Condesa apartment.
You fall for the dog first, figure out the logistics second. If you're still in the figuring-out stage — good. You have time to choose a breed that fits traveling with a dog as a digital nomad.
After two years on the road with a Toy Poodle across Mexico, Colombia, Portugal, and Spain, here's what I've learned about which dogs fit this life and which ones don't.

The one thing that matters more than anything else: size
Most airlines allow dogs in-cabin if they fit in a carrier under the seat. That carrier usually maxes out around 45cm x 28cm x 28cm. If your dog can't fit comfortably in that box, every flight becomes a negotiation — cargo, sedation, separate check-in, waiting at baggage claim with your heart in your throat.
Dogs under 5–6kg (around 10–12 lbs) can usually fly cabin on most airlines. That number is your first filter.
Breeds that work well for nomad life
Toy Poodle My personal pick, and I'm not objective about this. Mochi is 3.5kg, barely sheds, and adapts to a new apartment in about 20 minutes flat. Poodles are smart enough to handle irregular schedules — they don't spiral when your routine changes. They're also hypoallergenic, which matters when you're staying in furnished rentals where the last tenant had cats.

The grooming is real though. Budget for it wherever you're based. In Chiang Mai it's cheap. In Lisbon it's not.
Chihuahua Tiny, light, fits any carrier. They bond hard to one person, which can actually be a comfort when you're both in a new city every few months. The reputation for being snappy is mostly about poor socialization — a well-raised Chihuahua is steady.
One note: they feel the cold. Pack a layer for them if you're heading anywhere above 1,000m or into European winters.

French Bulldog Popular in the nomad community, and I understand why — they're chill, they're adaptable, they don't need much exercise. But Frenchies are brachycephalic, meaning flat-faced, and several major airlines ban them from cargo entirely. Some restrict cabin too. If you fly a lot, check every airline's policy before committing to this breed. It can get complicated.

Maltese Quiet, small, low-energy. Good for coworking spaces and long desk days. They do need regular brushing, but the coat is manageable. If you want a dog that's happy sitting next to you while you're on a four-hour call, a Maltese will do it.

Shih Tzu Similar profile to the Maltese. They were bred as lap dogs for a reason — they're genuinely content being close to their person in a small space. Works well in apartments, adapts to new environments without too much stress.

Miniature Dachshund Longer body than you'd expect for a cabin carrier, so measure carefully before buying anything. But they're curious and resilient, and they travel with more personality than most small dogs. Good for people who want a dog with a bit more character.

Breeds I'd think twice about
Border Collie / Australian Shepherd Brilliant dogs. Also dogs that need a job and two hours of exercise a day. A coworking space walk at lunch doesn't cut it. If you're working 8-hour days in a city you don't know well, this isn't fair to the dog.

Labrador / Golden Retriever Too big for cabin. Cargo is stressful for animals and you'll spend every flight anxious. Some people manage it, but if you're flying more than a few times a year, it's a hard setup.

Husky Beautiful, high-energy, built for cold. Southeast Asia will overheat them. The barking in a thin-walled apartment in Medellín will not make you popular.

A few things worth knowing before you go
Airport security with a dog is its own skill. You'll take them out of the carrier, carry them through the scanner, fold the carrier flat on the belt, and hope they don't panic. Doing this solo with a rolling carry-on and a laptop bag is a logistics puzzle. Practice at home.
Some countries have quarantine rules. Japan, Australia, New Zealand, and the UK all have strict import requirements. Before you commit to a destination, check if your dog can enter without a multi-week quarantine. This has rerouted more than one nomad's travel plans.
Vets abroad are fine, usually. I've taken Mochi to vets in four countries. Most cities with a digital nomad population have at least one vet who speaks English. Bring your dog's vaccination record as a PDF on your phone.
The honest version: traveling with a dog makes everything a bit more complicated and also significantly better. You just want a dog that's built for the life you're actually living.
Traveling with a pet? The gear that's saved me the most stress.