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Best Places to Buy Teacup Dogs

Best Places to Buy Teacup Dogs: Complete Buyer’s Guide

Finding the right teacup puppy is not hard. Finding the right place to buy one — that’s where things get complicated.

The market for teacup dogs is filled with boutique stores, independent breeders, online marketplaces, rescue organizations, and an alarming number of outright scams. Every option comes with its own set of tradeoffs, and most guides written on this topic give you a shallow list without telling you what actually matters when making this kind of decision.

This guide is different. We’ve researched every buying option, pulled real pricing data by breed, documented the exact scam tactics targeting teacup buyers right now in 2026, and laid out a clear framework for making the right choice. We’ve also included an honest, transparent look at what makes Puppy Heaven — with 21+ years in Las Vegas and South Florida — one of the best options in the country for finding a healthy teacup puppy.

Read this before you spend a dollar anywhere.

What “Teacup” Actually Means (And Why It Matters Before You Buy)

Before diving into where to buy, you need to understand what you’re actually buying — because the word “teacup” means something different depending on who’s using it.

The American Kennel Club does not recognize “teacup” as an official size category. There is no breed standard. There is no governing body. The term is a marketing label used to describe dogs that are smaller than the already-small toy breed versions — typically under 4 pounds as adults.

Here’s why this matters for buying:

Because there’s no standard definition, any seller can call any small puppy a “teacup.” A three-month-old puppy that looks tiny today could grow to 10 or 12 pounds. Without documentation of parent weights and honest size expectations from the seller, you have no reliable way to know what you’re getting.

This doesn’t mean all teacup dogs are the same. A well-bred teacup from parents who are naturally small, health-tested, and raised responsibly can be a healthy companion for 12–15 years. Size alone is not the only issue. Many health concerns linked to teacup dogs come from irresponsible breeding practices and sellers who use the term “teacup” as a marketing label for undersized or poorly bred puppies.

The first rule of buying a teacup dog: Know your seller as well as you know the dog.

The 6 Main Places to Buy a Teacup Dog: Pros, Cons & What to Watch For

1. Reputable Puppy Boutiques (Specialist Stores)

This is the gold standard for most teacup buyers — and for good reason.

A legitimate puppy boutique specializes specifically in small and teacup breeds. They typically work with an established network of breeders, vet-check every puppy before placement, provide health guarantees, offer financing, and have physical locations where you can meet the puppy before committing.

The key word is “legitimate.” The boutique model has also been copied by bad actors — stores that look professional online but source from puppy mills or overseas kennels with no health transparency.

What a good boutique provides:

  • Puppies that have been examined by a licensed vet before sale
  • Documented vaccination and deworming records
  • Written health guarantee covering genetic conditions
  • Parent weight information and realistic adult size expectations
  • Microchipping before the puppy leaves
  • Physical location you can actually visit
  • Live video call options before commitment
  • Financing options for qualified buyers
  • Ongoing support after the puppy goes home
  • Nationwide delivery handled by the store, not a third-party shipper you’ve never vetted

What to watch for in this category:

  • Stores that refuse in-person visits or video calls
  • No physical address or a non-functional address listed
  • Health guarantee that requires you to return the puppy rather than cover treatment
  • Prices wildly below market (under $700) from a store claiming professional quality
  • No reviews anywhere except their own website

Puppy Heaven’s place in this category: Puppy Heaven has operated boutique locations in Las Vegas, NV and Sunrise, FL for over 21 years. With 30,000+ successful placements, verifiable Google and Yelp reviews, in-person visit capability, video calls before purchase, nationwide delivery, and 100% financing available — this is a textbook example of what a reputable boutique looks like. Every puppy is vet-checked, vaccinated, microchipped, and covered by a written health guarantee before leaving. Browse available teacup puppies →

2. Independent Breeder (Private Breeder)

Buying directly from a breeder means there’s no middleman between you and the person who raised the puppy. In theory, this can mean more transparency, more direct access to parent information, and a closer relationship with someone who knows the puppy well.

In practice, it varies wildly. Some of the best teacup puppies come from experienced private breeders who have spent decades refining their lines. Some of the worst come from backyard breeders who decided to put two small dogs together and sell the litter.

Signs of a good private breeder:

  • Has been breeding this specific breed for multiple years — not their “first litter”
  • Health-tests both parents and can share documentation (OFA cardiac, eye certifications)
  • Raises puppies in their home, not in kennels or cages
  • Asks you questions — about your living situation, experience, schedule
  • Provides a written contract and health guarantee
  • Is happy to do a video call and show you the parents live
  • Has verifiable reviews or referrals from past buyers
  • Doesn’t have 10 different breeds available simultaneously (a red flag for volume breeding)

Signs of a bad private breeder:

  • Can’t tell you the parent dogs’ weights or health history
  • Puppies are always available — no waitlists ever
  • Rushes to close the sale before you ask too many questions
  • Won’t let you visit or video chat before payment
  • Prices way below or way above comparable listings with no explanation
  • Accepts only wire transfer, Zelle, or cash — no credit cards

One honest reality: the best private breeders for teacup breeds have waitlists. If a breeder has exactly the rare tiny puppy you want available immediately with no wait, that’s worth questioning.

3. Online Puppy Marketplaces

Sites like PuppyFind, Greenfield Puppies, Lancaster Puppies, AKC Marketplace, and PuppySpot aggregate listings from breeders across the country and connect buyers with available puppies.

The quality here ranges enormously. Some legitimate breeders list on these platforms. Puppy mills also list on these platforms. The marketplace itself usually has some screening — AKC Marketplace conducts kennel inspections and lists only AKC-registerable litters, which sets a higher bar — but most aggregator sites are just that: aggregators. They’re not vetting every breeder on their platform the way a boutique vets its own puppies.

When marketplaces work well:

  • For purebred AKC-registerable breeds where you want to connect with a specialized breeder in a specific state
  • When you have the knowledge and time to do thorough breeder due diligence yourself
  • When you can make an in-person visit before committing

When marketplaces fall short:

  • For designer or hybrid breeds where “teacup” claims are especially hard to verify
  • When you need a vet-checked, vaccinated puppy with guaranteed health records ready to go
  • When you can’t visit in person and have to rely entirely on a stranger’s word

The AKC Marketplace is the most trustworthy aggregator platform because of its kennel inspection program. For standard AKC breeds — Yorkie, Chihuahua, Pomeranian, Maltese, Poodle — it’s a reasonable starting point for finding breeders.

For designer breeds like Maltipoo, Morkie, Cavapoo, or Pomsky, AKC Marketplace won’t have listings because these aren’t AKC-recognized breeds. A specialist boutique is the better option for these.

4. Rescue Organizations and Shelters

Adoption is a legitimate and often overlooked option for teacup dogs. Breed-specific rescues exist for Yorkies, Chihuahuas, Maltese, Pomeranians, and Poodles. Adoption fees are typically $100–$500 — dramatically less than purchase prices from breeders.

The honest trade-offs:

Advantages of rescue:

  • Significantly lower cost
  • Many rescue dogs are adults with known temperament and health history
  • You’re giving a dog a second chance
  • Many rescues include spay/neuter, initial vaccinations, and microchipping in the adoption fee

Limitations of rescue:

  • Very small teacup-sized dogs are rare in shelters — most go directly to rehoming through private networks
  • Less predictability over adult size if the dog is young
  • Some rescue dogs carry behavioral challenges from previous homes that require patient, experienced handling
  • No ability to know breeding history or parent health

For buyers who are flexible on age and have experience with dogs, rescue is worth exploring seriously. For first-time dog owners who want a puppy with known background and health documentation, a reputable boutique or breeder is usually a better fit.

5. Craigslist, Facebook Marketplace & Classified Ads

This is where the most risk lives — and also where the most scams originate.

People do occasionally sell genuine puppies on these platforms. A family whose dog had an accidental litter might list puppies on Facebook Marketplace. That’s real and legitimate. But these platforms have also become the primary hunting ground for puppy scammers, and teacup breeds are the most targeted category.

Scammers often communicate only by text or chat, avoid phone calls, and use poor grammar. Be wary of high-pressure tactics like “limited-time pricing” or claims that the puppy must be shipped immediately.

A common scam involves photos stolen from legitimate breeders’ websites — often photoshopped to make the puppy look very small, extra cute, and appealing. Teacup is a common term used for these online scams.

The safest rule for this category: if you can’t physically visit and meet the puppy before paying, don’t use Craigslist or Facebook Marketplace for a teacup dog purchase. The risks outweigh the potential savings in almost every case.

6. “Korean Teacup” or International Online Sellers

A specific category worth its own mention: overseas sellers advertising “Korean teacup” puppies with heavily edited photos showing extremely tiny dogs with round faces and oversized eyes.

Companies advertising these puppies have been known to advertise drastically photoshopped images of puppies for sale. Without a physical location to visit, clients can’t see the puppy for themselves — so when the puppy arrives, it’s much larger than advertised and doesn’t look anything like it did in the picture.

This category also intersects with a specific health concern: there has been a reported increase in teacup breeds being shipped worldwide where some puppies are intentionally removed from the mother’s womb early to restrict size. This results in very small teacup breeds that aren’t physically the correct age.

The rule is simple: don’t buy from any seller who has no verifiable physical location in the United States and who can’t do a live video call showing you the puppy and its environment in real time.

The Complete Teacup Puppy Scam Guide: Every Tactic

Puppy scams are exploding. The FTC and consumer protection agencies report millions of dollars lost annually to fake puppy listings — and teacup breeds are disproportionately targeted because buyers are emotional, the prices are high, and the “teacup” category has no official standards to enforce.

Here are every tactic currently being used, so you can recognize them immediately:

Tactic 1: Prices That Are Too Good to Be True

Teacup puppy prices generally range from $500 to $3,000 from legitimate sources, with some breeds significantly higher. A teacup Yorkie from a reputable boutique typically runs $1,995–$2,995. Teacup Pomeranians can cost anywhere from $1,500 to $6,500+ depending on the breeder, puppy age, location, sex, color, and health status.

If you see a “teacup Yorkie” or “teacup Pomeranian” listed for $250–$400, you are looking at a scam. Legitimate breeders cannot raise a health-tested, vet-checked, vaccinated puppy and sell it at that price.

Tactic 2: Stolen Photos

Many scam sites lift pictures directly from legitimate breeders. If you’re unsure, try a reverse image search on Google, Bing Visual Search, or TinEye. If the same picture pops up on multiple unrelated websites, chances are high that it’s been stolen.

This is one of the fastest ways to verify a listing. Before you engage with any online seller, right-click their puppy photos and run a reverse image search.

Tactic 3: Wire Transfer, Zelle, or Cash App Only

Money wire transfers are completely untraceable, making them an internet scammer’s dream. Whether in the form of a classic Western Union wire transfer, Cash App, or even Zelle, these payment methods offer zero protection to senders.

A legitimate boutique or breeder will accept credit cards or financing. If a seller insists on wire transfer or Zelle only, walk away immediately.

Tactic 4: Refusing Phone or Video Calls

One of the first warning signs is when a seller refuses to talk on the phone. Honest breeders want to get to know you and will be more than happy to answer questions over a call or video chat. Scammers stick to email or messaging apps, especially if they’re outside the country.

Any seller who won’t do a live video call showing the puppy and the environment in real time is not a seller you should send money to.

Tactic 5: The “Stuck in Shipping” Escalation

This is the most financially damaging scam pattern. After you pay for the puppy, you receive emails (often impersonating airlines or shipping companies) saying the puppy is stuck and requires additional payment for insurance, customs clearance, a special crate, or a health certificate. Each payment creates a new request for more money.

Scammers are now copying airline websites, images, logos, and emails to scam people out of additional money when selling/shipping puppies. Once you make arrangements with the fake shipper/seller, you receive an email from the “airline” saying you need to send more money for missing paperwork, shots, improper kennel, or required pet insurance.

Real delivery services never work this way. A legitimate boutique handles delivery directly — they don’t outsource it to an unnamed third party.

Tactic 6: Fake Websites With New Domain Ages

Scam sites are often only a few months old. You can check when the breeder’s website was created using a WHOIS lookup. If a website selling $3,000 puppies was created six weeks ago, that’s a major warning sign.

Also look for: no physical address, generic stock photography, suspiciously identical text to other websites (copied from legitimate breeders), and no reviews on Google, Yelp, or the BBB.

Tactic 7: Pressure Tactics and Artificial Urgency

If a breeder seems anxious to complete the sale or get your deposit as soon as possible, or if you feel like they are pushing you to make a quick decision, be careful. Such behavior is often a warning sign.

Phrases like “another buyer is interested,” “this price ends tonight,” or “she won’t be available by tomorrow” are manufactured pressure. Legitimate sellers don’t rush you. They want the right home for their dog, not the fastest sale.

Quick Scam Verification Checklist

  1. Before paying anyone for a teacup puppy online:
  2. Run a reverse image search on all puppy photos
  3. Do a WHOIS lookup — check when the website domain was created
  4. Search the seller’s name/phone number on the BBB Scam Tracker
  5. Verify their physical address on Google Maps (Street View)
  6. Request a live video call — ask the seller to do something specific (hold up a sign, show you the puppy from a specific angle)
  7. Check Google, Yelp, and Facebook for reviews outside their own website
  8. Never pay via wire transfer, Zelle, Cash App, or Western Union
  9. Read the health guarantee carefully — what does it actually cover?

Teacup Puppy Price Guide by Breed (2026 Market Data)

Understanding real pricing protects you from both scams and overpricing. Here’s current market data for the most popular teacup breeds:

Breed Reputable Boutique / Breeder Price Rescue / Adoption Red Flag (Too Low)
Teacup Yorkie $1,995 – $5,000+ $100 – $500 Under $700
Teacup Maltese $1,500 – $4,000 $100 – $500 Under $600
Teacup Pomeranian $1,500 – $6,500+ $100 – $500 Under $700
Teacup Chihuahua $1,500 – $5,000 $100 – $400 Under $500
Teacup Shih Tzu $1,200 – $4,000 $100 – $400 Under $500
Teacup Poodle $1,500 – $5,000 $100 – $500 Under $600
Teacup Maltipoo $1,500 – $4,500 $100 – $500 Under $600
Teacup Morkie $1,500 – $4,000 $100 – $400 Under $600
Teacup Pomeranian (rare color) $3,000 – $6,500+ Rarely available
Teacup French Bulldog / Mini $3,500 – $10,000+ $300 – $800 Under $1,500

What Drives the Price?

Breeder quality and practices — The single biggest factor. Breeders who perform health testing and provide proper care for their dogs tend to charge more than breeders who don’t. This testing and caring costs money, and that extra cost often gets rolled into the puppy’s price. However, these puppies may be less prone to health problems, so you may actually save more in the long run.

Size — Within the teacup category, smaller dogs tend to command higher prices. This is partly supply and demand (fewer naturally very small puppies in any given litter) and partly the market understanding that smaller dogs are what buyers specifically want.

Coat color — Standard colors are more available. Rare colorations — chocolate, blue, lavender, merle, parti-color, phantom — are genuinely harder to produce and priced accordingly.

Lineage and pedigree — Puppies with outstanding qualities, rare colors, or a long pedigree fall at the higher end of the price spectrum, often exceeding $3,000.

Gender — Female teacup puppies are typically priced $200–$500 higher than males across most breeds.

Geography — The geographical location of the breeder can also influence the cost of teacup dogs. High cost-of-living markets like New York, LA, and Miami carry higher prices than rural areas.

What’s included — A puppy priced at $2,500 that includes vet exam, vaccinations, deworming, microchipping, health guarantee, starter kit, and delivery support is a better value than a $1,800 puppy with none of those items.

10 Non-Negotiable Questions to Ask Before You Buy

These questions apply regardless of where you’re buying — boutique, private breeder, or marketplace.

1. What do the parent dogs weigh?

The most reliable predictor of your puppy’s adult size. If the seller can’t or won’t answer this, that’s a red flag.

2. Can I see the parent dogs on a live video call?

Genuine sellers welcome this. Scammers avoid it.

3. What health testing has been done on the parents?

At minimum: cardiac screening and eye certification for the breeds that carry those risks.

4. What’s included in the purchase price?

Vet exam, vaccinations, deworming, health guarantee, and microchipping should all be standard from any reputable source.

5. What does the health guarantee actually cover?

Read the specific language. A guarantee that only covers returning the puppy (rather than treatment costs) offers limited real protection.

6. How long have you been in business?

Longevity matters. A seller with 5, 10, or 20+ years and verifiable customer reviews is a fundamentally different proposition than someone who started six months ago.

7. Can I visit in person?

Physical visits are the gold standard for trust. If an answer is no and no video call alternative exists, stop there.

8. How is delivery handled?

Who handles the shipping? Is it done in-house, or outsourced to a third party you’ve never heard of? Reputable boutiques manage delivery directly.

9. What support do you offer after I bring the puppy home?

Good sellers stay available. They want to know how the dog is doing.

10. Do you accept credit card or financing?

If the only payment method is wire transfer, Zelle, or Cash App — this is not a legitimate seller.

How to Buy a Teacup Dog Online Safely: Step-by-Step

If you can’t visit in person before buying — whether due to location, travel constraints, or simply finding the right puppy in a different state — here’s the process that protects you:

Step 1: Research the seller, not just the puppy. Find them on Google, Yelp, the Better Business Bureau, and Facebook. Look for reviews that aren’t on their own website. Check the BBB scam tracker. Do a WHOIS domain age lookup. Verify their physical address.

Step 2: Run a reverse image search on every puppy photo. Right-click and search via Google Images or TinEye. Stolen photos are one of the most common early signals of a scam.

Step 3: Request a live video call — not pre-recorded footage. Ask the seller to show you the puppy doing something specific in real time. Hold it up, show you the play area, show you the mother if possible. Pre-recorded video is easy to fake in 2026.

Step 4: Ask for documentation before sending money. Vaccination records, vet health certificate, and parent information should be shareable before you commit.

Step 5: Pay by credit card or through a financing platform. Credit card payments offer chargeback protection. Wire transfers do not. Never use wire transfer, Zelle, or Cash App for a puppy purchase from anyone you haven’t verified thoroughly.

Step 6: Get the health guarantee in writing before the puppy ships. Not after. Not “we’ll send it with the puppy.” Before the transaction is complete.

Step 7: Understand how delivery works specifically. Who is handling transport? What carrier? What’s the route? Legitimate boutiques handle this directly and can answer these questions specifically. Vague answers about “our shipping partner” with no further detail is a warning sign.

What Makes a Teacup Puppy Source Actually Trustworthy?

After looking at every option in the market, here’s what separates genuinely trustworthy sources from everyone else:

Years in business with verifiable history. Anyone can build a website in a week. Years of operation with real reviews from real buyers across multiple platforms is not something that can be faked.

A physical location you can actually visit. The boutique model has a massive advantage here. When a business has a real storefront with real hours and real staff, the accountability is structural. You can walk in, see the puppies, meet the team, and ask every question you have in person.

Health testing and documentation. Not just “all our puppies are healthy.” Specific health examinations by licensed veterinarians, with documentation that travels with the puppy.

Transparent sizing expectations. Honest sellers will tell you what size range to expect based on parent weights. They won’t guarantee a specific adult weight because that’s not possible — but they’ll give you realistic expectations.

Written health guarantee with real teeth. Coverage for genetic conditions for a defined period, with actual remedies (treatment coverage or replacement) rather than just “return the puppy.”

Post-sale support. The relationship doesn’t end when you pay. Good sellers — especially good boutiques — stay involved and stay available.

Puppy Heaven: Why It’s the Best Place to Buy Teacup Dogs

There are a lot of options for buying teacup puppies. There aren’t many that check every box on the list above.

Among established boutique providers, Puppy Heaven is one example of a long-running business with physical locations and documented customer history.

Here’s what sets Puppy Heaven apart from every other option:

Physical boutiques you can walk into. Las Vegas, Nevada and Sunrise, Florida. Physical boutique locations where buyers can meet puppies before committing. Puppy Heaven specializes in this type of dog. Maintaining relationships with responsible breeders, veterinary oversight, and high-quality boutique operations requires significant long-term investment.

21+ years in business According to Puppy Heaven, the company has facilitated over 30,000 puppy placements. The company states that it has operated for more than two decades and built a large customer base across multiple states.

Every puppy vet-checked before placement. Full veterinarian examination before any puppy leaves for its new home.

Written health guarantee. Specific, in writing, before the transaction is complete.

Vaccinations, deworming, and microchipping included. Every puppy. No add-ons.

Video calls available before you visit or commit. Live, real-time — see the exact puppy you’re considering, meet the team, ask every question you have.

100% puppy financing available. Quick approval, manageable monthly payments — so the upfront cost is never the reason you don’t bring home the right dog.

Nationwide delivery handled directly. Personal hand delivery or air shipping across the entire United States and Canada. Low-cost home delivery specifically to California, Nevada, and Arizona.

Starter kit included. Food, wee-wee pads, and a toy — everything you need for the first night.

The full range of teacup and toy breeds in one place:

Browse All Available Teacup & Toy PuppiesExplore Financing OptionsContact Our Las Vegas or Florida TeamRead What Our Customers Say

Teacup Dog Pricing: The Real Cost of Ownership Beyond the Purchase Price

The purchase price is the beginning, not the total cost. Here’s what to realistically plan for:

Year One

Expense Estimated Cost
Crate, bed, harness, bowls, starter supplies $200 – $400
Puppy vet visits and core vaccinations $300 – $500
Spay/neuter (if applicable) $200 – $500
Flea, tick, and heartworm prevention $150 – $300
Small-breed puppy food (high-quality) $200 – $400
Professional grooming every 6–8 weeks $400 – $900
Puppy training (strongly recommended) $100 – $300
Year One Total $1,550 – $3,300

Ongoing Annual Costs

Expense Annual Estimate
Food $200 – $400
Routine vet care and preventatives $300 – $500
Grooming $400 – $900
Dental cleanings (every 1–2 years) $200 – $600
Toys, treats, miscellaneous supplies $150 – $350
Pet insurance $360 – $720
Annual Total $1,610 – $3,470

On pet insurance: Given the health conditions teacup dogs can be predisposed to — hypoglycemia, luxating patella, cardiac issues, dental disease — insurance at $30–$60/month is genuinely cost-effective. A single patellar luxation surgery runs $1,500–$3,000 per knee. One cardiac emergency can exceed $5,000. Insurance makes these manageable.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best place to buy a teacup dog?

A reputable specialist boutique with a physical location, documented health practices, written health guarantee, and verifiable customer reviews is the safest and most reliable option for most buyers. Online purchases are possible safely if you follow the verification steps in this guide. Puppy Heaven — with 21+ years of operation, 30,000+ placements, physical locations in Las Vegas and Florida, financing, video calls, and nationwide delivery — is one of the strongest options in the country.

How much does a teacup dog cost from a reputable source?

Pricing by breed varies, but most teacup puppies from reputable sources range from $1,500 to $5,000+. Rare colors, champion bloodlines, and extremely small sizes push prices higher. Anything under $700–$800 from a private online listing should be treated with serious skepticism.

Are teacup dogs healthy?

Teacup dogs may face increased health risks due to their extremely small size, which is why responsible breeding practices, veterinary care, and realistic size expectations are especially important. The health concerns associated with teacup dogs — hypoglycemia, dental disease, luxating patella, cardiac conditions — are significantly reduced when breeders prioritize health over size extremes and test parent dogs before breeding.

How do I avoid teacup puppy scams?

Never pay by wire transfer. Always run a reverse image search on puppy photos. Always request a live video call. Check the domain age of the seller’s website. Verify reviews on Google and Yelp, not just the seller’s own site. Use the BBB Scam Tracker. Never pay anyone who creates urgency or pressure.

Can I buy a teacup dog online safely?

Yes — if you follow a verification process. Legitimate boutiques like Puppy Heaven handle online purchases routinely, with video calls, documented health records, credit card payment processing, and direct delivery. The key is doing your due diligence on the seller, not just the puppy.

What teacup breeds are best for apartments?

All teacup breeds adapt well to apartment living. The most consistently popular for small spaces are the Teacup Yorkie, Teacup Maltese, Teacup Chihuahua, Teacup Poodle, and Teacup Shih Tzu. Each requires 20–30 minutes of daily light activity, manageable entirely indoors.

Do teacup dogs come with health guarantees?

From reputable sources, yes. A written health guarantee covering genetic conditions for a defined period — typically one to two years — is standard from any legitimate boutique or responsible breeder. Make sure you receive it in writing before the transaction completes.

Conclusion

The best place to buy a teacup dog is the one that can answer every question on this page clearly, specifically, and in writing — before you pay.

That means a physical location or verified track record. Live video access. Documentation. A health guarantee with real terms. Transparent pricing. Credit card payment. And someone who’s been doing this long enough that their reputation is their most valuable asset.

That’s exactly what Puppy Heaven has built over 21 years. For buyers looking for an established boutique with physical locations, health documentation, financing options, and nationwide delivery, Puppy Heaven remains one of the more recognized names in the teacup puppy market.

Browse Available Teacup Puppies at Puppy Heaven →

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