Quick answer

For most large dogs, our top pick is the Ruffwear Front Range Harness. It pairs a padded chest plate with both a front and back leash clip, four adjustment points for a snug barrel chest fit, and reinforced webbing that handles steady leash load from a 60 to 90 pound dog. If your dog is a hard, persistent puller, the 2 Hounds Design Freedom No-Pull Harness with its martingale chest loop may redirect better. For working breeds and very strong dogs, the Julius-K9 IDC Powerharness offers heavy hardware and a sturdy top handle. The Rabbitgoo No-Pull is the value option, and the PetSafe Easy Walk suits owners focused purely on pull management for training walks.

What to consider for Dog Harness For Large Dogs

Large dogs change the math. A 70 pound dog that lunges can generate far more force than its body weight, so clip quality, stitching, and webbing width matter more than they do on a small dog. Chest shape is the next variable. Many large breeds, like Labradors, Boxers, and Pit Bull type dogs, are barrel chested, so a harness that only adjusts at the neck and belly often gapes or rides up. Look for at least four adjustment points so the girth strap sits behind the front legs without rubbing the armpit. Strength alone is not enough either. A strong dog that learns it can back out of a loose harness becomes an escape risk near traffic, so a snug, correctly measured fit is a safety feature, not a comfort nicety. Finally, think about how you handle the dog day to day. A sturdy top handle helps you control a big dog at the vet, near other dogs, or when lifting into a car, while reflective trim matters for early or late walks when a large dark dog is hard for drivers to see.

What to look for in a gear item (harness, collar, leash or muzzle)

Correct fit and sizing. Measure your dog’s chest girth at the widest point behind the front legs, and weight, then match the brand’s own chart rather than guessing by breed. Aim for a two finger gap under the straps, snug enough that the dog cannot reverse out but loose enough to avoid chafing.

Durable hardware and materials. On a large dog, favor metal or heavy reinforced buckles and aluminium leash rings over thin plastic. Wide polyester or nylon webbing spreads load and resists fraying, and box stitching at stress points outlasts a single line of thread.

Safety features. Escape resistant designs use multiple adjustment points and a girth strap that cannot slide forward. A well placed chest piece keeps pressure off the throat, which protects the trachea on flat faced or heavy pulling dogs. Reflective trim adds visibility in low light.

Comfort and padding. Foam or neoprene padding across the chest plate and under the girth strap prevents rubbing on long walks, which matters for active large dogs that wear the harness for hours.

No-pull design where relevant. A front clip attachment point gently turns the dog back toward you when it pulls, which makes a heavy dog easier to manage. It is a management aid, not a replacement for training with a certified trainer.

How we chose these picks

  • We focused on harnesses sized and rated by their makers for medium to large and extra large dogs, typically 40 pounds and up.
  • We compared publicly available manufacturer specifications for webbing width, clip type, and number of adjustment points.
  • We prioritized escape resistance and a no-choke chest design suited to strong, barrel chested breeds.
  • We read patterns in large volumes of owner reviews to surface recurring durability and fit complaints, not one off opinions.
  • We checked that each model offers a genuine size range that fits big dogs rather than topping out too small.
  • We weighed comfort features such as padding and breathability for dogs that wear a harness for long active walks.
  • We noted honest trade-offs for each pick so readers can match a harness to their specific dog.
  • Never ranked a product higher just because it pays a commission.

What to avoid

  • Ill-fitting sizes chosen by breed name alone. Always measure chest girth and use the brand chart, since a loose harness on a large dog invites escape and a tight one causes chafing.
  • Flimsy plastic clips and thin single stitched straps that can fail under the force a strong dog generates when it lunges.
  • Aversive tools such as prong or choke collars used without professional guidance, which can injure the neck and worsen reactivity. Consult a certified trainer first.
  • Retractable leashes near traffic, where the loose line gives you little control over a powerful dog and the thin cord can snap under load.

For more big dog gear and care advice, browse our dog guides, our dog care products, and our dog training and care sections.

Sources and further reading