This is a specific conversation about Dog crates — the right size and type — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
A 16-week-old Cane Corso is already a sizing challenge — standard breed charts almost always underestimate them because they're built for average dogs, not a breed that routinely hits 50–60kg at maturity. Crate size really is the critical decision here: too small causes distress, but too large and you lose the den-like enclosure that makes crate training actually work. The material and style matter too, depending on whether this is for home use, travel, or both. Can you tell me roughly how big your pup is right now — height and weight if you know it — and whether this crate is mainly for home training, car travel, or both? And are you starting crate training from scratch?
He's 16 weeks, already about 18kg and quite tall — maybe 50cm at the shoulder. Pure home use, no travel. And yes, complete beginner with crate training. I don't want to keep buying crates as he grows.
inparticular.ai
Good — home use only makes this simpler, and knowing you don't want to rebuy is the right instinct. At 18kg and 50cm at 16 weeks, you're looking at a dog who'll likely reach 70–80cm at the shoulder and 50kg+ by 18 months. Most 'XXL' crates sold as 48-inch max out around 122cm long, which will be tight for a mature male Corso. What you need is a crate with a divider panel so you can section it down now for training — giving him just enough space to stand, turn, and lie down — and then open it up as he grows. What's your floor space like at home? And do you have a preference for a double-door setup, or is a single front-opening door fine?
Floor space isn't a problem, I've got a big kitchen. Double door would be useful actually — easier to get him in from the side. He's going to be a big lad.
inparticular.ai
Perfect setup for what I'd recommend. Go with the MidWest Homes for Pets iCrate Double Door dog crate in the 54-inch size. It's 137cm long, 58cm wide, and 64cm tall — enough room for a fully grown male Cane Corso without being so cavernous it defeats the training. It comes with a divider panel included, so right now you'd set it to roughly a third of the full length, and move the panel back every few weeks as he fills out. The double-door design means you can load him from the front or the side, which is genuinely useful when you're dealing with a dog this size. The slide-bolt latches are solid — Corsos are strong and curious, and flimsy latches won't last. Wire construction is right for home use: good airflow, he can see out, and it folds flat if you ever need to store it. It's available on Amazon UK and well-reviewed for giant breeds specifically.
That sounds ideal. Will the divider actually hold if he decides to push against it? He's already pretty strong.
inparticular.ai
Honest answer: the MidWest divider is sturdy enough for most dogs, but a determined adolescent Corso — especially between 6 and 14 months when they're strong but still testing everything — can dislodge it if they really lean into it. The fix is simple: a couple of zip ties through the divider and the crate frame keeps it firmly in place without permanent modification. The outer crate walls themselves are robust heavy-gauge wire and won't flex under a Corso's weight. If he becomes a serious escape artist as a teenager, you can look at reinforced steel crates, but the MidWest will serve you well through the training phase and beyond for most dogs. The key is getting the training right early so he sees the crate as his space rather than a barrier — at 16 weeks you're at exactly the right age to start.
Brilliant, that's really helpful. I'll go for the 54-inch MidWest. Thanks.
inparticular.ai
Good choice — it'll grow with him and save you buying a second crate. One practical tip: when you first set it up, put the divider in to make the space snug, throw in a worn t-shirt that smells of you, and feed his meals inside it for the first week before you ever close the door. Corsos bond hard and fast — making the crate feel like your space as much as his takes a lot of the resistance out of it. Good luck with him.