This is a specific conversation about Pet gates — containing dogs safely — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
A Great Dane with an unusually wide chest is a real challenge for standard gates — most max out at a width that suits Labradors, not giant breeds. Gate choice generally comes down to three things: your dog's size and jumping ability, the width of the opening you're fitting it in, and whether you need a pressure-mounted or wall-mounted unit. Worth flagging upfront — pressure-mounted gates are not safe at the top of stairs, so if that's the location, wall-mounting is the only sensible option. To point you in the right direction: where are you installing this gate — stairs, a doorway, or blocking off a room — and is wall-mounting something you're able to do?
It's for a wide doorway between the kitchen and the living room — about 110cm across. He's a 3-year-old Great Dane, probably 80kg, and his chest is noticeably broader than most Danes I've seen. Standard gates just press into his sides when he tries to squeeze through or even stand near them. Wall mounting is fine, we've got solid door frames.
inparticular.ai
That makes sense — a lot of 'extra wide' gates still have a fixed lower bar or a narrower swing panel that catches a deep-chested giant breed right across the ribcage. At 110cm and with a dog that broad, you need something with a genuinely wide swing gate and no low crossbar. Can I ask — does he try to jump or push through gates, or is he more of a leaner and a nudger? And roughly how tall is he at the shoulder?
He's about 85cm at the shoulder. He doesn't jump gates — he's never really been a jumper — but he will lean his full weight on anything that feels flimsy. He's knocked over two pressure-mounted gates already just by walking into them.
inparticular.ai
Right, that settles it — you need a wall-mounted gate rated for serious pressure, with a walk-through panel tall enough that he doesn't feel penned, and wide enough that his chest clears the frame cleanly. My recommendation is the Safetots Extra Wide Walkthrough Gate. It wall-mounts solidly, extends to cover openings well past 110cm, has a tall frame (around 76cm high, which won't challenge him but creates a clear boundary), and critically the walk-through door has no bottom bar — his chest and legs clear it without any contact. The one-handed auto-close latch is sturdy enough to resist leaning. It's designed with large breeds in mind and the wall fixings are beefy enough to hold against a Dane-weight shove. Given his chest width, I'd also suggest measuring his broadest point and confirming it clears the swing panel width before ordering — the product listing shows those dimensions and he should have at least 10cm to spare either side.
That sounds exactly right — the no bottom bar detail is the thing I hadn't thought to look for. Does it come in a version that extends to cover wider openings if needed in future?
inparticular.ai
Yes — Safetots sell extension panels separately that clip onto the gate, so if you ever need to fit a wider opening or want to reconfigure the layout you're not buying a whole new gate. The base unit handles your 110cm doorway on its own, but the extensions are worth knowing about. One practical note: when you fit it, use all four wall anchors rather than the minimum two — with a dog that leans at that weight, the full fixing set will keep it solid for years.
Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.