How To House Train A Puppy Follow These Steps

Labrador puppy in crate with how to house train a puppy in a banner above

© Depositphotos.com / jeanro

I think youll agree with me when I say:

One of the first and most important things you have to learn as a new owner is how to house train a puppyand fast!

Well, it turns out you can dramatically decrease the time it takes to house train your puppy, getting to the days of cleaner floors and carpets much sooner, by arming yourself with just a little knowledge and following a well laid out plan.

And in this article, I give you a detailed step-by-step method to follow that will have your puppy house trained in the fastest time possible, with the least accidents, mess and cleaning along the way.

I dont promise any magic pill or house training secret that will have your puppy house trained in a week. No such secret exists and the time it takes will differ from puppy to puppy and owner to owner.

But what I do offer is a comprehensive guide, written from countless hours of research and my own house training experience thats taught me what does and doesnt work.

If you follow this guide with patience, consistency and dedication, I can guarantee youll take both your puppy and yourself from complete beginners to house training aces as quickly and stress free as possible.

How To Use This guide

How To House Train A Puppy is the 11th article in my Ultimate Guide To House Training series.

The previous 10 articles contain a wealth of supporting information that answer many of the most common house training questions and provide the knowledge for you to make informed decisions on the method and style of potty training you will follow.

However, Ive purposely made this how-to guide as complete and standalone as possible, so reading the previous articles isnt essential.

I repeat the most important information here in less detail, then link out to those articles if youd like a more detailed read and deeper understanding.

To use this guide, I recommend reading it once fully from start to finish, then you will have covered everything you need to know to successfully house-train a puppy.

I warn you, this article is long. Very long. It will likely take you 15 minutes to read. But what youll learn, the best way to house train a puppy as fast as possible, will pay you back the time invested hundreds of times over in the first few weeks and months with your puppy.

And if you bookmark this guide you can use it as a reference by clicking in the table of contents above to take you directly to any section if you need to refresh your memory on a particular topic.

So lets begin

The 2 Essential Keys To Successful House Training

At 8 weeks old, a puppy knows no better than to wee or poop absolutely anywhere they happen to be standing when the urge strikes. Theyve no idea this isnt how its supposed to be done or that you dont find pottying on your carpets acceptable.

Its up to you to choose an appropriate bathroom spot, train your puppy to use it and at the same time teach them it isnt acceptable to potty anywhere else inside your home.

To achieve this there are 2 essential keys to success. 2 keys that are the ultimate aim of any method or technique youll ever come across:

  1. You need to prevent mistakes inside your home.
  2. You need to praise your puppy for pottying in the right place as many times and as often as possible.

A big part of achieving this is simply to take your puppy to their designated toilet spot often. This way you get the greatest number of opportunities to praise them for doing the right thing. And because theyre empty you also lessen their need to potty when in the wrong places.

But its not as simple as just this. You must also prevent mistakes in your home through a mixture of confinement and concentrated supervision. And fit this 24/7 task in to your current lifestyle and routines.

To do this is both an art and a science, needing a well thought out and highly planned approach to give your puppy the greatest chance possible of doing the right thing, while limiting opportunities to do the wrong thing.

And this guide will show you exactly how.

How To House Train A Puppy: FAQ

How long can a puppy hold their bladder? How many times does a puppy need to potty each day? How long will it take before your puppys completely house trained?

There are many questions an owner will have when starting out with house training and theres a lot of misinformation written out there.

So to answer the most frequently asked questions I wrote the following article: Basic need to know facts before you start.

I recommend you read that article so you have realistic expectations of your puppy and yourself, to know what you can both achieve in what time frame.

How You Should Approach The Process

White cartoon man carrying a plan ahead road sign

© Depositphotos.com / nasirkhan

Because your puppy has no idea what youre asking them to do or why, you are the most important part in the house training process.

Its up to you to teach them acceptable toilet habits and you must do so in a way thats as easy for them to understand and as stress free as possible.

How you approach things will have a dramatic effect on how smoothly things will go, so much so that I dedicated an entire article to the matter: The Mindset And Approach You Must Take to House Training.

In the article I discuss traditional methods that should never be used, why they shouldnt and what you should do instead.

I cover how you must take on the role of guide and trainer, must be patient and understanding, yet firm and consistent.

I cover how to work with your puppys natural instincts, the best way to deal with accidents in the home and how toilet training lays the foundation of your future relationship together.

Its important reading for anyone about to embark on a house training program so I recommend you pop off to read it before continuing on with this guide.

Why You Shouldnt Allow Your Puppy Full Run Of The House

Restricting your puppys access to your home until they can be trusted is one of the best things you can do for a faster and cleaner road to success.

Dogs have an instinct not to eliminate inside their den, the place where they eat and sleep. Your task is to convince your puppy your entire home is their den and they shouldnt soil anywhere inside it.

This is so much easier to do if you initially restrict your puppy to just a single room of your home, convince them to keep that clean first and then slowly expand the areas theyre allowed into.

Dogs do not generalize well so even if they know they arent supposed to potty in your kitchen, they will not take this idea and apply it to your bedroom. You have to teach them not to potty in your bedroom almost as a separate idea.

If you allow access to your entire home right away, your puppy wont see it as one big place, but lots of separate and entirely different places.

But if you start small, restrict them to and potty train them in one area, then expand bit by bit, its easier for your puppy to associate the new area with their living space that theyre supposed to keep clean.

This will speed up the house breaking process while at the same time lowering the number of accidents your puppy will have and the number of deep cleans youll have to do. A winning situation in anybodys book!

Equipment Check-list

Paper with checkboxes and green tick

© Depositphotos.com / tairen10

The following is a list of items and products youre going to need to help you toilet train your puppy.

Some are essential, others are optional and what you need will depend upon the method you choose.

Youll be able to determine what you need once you finish the guide and know your plan of action.

If youd like a detailed description of how and why these items are so useful, how each should be used and how they help during house training, please see my article: Products, Supplies And Equipment You Need For House Training

Food & Water Play An Incredibly Important Role!

Puppy kibble and water in twin bowls on white background

© Depositphotos.com / belchonock

What you feed and how you feed your puppy has an incredible impact on the process.

Ive written a detailed article on how feeding choices make a massive difference during house training which you can read by clicking here.

In it is a detailed discussion of the influence your choices around food will make to your success and lots of advice around how to feed your puppy.

Of course I highly recommend you read it, then you can come back informed and skip this section for the next. But for those short on time, the main points of the article are as follows:

High Quality Food Results In Fewer Bowel Movements Each Day

Low quality food is full of cheap fillers, has low nutritional value and is hard to digest resulting in more passing right through. Whereas high quality food is high in nutrition, easily digested and more gets absorbed meaning less passes through.

Therefore, high quality food results in your dog producing fewer stools each day which is obviously ideal when house training.

High Quality Food Helps Your Puppy Learn Bowel Control

Because a puppy extracts more nutrients from high quality food and less cheap fillers flow straight through, their stools are firmer and this helps them in learning bowel control.

What Goes In On A Schedule, Comes Out On A Schedule

Because food travels through your puppys system at a reasonably consistent pace, if you feed them at the same times every day, they will settle into a pattern of eliminating at the same times every day.

You can then base a schedule around these times, your puppy will learn to expect a toilet break at these times and house training becomes easier for both of you.

Do Not Free Feed Your Puppy, Stick To The Schedule

Close up of Labrador Puppy Eating from a metal bowl

© Depositphotos.com / lifeonwhite

If instead of sticking to strict feeding times you leave food down for your puppy all day, they may pick at and eat their food at random times.

This is known as free-feeding and is the worst thing you can do until your puppy knows appropriate toilet habits.

By eating at random times, they will need to poop at random times too.

With no regular, predictable pattern to when your puppy needs to poop, house training will be more difficult.

Therefore, make your puppy eat on a schedule and pick up their food bowl between meals, whether emptied or not.

Stick To One Brand Of Dog Food

Dramatic changes in diet very often lead to loose stools or diarrhea, your puppy becomes physically incapable of holding it in and this is the worst thing that can happen during house training (not to mention all the cleaning youll have to do!)

Choose a single, high quality and nutritionally balanced brand of puppy food and stick to it. The one your puppys breeder used is usually the best choice so your puppy doesnt have to go through a change.

If you do need to choose a new brand of food, or are thinking of changing to something better, weve listed some of the best foods for Labrador puppies in article you can read by clicking here (opens in new window).

Availability Of Water

You should make water freely available to your puppy throughout the day, monitor their intake so you can judge if theyre taking in too much or too little, but dont restrict access as their needs may vary.

The important thing to do is remove their access to water for the last 2 hours before bed, otherwise they will need to go many times through the night which of course you do not want.

You Must Clean Deep And Thoroughly To Prevent Repeat Mistakes

A cartoon cleaner with deep clean in big red letters aboveDogs are attracted back to places by the smell of their own urine to use the same spot as a toilet again and again.

And their sense of smell is so keen that even the tiniest little trace of urine is enough to encourage a repeat performance.

Therefore after every accident, its essential for you to meticulously clean the area, removing every last trace of urine and its smell. If you dont, there is a very high chance your puppy will make another little puddle.

This can ruin your efforts because encouraging them to potty inside your home is the exact opposite of what youre trying to achieve.

Ordinary household cleaners just dont do a good enough job of eliminating odors so you really do need to use a stain and odor remover specially designed for the purpose. And you need a step by step method to follow that guarantees results.

For advice on the cleaning products you should choose, those you simply must avoid, how to find hidden urine stains (with a UV light) and a step by step process for a fast and thorough cleaning, please see my article: Accidents Happen: How To Remove Pet Stains And Odors.

An Outside Or Inside Bathroom Spot? Or Both?

Before you start potty training, you need to make one very important decision: Will your dog have a bathroom spot outside, inside, or perhaps even both? And how should you decide?

My advice is: Choose an outdoor bathroom spot unless you have a very good reason to do otherwise.

Training a dog to toilet outside exclusively is easier for your puppy to understand, easier for you to train and kinder on your nose.

But if you have mobility problems or live on the top floor of a high-rise building, getting outside quickly is impossible. Then you have to choose a bathroom spot inside your home, at least until your puppy has developed some strong bladder control.

You can choose a mix of the two by having your dog toilet outside when youre there but inside on pads or paper when you arent. This is suitable if you have to work all day or must occasionally leave your dog alone for many hours.

Many Owners Should Paper Train Their Puppies Just In Case

A yellow Labrador puppy walking on newspaperIts a good idea to paper train your puppy to toilet inside when in their confinement area, even if your final plan is for them to only ever toilet outside.

This is because depending on a puppys age, its physically impossible for them to hold their bladder for more than a couple of hours until they grow.

Personally, Ive always found with every dog Ive ever owned that there are always times when Ive had to leave them alone for 3, 4, maybe 5 hours. I plan for this not to happen, but occasionally it does.

You cannot crate a puppy for this length of time, so you must have a back up plan. And that is to confine them to an exercise pen or a single small room with a papered area for them to potty.

So although when home Im vigilant and very actively house training my puppy to toilet outside, I also have to paper train them for the odd occasion Im not home. After speaking with many friends and owners, I know this is a common scenario for many.

Considerations For An Outside Bathroom Spot

Many people allow their dogs to use their entire yard as a toilet, just so long as its outside. But you might want to consider training them to use just one specific spot every time.

If theyre allowed to go anywhere in the yard, its highly likely youll be unable to find and pick up all of their excrement which isnt a good thing if you have children who play there, or puppy deposits around your nice sun lounger.

You may also find your dogs urine causes lawn burn, where the grass turns brown in regularly used areas of your lawn. Furthermore, if they regularly wee close to a door or underneath a window it can cause quite a stink to waft through your home, particularly in summer. But

If you train them to use just a single spot, your yard will be cleaner and more hygienic for all other users, you wont have the problem of Nitrogen burned grass and its so much easier for you to keep your yard clean.

So it makes perfect sense to train your dog to use one specific area every time. An area away from any doors, windows, barbecues or play areas. But please dont think if you choose a spot out of the way you can shirk on cleaning duties.

Dogs like to go where they can smell theyve been before, but it must still be clean. So if you want them to keep using the one single spot you must still pick up what you can and give the area a regular clean.

Considerations For An Indoor Bathroom Spot

Indoor fake grass and red fire hydrant

When choosing an indoor potty spot, the first thing you want to keep in mind is that you have to live with the smell.

Due to space limitations it isnt always possible, but you should try to avoid places such as bedrooms, areas where children play or anywhere you prepare or store food. This doesnt leave many options!

Ideal places are any little used room: A spare room, the laundry room or a little used bathroom.

Another consideration is the surface you place your dogs bathroom on. For indoor potty using dogs there will always be the risk of accidents and misses.

So if you can, place your puppys bathroom on a tiled or linoleum floor. Or if it must be in a carpeted area, lay a plastic sheet underneath the toilet to protect your floor and make cleaning easier.

Puppy Pads, Papers, Litter Tray or Turf Box For Inside Use?

There are many options to choose from to use as an indoor potty spot. Turf boxes, litter trays, some new ones even have drainage that collect the waste in storage tanksthe list is now almost endless.

So which should you choose?

Personally I always train my dogs to potty outside and do not provide a permanent indoor toilet for them. Therefore Ive never considered turf boxes or litter trays, choosing instead to use paper and puppy pads if I must leave them home alone longer than they can hold their bladder.

But if you need to make the choice: Whats the pros and cons of each?

Puppy Pads

A pile of pale blue puppy padsPuppy pads are highly absorbent and can be placed in a tray with raised edges, lessening spills and making clean up relatively easy.

Theyre often steeped in a scent to attract a puppy to eliminate on them so they can help to speed up the house training process a little. They also look better in the home than an area covered with paper (slightly).

The downside is they dont cover as wide an area as paper can and Ive heard stories of dogs that learn to enjoy shredding them to pieces, but this is true of most things I guess!

Paper

A pile of cartoon newspapersPaper is very cheap and if you use old newspapers then its almost free! So you can cover a wide area at very low-cost while your puppy is young and inexperienced.

However, urine often runs off the paper before soaking in so spills are more common and cleaning up more difficult. Also, wee can soak through paper to the floor below more easily, though you can use a tray like with puppy pads if you wish.

Finally, its very easy for your puppy to tear up the paper and spread it around where a pad is more contained when stuck into a tray.

Litter Trays

One empty and full beige colored litter traysA Litter tray is easy to clean with highly absorbent litter soaking up the waste and the high sides of the tray doing a good job of keeping everything contained. It also looks better than a spread of newspapers.

But the main problems with litter are some dogs see it as a snack, it can get walked out of the tray and trodden around the house when stuck to their paws and god forbid you have a dog that tries to bury their waste!

Turf Box

A fake grass puppy turf boxTurf boxes are available with genuine turf or synthetic options. They work well because they look so different to the surrounding floor that a puppy can easily distinguish it as a potty area, your dog gets a soft, grassy feeling under their feet and they do a good job of keeping everything contained.

The downside is they are the most expensive of the available options and some dogs develop the habit of trying to dig and chew in the turf box like they would with an outside bit of grass.

Which Do I Recommend?

I recommend using newspapers with a very young puppy, confined to a single room with an easy to clean floor.

Once your puppy is used to going on the paper, cut the area covered down to the size of just a couple of sheets, then place puppy pads in a tray on top of the paper and encourage your puppy to use this.

Paper is so cheap that you can use it in abundance with a new pup until theyre at least semi-trained, and then switch to puppy pads so the task of cleaning is easier.

If you only need to use an indoor potty spot with your very young puppy until they mature, learn some bladder control and then use the outside exclusively, I wouldnt ever consider a turf box or tray.

But if you intend to use an indoor bathroom long-term, you might want to consider turf boxes, litter trays or even one of the more modern and creative indoor toilets available.

There are some modern doggie loos available needing only weekly cleaning, some that eliminate odors and many that look better than paper or puppy pads as a permanent feature of a home so you may want to research some of these options.

Four Methods To Choose From For House Training Your Puppy

There are 4 widely used and recommended methods you can choose from, though the reality is you will almost certainly use a mixture of 2 or more.

These methods are:

Throughout the rest of this guide I will be referring to each of these 4 methods and when you should or could be using them.

To be sure you have a decent grasp of what each method is and what they involve, Im going to give a brief summary of each.

I will also link to more detailed articles Ive written on each method for those whod like a more detailed understanding.

Paper Training

A Labrador puppy on a pile of newspapers, face hidden

© Depositphotos.com / agencyby

Paper training is the most widely known and most commonly used method for house training throughout the world.

Heres a brief summary of the technique:

Description: Paper training is teaching your puppy to toilet indoors on a wide area of newspapers or pre-treated puppy pads that encourage a puppy to use the area as a bathroom.

Once used to using the paper or the pads, you slowly cut the area covered until they reliably use just a couple of sheets and never miss.

You then slowly move the paper toward the outside where another set is placed and you begin to encourage your puppy to go outside only, before completely removing the papers inside. At this point they will have made the transition.

A top tip when paper training is when you clean away soiled paper, you should hold one piece back and place it as a middle layer of the new papers.

Puppy pads have a scent that attracts a puppy, paper does not. But by keeping back a piece of slightly soiled paper with the scent of your puppys urine, you get the same effect of attracting your puppy to eliminate where you want.

Effectiveness: On a scale of 1 to 5, I give it a 3.

It cannot score higher because youre training them to toilet inside before re-training them not to! This is confusing and will make the learning process take longer.

It also leads to mistakes (pottying inside) being made far later into a puppys life when compared with the other methods, particularly when they see any paper thats been left lying around.

Best suited to: Either people who are going to have an indoor bathroom spot long-term, or people who will not use a crate for training yet cannot commit to constantly supervising their puppy when inside the home.

But its also a good back up plan for everybody to use for times they have to leave their puppy home alone longer than they can be expected to hold their bladder.

Ease of use: On a scale of 1 to 5, definitely a 5.

Its a very easy method to use, requiring the least effort from you when compared to any other technique. But it does result in more mistakes from your puppy until later in life. So you can be more passive and less involved at first, but will have more cleaning to do later into your puppys life compared to other methods.

Equipment needed: Nothing but stacks of old newspapers! A very cost-effective method.

Further Info: For a detailed discussion of paper training, pros, cons and some expert tips, please see the following article: How To Paper Train Your Puppy Or Dog The Easy Way

Crate Training

A Labrador puppy in a stylish crateUsing a crate is the most effective and simplest way to speed up the house training process.

Description: The method takes advantage of the fact dogs have a natural instinct not to soil the area where they eat and sleep.

Key to this is making the crate just large enough to stand in, turn around easily and lay down stretched out but no bigger. A puppy or dog will then hold it as long as they possibly can to avoid relieving themselves and then have to lay in it.

A huge benefit to this is a puppy learns while very young that just because they have an urge to wee or poop, they dont have to and can actually hold it. With other methods a puppy doesnt learn this fact while so young.

You dont crate your puppy all the time though, this would be cruel. You crate them only when you cant watch them, are busy in the home or maybe away from the home a short while. The rest of the time you watch them and regularly take them outside to potty to teach them good habits.

Effectiveness: On a scale of 1 to 5, I give it a 5

I say its the most effective method I know or have ever read about. Puppys learn the correct behavior quicker than with any other technique and theres fewer mistakes (and less cleaning!) along the way.

Best suited to: Everybody! I highly recommend using a crate during the house training process because its so effective.

Ease of use: On a scale of 1 to 5, Id say a 3.

Its easier than constant supervision, harder than paper training. This is because you will have to crate train your puppy before you can use a crate for house training which does take time and effort.

Click here for my free and detailed guide to crate training your puppy.

Equipment needed: A suitable crate. I have a guide to help you select the right size and type that you can read by clicking here.

Further Info: To read a detailed discussion on the use of a crate for house training, please read: How To Use A Crate To House Train A Puppy

This article covers why the method is so effective, how it takes advantage of 3 of your puppys natural instincts, weighs up a few pros and cons and much more besides.

Constant Supervision

White Labrador puppy lying on white bedspread near the hands of woman

© Depositphotos.com / agencyby

Description: It is as it sounds: You spend all your time with your puppy, supervising them constantly.

Every time you spot the signs theyre about to potty you scoop them up and take them to their bathroom spot.

Effectiveness: On a scale of 1 to 5, I tentatively give it a 3.

It could actually score higher or lower depending on how committed you are and how successful at supervising your puppy you are.

But Ive given it a 3 because no matter how good your intentions are, no matter how mindful you are of the task of supervision, you will let your guard down and your puppy will be able to sneak off to make mistakes.

For this reason, its not as effective as crate training and will take longer, certainly resulting in more accidents along the way.

Best suited to: People who are against any kind of confinement and can stay at home to watch their puppy all day every day. Mostly people who work from home and the retired.

But this method also forms a part of every house training plan, whether you use other methods alongside or not. This is because when a puppy is free inside a home, they MUST be closely supervised to prevent any mistakes.

Ease of use: On a scale of 1 to 5, I give it a 2.

It scores low as it requires a lot of input from you as the owner. You need to concentrate on your puppy at all times, ready to intervene and correct them any time theyre about to potty where they shouldnt.

It is quite draining never being able to take your eye of your puppy.

Equipment needed: None. Nothing. Not a crate, newspapers, puppy pads or anything. The cheapest of all the methodsunless you put a price on your time.

Further Info: For more information on the constant supervision technique, please read the following article: House Training WITHOUT A Crate: Constant Supervision

Umbilical Cord Training

Lab puppy on leash on white background with a pair of legged jeans

© Depositphotos.com / andresr

This is a little used technique, and at first may sound a little silly. But it is highly effective.

Description: This technique calls for you to tether your puppy to you by leash and have them follow you wherever you go when inside your home.

This way theyre never more than a few feet away and have no chance to sneak off unnoticed to potty where they shouldnt.

You will notice and be able to intervene and correct every possible mistake, taking them outside every time they need to relieve themselves.

Effectiveness: On a scale of 1 to 5, Id say its a 5.

Used correctly, the opportunity for your puppy to make mistakes is completely removed so every single time they need to visit their bathroom spot is a training opportunity you will take advantage of and no mistake goes uncorrected.

Best suited to: People who spend all their time at home with their puppy and would also enjoy literally being tied to their pup all day.

Its also a good method to throw into the mix for people whove found difficulty with constant supervision and allow their puppy to sneak off and have accidents in the home, helping them to get better results.

Ease of use: On a scale of 1 to 5, Id say a 4.

Its easier than constant supervision as your puppy is attached so you can relax a little in comparison. Its easier than using a crate because you dont have to crate train your puppy. But its not as easy as paper training which is very hands off for an owner.

Equipment needed: A quick release collar and a house line / leash.

Further Info: for a detailed discussion of this technique, the benefits, downside, and many more tips, please see my article: Umbilical Cord House Training: What is It? How Does It Work?

What Do I Use And Recommend? A Mix Of 3 Methods

I use and recommend a mixture of crate training, constant supervision and paper training.

I primarily use crate training as I firmly believe its the most effective method and Im also a strong believer in the idea that every dog deserves to be crate trained to enjoy the continuous benefits it offers throughout their life.

I use constant supervision extensively because when a puppy is outside of the crate you have to watch them diligently to avoid puppy mistakes.

I use paper training while my puppies have almost zero bladder control until the age of 10 or 11 weeks, and later in life when I cant avoid leaving them home alone for longer than they can be expected to hold their bladder.

Admittedly this is somewhat going against my advice because I always recommend to avoid paper training if possible. It encourages or allows your puppy to toilet inside the home, before then training them not to do so. Its saying its OK, before turning full circle and saying that its not.

This is confusing to your puppy and harmful to our house training efforts. (Unless youre going to have a permanent indoor bathroom spot of course, then this method is perfect.)

But even though I recommend against it, using paper training ever so occasionally as a fall back plan works well for me.

I explain more fully why and when I use paper training in later sections of this article on House Training For Full Time Workers, and A Note On Puppies Between 8 And 12 Weeks

Eliminating On Command

A woman training a Labrador

© Depositphotos.com / andresr

Though not essential, its extremely useful to train your dog to eliminate on command.

When youre in a hurry and need to leave in the morning, or its right before bed time, these are times you will wish your dog would eliminate on command rather than you having to patiently wait for them to do their job.

Most dogs love being outside and will use any excuse to get out there and stay there.

So its of benefit if you can clearly tell them youre going outside to toilet only and for nothing else, that theres no chance of exercise or play. If they dont potty, theyre coming straight back in.

You do this by using a cue word and walking them on leash to their potty spot, not allowing them to do anything else and if they do not potty, taking them back inside and trying again in a few minutes.

Because a full bladder or bowel is uncomfortable, dogs are happy to relieve themselves, but some may try to hold it if they think they can get to stay outside and sniff around a while.

By not allowing this and associating it with a consistent command, it will only take a few short weeks for them to learn your chosen command means a bathroom break only and that if they dont go, theyre coming straight back inside uncomfortably full.

Choose Commands That Everybody Must Use Consistently

If this is something youd like to train, its important that you choose the words to use before you start the training and make sure everybody uses the same words consistently. If people use different words, your dog will get confused.

So pick a command like toilet time that you will only use when youre taking them to the bathroom and you will not allow them to do anything else.

Youll have a different word like walkies for other more fun times outside and your dog will eventually learn the difference and set their expectations of their time outside accordingly.

Once outside you can use another command like potty or do your job to ask them to do their business.

For the first weeks you should wait for them to start doing their business and then use the word potty to build an association. And praise them afterwards with good potty. This will slowly teach them the command.

Eventually your dog will learn toilet time means a quick bathroom break only, and potty is you asking them to go.

NOTE: For a very good guide on training to eliminate on command from the Whole Dog Journal, please click here.

A quick word of caution: Dont use a word for your elimination command that gets used at other times. For instance, many people use the words hurry up!, but if you say this to your spouse when heading late out the door, this could get very messy if your dog hears and reacts.

Getting Your Puppy Used To A Collar And Leash

A Lab puppy outside on leash smilingWhen your puppys very young its easy enough for you to scoop them up and carry them to their bathroom spot. And this is fine for the first couple of weeks while they have no bladder control and will perform their business very quickly.

But once they start to learn some bladder control, if you take them to potty without them being on leash, as soon as they hit the outside theres all the sights, sounds and smells that can take over their inquisitive minds.

They easily forget what theyve gone outside for and will romp and play in your yard instead, before going back inside still full. And some dogs even learn to actively hold their bladder just so they can stay outside to explore for longer.

So its in your best interests to lead them on leash to their bathroom spot and keep them there until they complete the job in hand.

Before you can do this you need to first get your puppy used to wearing a collar and leash. To help with this Ive written a detailed guide that you can read by clicking here: How To Get Your Puppy Used To A Collar And Leash

Start this process at 10 weeks, and always lead them on leash from the 11th or 12th week. You may regret it with lots of time waiting outside if you dont!

Have You Got Everything Prepared? A Check-list Before You Start

Like everything in life, house training runs smoother if you have everything ready before you start, hopefully before you even bring your puppy home. Although its never too late of course!

To help make sure youre ready, heres a check-list to cross off and make sure you have everything prepared. Have you:

  • Decided on and marked out a suitable bathroom spot?
  • Chosen and purchased a suitable high quality nutritious food?
  • Figured out the times of day you will feed your puppy?
  • Got a collar and leash? Put in place a leash training plan?
  • Bought a suitable crate and set it up in a suitable place?
  • Bought bedding for the crate?
  • Bought chew toys to occupy your puppy in the crate?
  • Decided on the commands you will use if any?
  • Purchased either baby gates, a pet barrier or an exercise pen for longer term confinement?
  • Sourced stacks of newspapers or puppy pads to use in the long-term confinement area?
  • Bought a tarpaulin sheet to protect the floor under the crate or exercise pen if it isnt tiled or linoleum?
  • Bought some small but highly tasty training treats to use as a reward?
  • Bought specialized pet stain removing and odor neutralizing cleaning products?
  • Bought a UV light to find hidden spots of urine that must be removed to prevent repeat accidents?
  • Sat and discussed with every member of your household your finalized plans so everybody has the same info?

With all this ready and in place, youre now ready to begin house training your puppy.

Successful House Training Is All About Schedules And Routine

Dogs thrive when living to schedules and routine, doing best when they have set times for eating, going to toilet, exercise, training and play.

And when it comes to house training, youre going to love schedules and routine too!

Feed On A Schedule, Your Puppy Will Eliminate On A Schedule

Green dog bowl of food beside a yellow blank scheduleIf you feed your puppy at random times throughout the day, theyll need to defecate at random times throughout the day.

They wont fall into any predictable schedule and your life will be that much harder.

But because the passage of food through their digestive system stays roughly the same, if you feed your puppy at the same times every day they will need to defecate at roughly the same times every day.

Furthermore, because puppys learn through repetition, by taking yours out to potty at the same times every day, their body learns to expect and follow this schedule, training your puppy to toilet at the times youd like them to.

When you know the times your puppy needs to eliminate you can have them at the right spot at the right time with a far greater success rate than if you didnt follow a routine. This results in fewer mistakes, more opportunities to praise your puppy for going in the right place and so speeds up their learning.

Can You Predict When They Need To Potty?

Depending on their age a puppy will need to poop 3 to 6 times a day, and wee many more times than that. Can these times be predicted? Mostly they can.

When a puppy needs to potty depends on when they last ate, drank and their recent activities. Mostly they need to go:

  • First thing in the morning
  • The instant they wake up from a nap at any time of the day
  • Just before going to bed
  • Within a few minutes of eating or drinking
  • Immediately after a play session
  • Immediately after any excitement

But a puppy also needs to go many times per day regardless of recent activities, so you should also take your puppy to their bathroom spot on a consistent schedule such as the following:

  • At 8 weeks old every 30 mins.
  • At 10 weeks old every 45 mins.
  • At 12 weeks old every 1 to 1. 1/4 hours.
  • At 16 weeks old every 2 hours.
  • At 20 weeks old every 3 hours.

This is only a guideline because all puppys are different. And on that note

Needs Vary Create A Schedule To Match Your Individual Puppy

Not all puppies are the same. Some will need to wee within 2 minutes of drinking, others after 20 minutes. Some will need a bathroom break within 2 minutes of waking, others 15 minutes later.

This means there isnt a one-size-fits-all schedule I can give thats suitable for every puppy and owner. You have to determine your puppies own natural tendencies and create a schedule to suit.

To achieve this, you need to follow this 5 step process:

  1. Feed them to a strict schedule.
  2. Decide on exercise, play and training times.
  3. Develop a schedule including feeding, exercise, play, training and all scheduled potty times.
  4. Alongside your schedule, keep a written diary of your puppys daily activities, bladder and bowel movements.
  5. Use the information gathered in your diary to learn from any mistakes and adjust your schedule for the following week.

This may sound like a lot of work but it really isnt once you get in to the routine. And besides:

Once youve determined your puppys natural rhythms, you can be at the bathroom spot at the correct times more accurately which is of huge benefit to both you and your puppy, so its highly worth doing!

But if you fear living to strict schedules is too hard to dodont fear! You dont have to stick to them 100% of the time.

The more you can stick to schedules and routines, the smoother and faster the process will be. But you can stray from the path when necessary and still find success, it will just take a little longer. Just dont be overly strict and hard on yourself because we all have a life to live outside of house training!

So lets go through the 5 steps of creating your puppys schedule.

Creating A House Training Schedule For Your Puppy

Blue notepad with a blue and white pen

© Depositphotos.com / zzve

Follow this 5-step process to create a schedule that works with your puppys natural rhythms and fits with your lifestyle and commitments.

Keeping and following a written schedule may seem odd or a bit excessive, Im sure youve not seen many people bother with it?

But I promise you its not much work, after a couple of days practice it becomes a simple routine, the time it takes is negligible and the results are phenomenal.

Step 1: Decide Your Puppys Feeding Schedule

Depending on how old they are, your puppy needs feeding between 2 and 4 times a day. Heres a guide to how often and when you should feed them:

You should feed your puppy 4 times a day until 12 weeks old.

To achieve this you need to feed them every 4 hours and you should make it the same time every day, fitting it into a schedule thats best for you.

A good routine would be to feed breakfast when you first get up, at 7:30AM, then at 11:30AM, 3:30PM and 7:30PM.

You should feed your puppy 3 times a day when 12 to 26 weeks old.

The timings for 3 feeds a day would be roughly every 6 hours: 7:30AM, 1:30PM and 7:30PM.

From 26 weeks old and onwards, feed your puppy just two times a day

For 2 meals a day you need to space them out 8 to 12 hours apart.

What works for me is shortly after I get up at 7:30 and when we have our evening meal between 6:15PM and 6:45PM.

Availability Of Water:

You should make sure fresh water is always available but because drinking too much or too little can be a sign of health problems, you do need to monitor their water intake.

Step 2: Decide a Schedule For Exercise, Training And Play

A Yellow labrador puppy running

© Depositphotos.com / Madrabothair

Physical activity has a direct influence on a puppys potty schedule because it helps things move along for want of a better expression.

Physical activity often leads to a puppy needing to potty very soon after. So to encourage predictable potty times for your puppy, you want to schedule their exercise and play.

This will help your puppys mind and body to slip into a routine that will help you both with the house training process.

Deciding when to exercise, train and play with your puppy is entirely up to you. You should fit it around your lifestyle and commitments, but try to make it the same times each day if you can.

Step 3: Design Your Schedule From The Info Gathered

If youve followed the guide so far, youve now gathered all the information you need to design your puppys house training schedule.

Enter all the following details into a single column in an excel spreadsheet, or write them down as a day schedule with a pen and paper:

  1. When you wake and add an instant bathroom break (before you do ANYTHING for yourself!)
  2. Enter your puppys feeding times.
  3. Enter the times you will play with, train and exercise your puppy.
  4. Enter a scheduled visit to the bathroom spot after each of the activities listed in points 1 to 3.
  5. Add scheduled bathroom visits after any length of time longer than your puppy should be expected to hold it according to their age. (30 mins at 8 weeks, 45mins at 10w, 1hr at 12w, 2hrs at 16w, 3hrs at 20w+).
  6. Write in scheduled sleeps for your puppy, place them in the crate or confinement area.
  7. All other time is SUPERVISED free time, spent socializing, relaxing and bonding with the family and so on.

After writing down this schedule, tick off each task as you go through the day with your puppy.

This way you will always know what needs to be done and when, and there will be no confusion about whether someone else in the house fed, exercised or took the puppy to the loo. If its not crossed off the schedule, it hasnt been done.

Step 4: Keep A Diary Of Your Puppys Daily Activities

A hand writing on a notepad on the door of a fridge

© Depositphotos.com / Gajus-Images

Alongside the schedule youve designed, add some columns where you can take notes of your puppys bladder and bowel movements, as well as their daily activities.

You do this because its important information you can use to design an ever more accurate schedule going forward. (I discuss this further in step 5 below.)

The things you should write in your diary are:

  • Any unscheduled play or other excitement (Puppies often need to wee after)
  • The times they sleep
  • The times you take them to their bathroom spot
  • The times they urinate
  • The times they defecate
  • How long they took to potty after being taken to the potty spot
  • Toilet visits where puppy neither peed or pooped
  • Any accidents / house training mistakes and why they happened

Basically, note down anything food, activity, accident or potty related so you can look for patterns to help you in the next step.

Step 5: Learn From The Diary To Refine Your Schedule

Look over any accidents your puppy had and you noted during the day.

You should be able to pick up on any patterns and adjust your own behavior to avoid mistakes in future.

Was puppy left alone and peed in the living room while you made breakfast? You need to increase supervision or make doubly sure you crate them when youre busy. Puppy should never be left alone unsupervised, learn from this mistake.

Or maybe puppy peed in the crate after an hour? You left them crated longer than they can hold their bladder, or didnt empty them before crating.

Learn from this mistake.

Look over how long they took to potty after being taken for a scheduled potty break

Did you catch them in the act 3 times in a single day? Well done for watching them closely enough. However, if they tried to go 3 times in the home, youve learnt that you likely arent taking them to empty themselves often enough. So increase the frequency.

Or perhaps the opposite happened and you noted that 3 times in the day you took puppy for a scheduled bathroom break, they didnt go and you returned them inside for 15 minutes before trying again?

This shows your puppy is maturing fast, doesnt have to potty as often as you thought and can last longer between potty visits than youre allowing. Therefore you should stretch out the time between visits by 10 to 15 minutes for the following day.

Look over how long after eating they pooped

If you see puppy didnt potty for 20, 15, 20 and 20 minutes after their meals of the day, with this information you learn its pointless to take them to their potty spot until 15 minutes after they finish eating.

Some puppys go 2 minutes after eating, some after half an hour. This is how you find out.

And Now House Training is So Much Easier

By writing out the schedule as in step 3, you should never forget to feed, train or take your puppy to potty. If its not marked off on the schedule, its not been done.

And by using the schedule as a diary as in step 5, you get feedback on how you and your puppy are performing, and are armed with the necessary info to make changes to your schedule over time. This helps you to truly match your puppys natural rhythms and their maturing and changing body.

You, your puppy and their needs all stay in sync and house training becomes that much easier.

How And Where To Keep The Diary

2 post it notes and some paper on a fridge door

© Depositphotos.com / ccaetano

For ease of use, I recommend simply keeping a written diary with good old-fashioned pen and paper.

Were all in the electronic age surrounded by smart phones and i-Pads, but this is simply too much hassle and will likely lead to you not bothering if you have to power up a device and so on to make an entry.

Just make a spreadsheet in excel and print it out, or simply buy some lined paper.

Keep it somewhere you can always see and know where it is, alongside a pen or pencil and write entries in it as you watch your puppy throughout the day.

Next to your house phone, pinned to the fridge or by the exit to your puppys bathroom spot is a good place to keep it, but put it wherever is best for you.

When To Start And Stop Using A Schedule And Diary?

When you first get your puppy home at 8 weeks, they can barely control their bodily functions so keeping a diary isnt perhaps that helpful but I still recommend you do so, to get yourself into the habit.

I would recommend keeping a diary every single day until youve determined a definite pattern and have spotted their individual ways. Up until theyre 14 weeks old is a good target.

After this, continuing with a diary every day is the best advice, although keeping one for 3 consecutive days each week will be sufficient for you to pick up on any changes as they mature.

Once your puppy is 5 to 6 months old, they will have sufficient bladder control and experience to make a schedule and diary unnecessary. Just make sure they get access to the outside at least once every 3 hours and all will be fine.

Extending The Time Between Toilet Breaks

I discussed earlier how a puppy will need regular visits to their bathroom spot, something like every 30 minutes at 8 weeks old, every 45 minutes at 10 weeks old and so on.

But every puppy is different and their progress in having longer time between needed toilet breaks will vary too.

Although your puppys natural progression reflects in your diary and your schedule will adjust to suit, you should purposely try to increase the time between breaks yourself if it doesnt happen naturally.

If you dont see a natural increase of time between eliminations, add 5 minutes to the scheduled times every 3 or 4 days to stretch out how long they can last.

If they cant make the time, peg it back 5 minutes and try to increase the time again in a further 3 or 4 days.

You do this because as a puppy grows, the size of their bowel and bladder increases, so they will be able to hold more for longer and you want to take advantage of this. This is also teaching them necessary bladder and bowel control.

Your aim is to have them needing a toilet break only every 4 hours or so by the time theyre 5 to 6 months old.

Taking Your Puppy To The Bathroom Spot

Yellow Labrador puppy with a paw on a toilet rollIn an ideal world, when you take your puppy to potty they will empty themselves completely and instantly, with no delay and not holding any back to release as soon as theyre back in your home.

There are a few things you can do and some that you certainly shouldnt that will help you to achieve this goal.

Use your cue word before you take them: By using your chosen cue word every time before you take them to potty, your puppy will learn what the trip is about and what they must do. This eventually leads to faster results as they know what is expected of them.

Lead your puppy to the bathroom spot on leash: This gives you the ability to keep your puppy at the bathroom spot and prevent them wandering off, getting distracted and forgetting what they are there for.

This isnt always possible if you catch them in the act and must hurry, but for scheduled bathroom visits you should always aim to take them on leash.

Make sure you stay with them at their bathroom spot: If you have them on leash, then of course you will be. But if you dont have them on leash, make sure you stay with them because the separation will just make your puppy anxious to get back with you and they will not potty.

Once at the bathroom spot, dont say or do anything until they start to eliminate: Puppys get distracted very easily and any attention can take their mind off the job in hand. Be boring, uninteresting, and just hold your puppys leash until they start to go.

When they start to go, say your chosen cue word in a soft warm voice. Otherwise remain silently still until theyre finished: You need to associate your cue word with the act, but if you say it too loud and brightly, it may distract them and they wont finish.

Similarly, any other movement or sounds like praising them too early or shuffling your feet might distract them and they might not finish what theyve started.

If they dont finish and completely empty themselves, they may finish inside your home and even if they dont they will not be able to make it to the next scheduled bathroom break so an accident in the home is more likely.

When youre sure theyve finished, praise them like mad and reward them: You should heartily praise your puppy for going in the right place, then allow them a few minutes off leash, a couple of minutes play or a tiny (and I mean tiny!) but tasty food treat.

The praise and reward make going to potty a happy experience, tells them theyve done right and helps them to learn more quickly.

Mix up the reward between play, time off leash and a food reward to keep them guessing, but keep the food rewards to a minimum as what goes in must come out and random feeding promotes random elimination times!

If Your Puppy Doesnt Go When At Their Bathroom Spot

A Labrador rolling around in the grass

© Depositphotos.com / c-foto

First of all, make sure youve spent enough time out there.

Many people pop out, stand for 1 minute and then come back in. This isnt enough as a puppy can only go when they need to go and they may not be ready.

Some people recommend to stay out there for 10, 15, 20 minutes, whatever it takes until they go, then praise profusely when they do. Although this advice may be sound, personally Id rather not.

I recommend you give them 3 to 5 minutes, saying your cue word every 30 seconds or so but otherwise standing silently still just holding their leash so they cannot wander off.

If after 3 to 5 minutes they havent been to toilet, bring them back inside your home and then:

If using constant supervision: Set them down in your home and continue watching them to intervene in case they make moves to go in the wrong place. Take them back to their bathroom spot in 10 minutes or so.

If using a crate for house training: Pop them back in the crate and leave them for 10 minutes. Then take them back to their bathroom spot.

If using umbilical cord training: Take them back into your home and watch your puppy carefully while theyre tethered to you by leash. Take them to their bathroom spot after 10 minutes.

If paper training: If they are confined to the area thats papered, do nothing. If not, take them away from their bathroom spot and watch them for 10 minutes before returning them to their bathroom spot.

In all cases, just remember youve brought them back in with a full bladder so you mustnt take your eye off them if free in your home.

And if crate training, do not leave them in the crate too long else they may be forced to soil in there. Prevent this at all costs.

Rinse and repeat the visits to and fro like this until they do potty, then follow the next sections advice.

What You Should Do Between Scheduled Bathroom Breaks

Between scheduled bathroom visits you should do two things: Allow some supervised free time in your home, and use your chosen house training method.

Granting Free Time In Your Home

Young woman playing with labrador puppy on wooden floor

© Depositphotos.com / ikostudio

After returning from the bathroom spot you should grant your puppy some free time in the room where you spend most of your time, up until 20 to 25 minutes before their next scheduled bathroom visit.

By free time I mean time outside of their crate, or off leash, or out of their confinement area. Time free to roam, explore and live life.

When 10 weeks old they may need to toilet every 30 minutes, so they only get 5 to 10 minutes free time. When 12 weeks old, they may need to toilet every hour so they can get 35 to 40 minutes free time.

You allow this free time because you are of course working toward a time when they will always be free and trusted unsupervised. To get there they need the experience, to get used to being free in your home and begin seeing it as a place they need to keep clean.

They also need social interaction and life experiences.

The best time to grant this free time is right after a bathroom visit so youre fairly sure theyre empty and are far less likely to make a toilet mistake in your home.

The important thing to remember is: When your puppy is free in your home in this way, you must know exactly where they are at all times and be watching them like a hawk, ready to intervene if they look like theyre about to potty where they shouldnt.

But what are the signs a puppy is about to potty?

Signs To Look Out For Showing Your Puppy Is About To Potty

When supervising your puppys free time, the signs you need to look out for that they need to eliminate are:

  • Sniffing
  • Pacing about and / or circling
  • Whining and / or barking
  • General restlessness
  • Heading to a secluded, hidden spot or trying to leave the room.
  • Heading toward, barking at or scratching the door to the outside.
  • Appearing needy, or getting very nippy and naughty (if its out of character.)

The minute you see any of these signs you should take your puppy to their bathroom spot immediately. There may well be some false alarms, but better safe than sorry.

Most puppies will display one or more of these pre-elimination behaviors, but no two puppies are the same so you need to be observant and learn your own puppys pre-toilet rituals.

Carefully watch them and you should soon notice what body language means a wee or a poop is imminent. There will be recognizable signs.

End Free Time 20 Minutes Before A Scheduled potty Break

Yellow lab puppy sleeping near a black analog alarm clock

© Depositphotos.com / AOosthuizen

Once your puppy has enjoyed some free time and its nearing 20 to 25 minutes before a scheduled potty visit, you need to switch to using your chosen house training method.

We do this because the time is fast approaching when mistakes are most likely to be made. So we might crate our puppy, or attach a leash for umbilical cord training if were using these techniques.

Remember, all free time is closely supervised anyway so youre ready to react if theyre about to make a mistake, So..

If using constant supervision: Carry on as you are. Watch your puppy and be ready to react if they look like theyre about to potty. Then at their scheduled potty time, attach a leash and lead them to their bathroom spot.

If using a crate for house training: Encourage your puppy into their crate and close the door, leaving them there until their scheduled potty time and then release them, instantly attaching a leash and leading them to their bathroom spot.

If using umbilical cord training: Attach a leash and tether your puppy to you, ready to react if they make moves to eliminate. Take them to their bathroom spot at the scheduled time.

If paper training: Take your puppy to their confinement area where their papered bathroom spot is and supervise them, ready to intervene if they make moves to potty away from the paper. Encourage them to potty at their scheduled time if they dont do so naturally.

If You Catch Your Puppy In The Act Of Making A Mistake

If you catch your puppy pottying in the wrong spot, you should simply clap your hands and say a firm NO!. You dont want to shock and scare them, just loud enough to startle and get their attention.

Its very important you DO NOT scare them as they may become afraid to potty in front of you. Not good when you need to be there to encourage them for doing it in the right place.

When you clap and say NO!, some puppies will stop what theyre doing, but others may not.

If they do, you can pick them up and carry them, or take them by the collar and gently lead them to their bathroom spot, then encourage them to finish where they should.

But if your puppy doesnt stop mid-flow, my advice is to accept the fact youre too late, you didnt recognize the signs they needed to potty (or werent watching them closely enough) and you should let them finish and then clean it up.

Many people recommend to pick your puppy up and take them outside even if they dont stop. But to me this seems foolish.

Instead of a little pile or puddle, you then have a long line of wee or poop from where you caught them all the way to the bathroom spot that you then have to deep clean instead. To me this isnt worth the extra cleaning effort.

If You Find A Mess But Didnt Catch Your Puppy In The Act

Choc Lab next to a puddle of wee and being told off

© Depositphotos.com / adogslifephoto

There is nothing you can do.

Youve missed the opportunity to correct your puppy and anything you do now your puppy will be unable to connect to the act of pottying in the wrong place.

If you get angry, shout at or punish them in any way, they might look guilty trying to appease you, but they will have no idea what it is thats driven you mad. Theyre just trying to calm the situation.

And what sometimes happens is a puppy learns that poo on the floor is what youre mad about, causing them to slink away to poo where its hidden, or worse they may even eat it so you dont see it and get mad.

So if you stumble on a mess you didnt catch them make, simply move them away and deep clean the area. Then think how they were able to make such a mistake and tweak your plans so it cannot happen again. But any corrections or punishment now will be futile.

House Training For Full Time Workers

This advice applies not just to full-time workers, but also if you must occasionally leave your puppy home alone for a few hours.

Most importantly, follow all the advice in this guide so far for the times that you are home. Supervise them, correct any mistakes, set feeding and elimination schedules and everything else I have advised. Then, what follows are your choices of what you can do to cover when you arent at home.

First of all, if like me you use a crate, you simply cannot leave your puppy in the crate for many hours. Theyll be forced to potty in there after a very uncomfortable time trying to hold it for as long as they possibly can.

This is very unfair on your puppy and it will destroy the crates power as a house training tool if they lose the instinct to keep it clean.

Secondly, please do your best to enlist the help of a family member, friend, neighbor or hire a dog walker to periodically pop in to visit your puppy, take them to their bathroom spot, give them some social interaction and so on.

I understand this isnt possible for all owners, but you should strive to achieve this if possible.

Having said that, what should you do about house training when you arent at home:

Confine Your Puppy And Use Paper training

Throughout the many articles of this guide you will have read me advising against paper training unless youre planning on a permanent indoor bathroom spot for your dog.

But I also freely admit to using paper training myself occasionally, for the unavoidable times I have to leave my puppy home alone for a few hours.

If you have to leave your puppy home alone for any reason, usually because you work, then paper training in your absence is the only thing you can do.

You then have two options available to you: Buy and use an exercise pen, or confine your puppy to a single, puppy-proofed room.

Using An Exercise Pen

A puppy exercise pen on white backgroundAn exercise pen is a confinement device that looks like a crate but is much larger and has no roof. They can have any number of panels, be square, hexagonal, octagonal, L-shapedtheyre very flexible (an example 8 sided pen is in the image to the right.)

You use it to confine your puppy so you know theyre safe, as is your home and belongings from their teeth.

Theyre big enough for you to paper an area inside to use as a toilet, while leaving space where you can set up your dogs bed, a water bowl and some chew toys and so on away from where they have to potty.

Initially use less than half of the confinement area for your puppys bedding, toys and water bowl, then paper over the remaining floor space. As they get used to pottying on paper, reduce the area covered one sheet at a time until just a small area remains covered.

Once you know your puppy can hold their bladder for longer than they have to be left alone, remove the paper altogether.

By 16 to 20 weeks, they should be able to last the 3 or 4 hours max they will be left alone and somebody comes to exercise them and allow a bathroom break.

NOTE: You should get your puppy used to an exercise pen by using the same techniques as crate training, so please refer to my guide to crate training puppies

Using A Single Puppy-Proofed Room

A choc Lab lying in front of a pet barrierWhen Ive had to leave a puppy alone, I confine them to a paper covered area of a puppy proofed room, with a puppy pad in a holder.

Between 8 and 12 weeks (when weeing seems spontaneous), my puppy spends a fair bit of time in there and I paper train them to use puppy pads.

Most recently, the room I used was basically our dining room, though its never used for that purpose and is essentially bare.

Our kitchen and dining room was separated by an arch where a door used to be, with tiled flooring, making it ideal.

I used a baby gate across the arch between the kitchen and dining room, and initially covered the dining area with paper, over time reducing it to just two sheets with the puppy pad holder on top.

The dining area is completely empty, with no furniture, nothing in there. So its as puppy proofed as can be. But a word of warning

If you use this option and have any furniture or anything at all in the room, its likely it will be scratched and chewed! Skirting boards, the corners of furniture items, anything within reach is a potential target for teeth and claws.

My girlfriend works from home, we crate trained and we had no problem finding house sitters in an evening if we needed one, so we all but had things covered. But this is something you need to be mindful of.

So I recommend using an exercise pen if youre going to leave your puppy alone often and theres any chance of a room being damaged.

Some Form of Confinement is Always Necessary

Sad looking black labrador puppy on black background

© Depositphotos.com / feedough

Regardless of the method of house training you choose, some form of confinement is almost always necessary, for the times when you really cannot watch your puppy.

And there will always be a time or two so its best to prepare in advance.

You may have an unexpected visitor or need to visit A&E in an emergency. Whatever the reason, there just WILL be times you cannot supervise your puppy.

If youre using a crate, you have these times covered. But if youre against a crate for whatever reason and have chosen to exclusively use constant supervision or umbilical cord training, you will have to invest in an exercise pen or confine your puppy to a single room and use paper training.

The essence of house training is to prevent mistakes and praise your puppy heavily when they potty in the right place.

If you cannot watch your puppy, the chances of them making a mistake go through the roof. So even if you choose to use a constant supervision method exclusively, you will still need to confine your puppy sometimes to a paper covered area just in case.

A Note On Puppies Between 8 And 12 Weeks

Group of adorable labrador puppies in a wicker basket

© Depositphotos.com / domako

Youll likely find your 8 week old puppy has absolutely no bladder control. I mean literally none at all.

One minute they are trotting along, the next they are leaking. No warning signs for you, not even any warning signs for them. They just dont know its going to happen themselves.

Its not their fault, its just their immature bodies doing what they do.

During this time its foolish to allow them on your living room carpets for even a second.

I recommend setting up an exercise pen with the entire area papered, or do as I do and confine them to a room with the entire area papered.

Use this time to paper train them, to get them used to weeing on paper and gradually reduce the area because you will use this method if you ever have to leave them home alone during the next 4 or 5 months.

Some time between 8 and 12 weeks, your puppy will start to show some bladder control (usually 9 to 10 weeks) and will begin to show warning signs that theyre about to potty instead of instantaneously leaking. They will sniff, circle and so on as I mentioned before.

At this point you can now move on to using your chosen house training method.

Im not saying when 8 weeks old you dont house train them. Do! Start encouraging them to potty in the right place from the minute you get them home.

Im just saying that its very hard when you have absolutely no warning for the first few days to a couple of weeks. Just dont get mad at your puppy, it isnt their fault and you should expect this.

House Training A Puppy At Night

A young puppy will not be able to last through the night without needing to potty. However, similar to humans a dogs body slows down during the night and the need to toilet is severely reduced.

So the good news is, even at 8 weeks they will be able to last 4 or so hours and you will only need to wake once during the night.

A Schedule For Over Night

Alarm clock and banner saying wake up beneath the phases of the moonAllow your puppy no food for 3 hours and no water for 2 hours before bed. Also, make sure to take them to their bathroom spot right before you go to bed so they can empty themselves.

Then set an alarm for 4 hours after their bed time when you must get up and take them to their bathroom spot. No excuses, you simply must do this.

If you find your puppy has soiled in this time, you should set the alarm for half an hour earlier the next night (3.5 hours). Repeat until you find youre waking before theyve had an accident.

After a few days of not having a night-time accident, set your alarm for 15 minutes later and increase the time by 15 minutes for each successful night they do not have an accident.

The time a puppy can last over night without needing to potty increases dramatically during their first few weeks so youll find this is OK to do.

If you find they make a mistake one night before you wake, set the alarm back half an hour, make sure they stay dry a few days and then increase 15 minutes nightly again.

Within a few short weeks youll find they can last a full 7 hours without needing a bathroom break. And by using this schedule, you strike a good balance between a couple of inevitable accidents while stretching out the time at a good pace to lasting a full night.

A Word Of Caution For Those Using A Crate

Its important that your puppy isnt forced to eliminate in their crate as it can ruin their natural instinct to keep it clean, the very thing we take advantage of to help the house training process.

This is why I recommend if you find a mess you set the alarm for half an hour earlier, a reasonably big step back to where theyve been successful at before.

If they soil their crate more than once in any given week, you may have to progress slower (add 15 minutes every 2 or 3 days), or perhaps sleep them in a papered exercise pen or their confinement room. Maintaining their instinct to keep the crate clean is of utmost importance.

You should also consider consulting your vet to make sure its not a medical problem causing the mistakes.

What To Do At The Bathroom Spot At Night

When you take them out at night, say your chosen cue word, take them straight to their bathroom spot, praise them gently when they finish their business but do not reward them with anything else.

The last thing you want is to teach your puppy that during the night is a time for play or food treats!

This will come back to haunt you in a big way and result in noisy sleepless nights. You want your puppy to learn that night-time is for sleeping and for nothing else.

When the alarm goes off, collect them, take them to potty, praise with a simple, deadpan Good potty! then silently take them back and return to sleep until the morning. Do nothing else.

By 16 Weeks Old They Should Last Through The Night

No two puppies are the same. Some will be able to last the whole night without a potty break at 10 weeks (rarely), and some may not be able to at 15 weeks (also rarely).

But certainly by 16 weeks old your puppy will be able to last a 7 hour night without needing to potty if you do not feed them for 3 hours or provide water for 2 hours before bed time and allow them to empty themselves right before you lay down for the night.

No Progress? It Could Be Due To Medical Issues

Labrador on a table with a vet standing over

© Depositphotos.com / Nivens

If you seem to be making little progress and your puppy is weeing and pooping randomly all the time, or just doesnt seem to be developing bladder control,  it could be due to medical reasons.

If you are feeding, exercising, training and playing with your puppy to a schedule, and when you look at your diary there seems to be no pattern to the times they need to potty, you should seek the advice of your vet.

Common ailments such as gastroenteritis, urinary tract infection and health issues affecting internal organs and the genitalia can lead to a dog needing to potty much more frequently, often leading to eliminating in the house.

Also, you should regularly check the firmness and consistency of their stools and if theyre too hard and dry, or soft and runny, theres likely something wrong with their diet or a medical condition to blame. Again, seek the advice of your family vet.

You cannot successfully house train a puppy who is ill because their bodily functions will be too unpredictable. But of course if theyre ill, you want to have them back to good health anyway!

How Do You Know When Its Time To Stop House Training?

The simple answer is: When your puppys proven that they know to never soil inside your home.

The average will be between 6 and 7 months old. The élite few may be some weeks earlier and yet others, particularly the smaller breeds, may take from 8 to 10 months. But 6 to 7 months is the ball park figure to aim for.

However, you have to be careful here and cant judge it by a clock or calendar, you have to judge it by your puppys behavior and only stop when they have proven you can trust them.

A single mistake in the home can cause a major setback.

A puppy may not make a mistake for 2 weeks, then you give them too much freedom, they make a mistake and all of a sudden they are regularly trying to potty in the home again.

Also, some puppies just seem to forget everything for a few days now and then while growing up, even after being perfect for a couple of weeks.

Please remember this, expect it even, because its perfectly normal and you shouldnt get worried or think your dog is being naughty. Just stick to your plan and they WILL eventually get it.

So anyway, its in your best interests to show caution and not be too hasty to end the house training process. My advice would be to continue until they havent even attempted to make a mistake for at least 6 weeks so you can be sure they really have got it.

Conclusion

With house training, the fewer mistakes you allow your puppy to make and the more they are rewarded for doing the right thing, the quicker they will learn and the faster you will find success.

Because of this, the more effort you put in and the more time you spend with your puppy at the beginning supervising to correct mistakes and taking them to their bathroom spot many times each day the better.

But there are many other things you can do to help yourself and your puppy to find success. Setting up routines and schedules, controlling your puppys diet, understanding your puppys capabilities at different ages, working with their natural instincts and more besides.

This guide has provided you with all the theory, strategies, tips and tricks you will ever need to successfully house train your puppy as quickly and efficiently as possible, with the fewest mistakes along the way.

Put into practice what youve read within this guide and with a little patience and dedication you will be able to turn any puppy into a house training champion.

My Complete House Training Program

This was part 11 in a 12-part series where Ive tried to provide all the guidance you could possibly ever need and covered everything I can think of for you to successfully house train your puppy or adult dog.

Please see the entire series linked to below:

Questions, Feedback And Comments?

This guide has taken me many weeks to put together so Im hoping it will prove useful to people.

I would love to hear any feedback you have whether good or bad, so I can improve the guide over time and make sure its as useful as can be.

If you have any feedback, comments, questions or suggestions on how to house train a puppy, please add them to the comment section below and I will answer every one. Thank you :-)

Further Reading:

For an entire website dedicated to House Training: www.TheHouseBreakingBible.com

For many example schedules for puppies of different ages, see: Housetraining (pdf) from The Academy, Canada.

For a nice, detailed guide with some further tips and advice, see: How To Potty Train A Puppy, from Fido Savvy

You might also like...


Free Download Dog Training Full HD Videos

Sales Page: http://ouo.io/CF5S8u
Download: http://ouo.io/AplwQR (100% OFF)


How To House Train A Puppy Follow These Steps
How To Use This guide How To House Train A Puppy is the 11th article in my Ultimate Guide To House Training series. The previous 10 articles contain a

House Training a Puppy | Potty Train a Puppy the Easy Way
House train a puppy quickly by using your puppy's natural instincts. Potty train a puppy the easy way with these simple, House Training When You ARE Home.

How To Train A Puppy | Puppy Training | Potty & House ...
How To Train A Puppy The Essential Steps 1. Puppy House Training Follow these tips to stop your puppy from developing separation anxiety. 7.

4 Steps to House Training a Puppy - Ty the Dog Guy
4 Steps to House Training a Puppy. Potty training a dog has four simple steps and if you follow them you are If you follow these four steps you are

5 Easy Steps to House Training | The Balanced Canine
Learn 5 easy steps to get your dog house trained in not time. Dr. Mark If you follow these 5 easy steps, 2 thoughts on 5 Easy Steps to House Training

How To Potty Train a Puppy - How to House Train Your Dog
How To Potty Train a Puppy - How to House Train Your Dog Knowing how to potty t How To Potty Train A Puppy in 7 Easy Steps - Duration: 3:32.

Struggling to House Train Your Dog? Follow These Simple ...
Struggling to House Train Your Dog? Follow These Simple Steps for Success! February 18, 2015

How to Housetrain Your Dog or Puppy : The Humane Society ...
Housetraining your dog or your yard should be treated like any other room in your house. Give your puppy some Or you may want to crate train your puppy

Housebreaking Your Puppy in Six Easy Steps - Dogster
What steps should you take to ensure puppy house training success for Housebreaking Your Puppy in Six Easy Steps. These behaviors should become a cue to you

4 Ways to Train a Boxer Puppy - wikiHow
How to Train a Boxer Puppy. Rewards-based training is the best method to get your dog to understand and follow all kinds of When house-training a puppy,


How To House Train A Puppy Follow These Steps Rating: 4.5 Diposkan Oleh: Anonymous
 

Top