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How to Toilet Train Your Puppy

Bringing home a new puppy is an exciting milestone. At Teddy Maximus Puppy Hub, we know that one of the first (and most important) skills your furry friend needs to learn is proper toilet training.

With patience, consistency, and the right techniques, you can successfully house-train your puppy and build healthy habits that last a lifetime.

This guide will walk you through how to toilet train your puppy, step by step.

How to Toilet Train Your Puppy

1. Create a Consistent Routine

Puppies thrive on routine. Take your puppy outside:

  • First thing in the morning
  • After eating or drinking
  • After naps
  • After playtime
  • Before bedtime
  • Every 1–2 hours during the day

Choose a specific toilet spot outdoors and stick to it. The familiar scent encourages them to go.

2. Use Positive Reinforcement

When your puppy toilets in the correct place:

  • Stay outside with them until they have done their business
  • Consider having a key word or phrase you can say/repeat when they go out e.g. 'go toilet!'
  • Praise them enthusiastically
  • Use a happy tone
  • Offer a small treat immediately

Timing is crucial. Reward them within seconds so they associate the action with the praise.

Avoid punishment for accidents — this can create fear and slow the training process.

3. Watch for Toilet Signals

Learning your puppy’s body language helps prevent accidents. Common signs include:

  • Sniffing the ground
  • Circling
  • Whining
  • Suddenly stopping play
  • Heading toward the door

If you notice these signs, take them outside immediately.

4. Manage Accidents Properly

Accidents are part of the learning process.

If you catch your puppy mid-accident:

  • Calmly interrupt with a gentle “Outside!”
  • Take them straight to their toilet spot

If you find a mess later:

  • Clean it thoroughly with an enzyme-based cleaner
  • Do not scold your puppy

Lingering smells can encourage repeat accidents in the same spot.

5. Consider Crate Training

Crate training can be highly effective for toilet training. Puppies naturally avoid soiling their sleeping area.

Tips for crate success:

  • Choose the right size (enough room to stand and turn around)
  • Never use the crate as punishment
  • Take your puppy out immediately after crate time

Crates can help build bladder control and reduce overnight accidents.

FAQ

Commonly Asked Questions

Every puppy is different. On average:

  • Most puppies are reliably trained by 4–6 months of age
  • Smaller breeds may take slightly longer
  • Consistency can speed up the process

Remember: progress may not be perfectly linear. Temporary setbacks are normal.

Your puppy may be fully toilet trained when they:

  • Go to the door to signal
  • Stay accident-free for several weeks
  • Consistently toilet in their designated spot

Even after success, continue reinforcing good habits.

Night training can be challenging, especially for young puppies.

Helpful tips:

  • Take your puppy out right before sleep
  • Set an alarm for overnight breaks if needed
  • Keep night-time trips calm and quiet so they don't associate it with having play time

As your puppy grows, they’ll naturally need fewer night-time breaks.

If you're struggling with toilet training your Dachshund, you're not alone. Dachshunds are adorable, loyal, and full of personality — but they’re also famously stubborn when it comes to house training.

1. Dachshunds Can be Stubborn

Originally bred in Germany to hunt badgers, Dachshunds were designed to think independently. When they were underground hunting prey, they had to make decisions on their own.

That independence today can show up as:

  • Ignoring commands
  • Choosing when they want to listen
  • Testing boundaries

Toilet training requires consistency and cooperation — two things a strong-willed Dachshund may resist at first.

2. They Have Small Bladders

Especially Miniature Dachshunds, who physically cannot hold their bladder for long periods.

If you miss their small “window,” accidents happen quickly.

3. They Hate Bad Weather

Dachshunds are notorious for refusing to go outside in:

  • Rain
  • Cold temperatures
  • Wind
  • Snow

Because of their short legs and long bodies, wet grass and cold ground are uncomfortable. If the weather is unpleasant, many Dachshunds will simply decide not to go, then relieve themselves indoors instead.

4. They’re Scent-Oriented

As scent hounds, Dachshunds follow their nose. If they’ve had an accident indoors and the area isn’t cleaned properly with an enzyme cleaner, they may return to that exact spot repeatedly.

Their strong sense of smell makes thorough cleaning essential.

5. Maturity

While some breeds are reliably house trained by 4–6 months, Dachshunds may take:

  • 6–12 months
  • Occasionally even longer

Consistency over time is critical.

6. They Thrive on Routine (but may test it)

Dachshunds need:

  • A regular schedule
  • Consistent feeding times
  • Frequent outdoor breaks
  • Immediate praise

While it can feel frustrating, Dachshunds are intelligent and capable of learning. Once trained, they’re often very reliable.

The key is patience, routine, and understanding their personality. They’re not being “naughty” — they’re being Dachshunds.

Final Thoughts - Toilet Training

Learning how to toilet train your puppy requires patience, consistency, and lots of encouragement. Positive training builds confident, happy dogs.

With a structured routine, careful supervision, and plenty of praise your puppy will master toilet training sooner than you think.

Remember: every accident is a learning opportunity — for both you and your puppy.

Teddy Maximus is awarded a Finalist position in the Nectar Small Business Awards

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