A new puppy learns fastest with short, consistent sessions and a predictable daily rhythm. This starter guide lays out a simple 4-week routine for house-training, foundational cues, and early social experiences—plus practical checklists to reduce accidents, jumping, nipping, and overwhelm in the first month at home.
Before cues and schedules, set your puppy up to succeed with a few decisions you’ll stick with for the next month:
Most early training problems improve when the day becomes predictable. Use the same anchors on repeat: potty → play/training → food/water → potty → calm chew → nap.
| Time | What happens | Training focus |
|---|---|---|
| Morning wake | Potty trip, calm praise, short play | Reinforce potty outdoors; prevent indoor roaming |
| Breakfast | Meal in crate or station | Positive crate association; name recognition |
| After eating | Potty trip, 1–2 minutes training | Sit, touch/hand target, reward calm behavior |
| Mid-morning | Nap in crate/playpen | Settle skills; reduce nipping from fatigue |
| Lunch (if used) | Meal, short walk in safe area | Loose-leash basics indoors; engagement |
| Afternoon | Play, chew time, nap | Trade/drop games; handling practice |
| Evening | Dinner, potty, gentle social exposure | Calm greetings; confidence-building sights/sounds |
| Pre-bed | Final potty, quiet settle | Night routine consistency |
House-training improves fastest when accidents are prevented and outdoor bathroom trips are heavily rewarded. For potty timing, use a simple rule: go out after waking, after eating/drinking, after play, and every 30–90 minutes depending on age and how well things are going.
For additional house-training basics, see the American Kennel Club’s puppy potty training overview.
Goal: help your puppy feel safe, build a repeatable routine, and start easy wins.
Nipping is normal puppy behavior. The skill you’re building is “teeth on skin ends the fun, calm behavior makes rewards happen.”
Socialization means positive, controlled exposure—not forcing interactions. The goal is a puppy who can notice new things and recover calmly.
For a science-backed approach to early exposure, review the AVSAB position statement on puppy socialization.
Positive, reward-based methods tend to build clarity and confidence; the RSPCA’s guidance on reward-based training explains the approach well.
If you want a ready-to-use routine with daily checkoffs, see: New Puppy Training Starter Guide (printable 4-week routine).
For families who like structured tracking pages, you can also add a simple worksheet system alongside your puppy log: Memory Boost Worksheets for Students & Adults.
Take your puppy out after waking, after eating or drinking, after play, and every 30–90 minutes depending on age and recent success. Supervise closely indoors, and reward immediately after your puppy finishes outside to speed up learning.
Start with name response, sit, and touch/hand target for fast, repeatable wins at home. Next add come, leave it, and place/settle because they’re practical for safety, impulse control, and calmer household routines.
Focus on controlled exposure: carry your puppy in busy areas, watch the world from a safe distance, and pair new sights and sounds with treats. Arrange meetups only with healthy, vaccinated dogs in clean, low-traffic settings, and ask your veterinarian what’s safest in your area.
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