{"title":"How to Potty Train a Puppy","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/pets/how-to-potty-train-a-puppy","category":{"slug":"pets","name":"Pets"},"creator":{"name":"Zak George’s Dog Training Revolution","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZzFRKsgVMhGTxffpzgTJlQ","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7vOXWCewEYM"},"tldr":"House-train a new puppy in about a month. Consistent schedule, crate training, immediate reward - no pads, no punishment. Step-by-step guide.","totalDurationSeconds":587,"difficulty":"easy","tools":[],"materials":[],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Feed on a Consistent Schedule","text":"Feed your puppy the same food at the same times every day. Consistent food in equals predictable bathroom needs out - you'll learn their rhythm within a few days.Most puppies do well on two or three meals on a fixed schedule. Avoid free-feeding (leaving food out all day) during house training because it makes their bathroom schedule random. Pick times you can commit to for the next month."},{"number":2,"title":"Keep the Puppy Close With a Leash or Gates","text":"Dogs instinctively avoid going where they sleep, but a whole house is too big for a new puppy to see as one 'home.' Start by giving them access to just one room or area.The easiest way to supervise constantly is to clip a six-foot leash from your belt loop to their harness - they can't wander off and you'll catch the signs (circling, sniffing, squatting) before an accident happens. Baby gates and a puppy playpen work when you can't tether them to you."},{"number":3,"title":"Introduce the Crate Gradually","text":"Set up a crate sized so your puppy can stand, turn around, and lie down comfortably - no bigger. Most wire crates come with a divider panel so you can start small and enlarge the space as the puppy grows.Don't force them in. Toss treats just inside the open door, let them walk in on their own, and reward them for entering. Work up to closing the door briefly while you sit next to the crate. For the first few weeks, place the crate near your bed so the puppy isn't alone at night."},{"number":4,"title":"Set the Potty Schedule","text":"Take the puppy outside about once an hour during the day. Always go immediately after they wake up, after they eat, and after active play.A good rule for how long they can hold it in the crate is one hour per month of age - a two-month-old can hold it maybe two hours at most. Most young puppies need one bathroom break in the middle of the night. Stay outside five to ten minutes and let them sniff - don't chatter at them, because talking becomes a distraction."},{"number":5,"title":"Reward Heavily the Second They Finish","text":"The instant the puppy finishes going outside, pour on the praise - enthusiastic voice, a high-value treat, or a short play session.Timing matters more than anything else. Reward during or right after the act, not thirty seconds later when you're walking back to the door. Puppies learn by association - going potty outside has to become 'the most fun moment of the day' in their heads. Within a couple weeks most puppies will start leading you to the door on their own."},{"number":6,"title":"Don't Punish Accidents","text":"If you catch them mid-accident inside, scoop them up and rush outside to finish. If you find a puddle after the fact, just clean it up with an enzymatic pet cleaner - regular cleaner leaves a scent trail the puppy will return to.Don't rub their nose in it, don't yell, don't punish. An accident means you weren't watching closely enough or missed a cue. Fix your supervision, not the puppy. Skip puppy pads unless outdoor access is genuinely impractical - pads teach the puppy that inside is sometimes okay, which is the opposite of what you want."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-19T14:10:41.879Z","published":"2026-04-21T22:09:25.961Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}