No Puppy Biting Allowed!
Teach Your Dog Proper Play Etiquette

Introduction to Puppy Biting

Puppy biting is a very common problem for new puppy owners. It is also one that can be very frustrating (and painful) to deal with. If not dealt with correctly, it can become a serious problem later in the dog’s life. Typically, puppies engage in biting behaviors during excitable greetings or playtime. This usually occurs in pups less than 5 months of age.

Puppies are like human babies when it comes to exploring their environment. They do so by touching and tasting everything. Since puppies don’t have hands, they use their mouths to do their exploring.

Puppy biting is a form of social play between puppies and dogs. Puppies and dogs interact with each other by mouthing and pawing each other. This teaches puppies some very important lessons about acceptable and unacceptable behavior when it comes to using their mouths and teeth. They learn how to inhibit their bite strength in order to remain socially acceptable.

Since our skin is much more sensitive than a dog’s fur-covered skin, they must learn that biting and pawing are not acceptable forms of interacting with us. They need to be taught other positive ways to greet, socialize and play with their humans.

Learning to Stop Puppy Biting

In order to teach your puppy the proper way to interact with you, you’ll need to show him that good things happen when he plays nicely with you and doesn’t nip. If he nips, he loses his playmate and in the process, he learns it also has other drawbacks. The basic principle here is, he gets lots of praise and petting as long as he doesn’t bite. If he bites, we show him how much we don’t appreciate it, and all play stops.

11 Helpful Puppy Biting Tips

  1. Try to pet your pup at times when he is calm/quiet or preoccupied chewing a toy. Make sure the dog has plenty of “legal” toys that he can chew on and be prepared with at least two or three of these toys before you begin playing with your dog. Keep switching toys and keep the dog fixated on the toys.
  2. Have “special” play toys that are brought out only at playtime. This keeps them new and interesting to the puppy. When you are done playing, put the toys away. Keep items such as socks, shoes, remote controls, etc… out of you puppy’s reach when playing.
  3. If you can, have “special” play areas in the house where you will typically play with your puppy. If possible, try to keep these areas separate from the ones you normally use to relax, watch TV, read or just have quiet time. Using these areas to play with your puppy might set him up to fail because the puppy will not understand that you want your “quiet time” in these places.
  4. While he is chewing on his toys, give him lots of praise and petting. Let him know how much you like it when he chews on these toys instead of your skin.
  5. If he gets bored with his toys and starts nipping on your skin or clothes, scream “OW”, “OUCH” or whichever word you’d like, immediately stop playing with him and ignore the dog for a couple of seconds.This will let him know his nipping really hurts and his fun is being put on hold. Try to be slightly over dramatic with this step; however, don’t frighten the dog. The object is to startle him, make him let go and possibly back away from you. You don’t want to cause a fear response. The dog should left wondering “what the heck was that?
    • After a second or two, resume playing and pet and praise as long as he doesn’t nip. If he starts nipping, repeat the process. If after 2 or 3 times, the technique doesn’t noticeably decrease the nipping, just walk away from the puppy. Don’t have any interaction. If you need to, leave the room altogether.
    • Be consistent with this technique every time he begins to nip. Everybody whom comes into contact with the puppy should practice this same technique.
  6. Another technique you can try, which is similar to Step 3; however, instead of screaming “OW, OUCH, etc…” try immediately freezing the instant he puts his open mouth on your skin. This is called shunning. Try not to wait until he is actually putting his teeth on your skin. Don’t pull away, flinch or jerk your hand away as the puppy might think you are playing.
    • After a second or two, resume playing and pet and praise as long as he doesn’t nip. If he starts nipping, repeat the process. If after 2 or 3 times, the technique doesn’t noticeably decrease the nipping, just walk away from the puppy. Don’t have any interaction. If you need to, leave the room altogether.
    • Be consistent with this technique every time he begins to nip. Everybody whom comes into contact with the puppy should practice this same technique.
  7. Give your dog lots of good exercise. A tired dog is a good dog and is less likely to be rambunctious and/or nip.
  8. Try coating your hands and/or feet with chewing deterrent (Bitter Apple) before you interact with your puppy.
  9. Avoid tug-of-war, wrestling, slap-wrestling or chase games. These only encourage the dog to get excited and want to nip.
    • Instead try playing constructive games that teach leadership and don’t encourage excitable, nippy interactions. If the dog knows some basic obedience cues, practice those cues in your play sessions. This will give him something positive to work towards and distracts him from wanting to nip.
  10. Instruct everyone that interacts with your dog not to encourage or allow the nipping behavior. They should greet the dog calmly by keeping hands slow and low, preferably with a toy or a treat. If you need to have a collar and a leash on your dog to restrict his nippy greetings, please do so. If he is highly excitable and nippy, use the leash to keep him away from your guests until he is visibly calmer and then try re-introducing the dog to the guest.
  11. Puppies will outgrow this behavior if you are extremely consistent in your interactions with him. Consistency is the key to success with this and all behavior problems. The more you allow nippy behavior the longer it will take him to learn not to do it.

“Maintain those leadership qualities and DON’T allow puppy biting at all.”

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