HomeBlogBlog4-Week Puppy Training Plan: Potty, Commands, Socialize

4-Week Puppy Training Plan: Potty, Commands, Socialize

4-Week Puppy Training Plan: Potty, Commands, Socialize

New Puppy Training Starter Guide: A 4-Week Routine for House-Training, Commands, and Confident Socialization

A new puppy learns fastest with short, consistent sessions and a predictable daily rhythm. This starter guide breaks training into a simple 4-week routine with clear priorities: prevent accidents before they happen, teach a few essential cues, build calm confidence around people and sounds, and create good habits that last.

What to Set Up Before Training Starts

Before the first “sit,” set the environment so the puppy can succeed on day one.

  • Choose one primary potty spot outdoors and use the same quick route to get there. Speed matters when a puppy suddenly needs to go.
  • Create two zones: a safe confinement area (crate or pen) and a supervised play area where eyes stay on the puppy.
  • Pick high-value rewards (tiny soft treats) and reserve them for training and potty success so they stay meaningful.
  • Set a realistic schedule for meals, naps, potty breaks, and play; consistency beats “perfect” timing.
  • Agree on house rules early (couch access, sleeping location, begging, door manners) to avoid mixed messages.

If you want everything organized in one place, the New Puppy Training Starter Guide printable eBook can help keep cues, routines, and weekly goals consistent across caregivers.

A Simple Daily Rhythm That Prevents Problems

Many puppy issues improve when the day follows a repeatable loop. A reliable cycle helps prevent accidents, reduces nipping from overtiredness, and makes training feel effortless.

  • Use the cycle: potty → play/training → water/meal (as scheduled) → calm time → nap; repeat throughout the day.
  • Take puppies out after waking, after eating/drinking, after play, and at least every 1–2 hours early on.
  • Aim for multiple micro-sessions (1–3 minutes) instead of one long training block.
  • Plan decompression time: sniff walks, chewing, and calm settling reduce zoomies and mouthy behavior.
  • Night plan: last potty break right before bed; keep nighttime trips boring and brief so your puppy learns that nighttime is for sleeping.

Sample day schedule (adjust for age, bladder capacity, and household routine)

Time What to do Goal
7:00 Potty immediately after waking Prevent morning accidents
7:10 Breakfast + fresh water (then potty 10–15 min later) Build predictable digestion timing
7:30 2 minutes: name + “sit” + reward, then short play Start focus and engagement
8:00 Nap in crate/pen Teach calm confinement
10:00 Potty + brief leash practice indoors Routine potty + leash comfort
12:00 Lunch (if feeding 3 meals) + potty Reinforce schedule
Afternoon Potty every 1–2 hours + chew/settle practice Reduce biting and restlessness
Evening Short social exposure + “come” games Confidence + recall foundation
Bedtime Last potty break, lights low, quiet crate Smooth nights

Week 1: House-Training Foundations (and How to Handle Accidents)

Week 1 is about prevention and clarity. Every accident indoors is practice—so the goal is to reduce opportunities while rewarding the right choice outside.

  • Supervision is training: if the puppy can’t be watched, use the crate/pen to prevent rehearsing accidents.
  • Reward outdoor potty fast—within 1–2 seconds of finishing—and pair it with a consistent potty phrase.
  • Learn pre-potty signs: sudden sniffing, circling, wandering away, quick squat, or heading to an old “favorite” spot.
  • If an accident starts, interrupt gently (a clap or upbeat “this way”) and go outside; reward if the puppy finishes outdoors.
  • Clean thoroughly with an enzymatic cleaner; avoid ammonia-based products that can mimic urine scent.
  • Track success: time of day, location, and triggers (post-meal, post-play) to tighten the schedule where it’s needed most.

Week 2: First Commands That Make Daily Life Easier

Week 2 focuses on cues that improve safety and make everyday handling smoother. Keep reps light and upbeat—think “practice,” not “performance.” For additional structure and reminders you can post at home, the New Puppy Training Starter Guide printable eBook can help keep everyone using the same words and steps.

For cue timing and positive reinforcement basics, the American Kennel Club’s puppy training guidance is a helpful reference.

Week 3: Socialization That Builds Confidence (Not Overwhelm)

For vaccination-aware socialization priorities, see the American Veterinary Society of Animal Behavior (AVSAB) position statement on puppy socialization.

Week 4: Loose Leash, Calm Greetings, and Bite Inhibition

If you’d like a simple way to keep track of your pup during outings (especially while practicing recall in safe, permitted areas), consider the Silicone AirTag Holder as a convenient add-on to compatible collars or harnesses.

Printable Support: Keeping the Routine Consistent

  • Use checklists to track potty times, meals, naps, and training reps so patterns show up quickly.
  • Post a weekly plan on the fridge to keep every caregiver aligned on cues and rules.
  • Keep training sessions tiny and frequent; a printable format helps prevent doing too much on busy days.
  • For a ready-to-use 4-week plan with house-training, commands, and socialization prompts, consider the New Puppy Training Starter Guide printable eBook.

FAQ

How often should a new puppy go outside for potty breaks?

A good starting plan is after waking, after meals or drinks, after play, before bed, and every 1–2 hours at first. Frequency varies by age, size, and the individual puppy’s bladder control, so adjust based on real patterns.

What if my puppy has accidents even with a schedule?

Tighten supervision (or use a crate/pen when you can’t watch), shorten the route to the potty spot, and clean with an enzymatic cleaner so odors don’t linger. If accidents persist or come with unusual symptoms (straining, frequent small pee, blood, lethargy), contact a veterinarian.

When can a puppy start socialization and basic training?

Gentle, positive exposure and simple cues can begin immediately at home, using treats, play, and short sessions. Choose safe socialization options and follow your veterinarian’s guidance regarding vaccination-related risk in your area.

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