Puppy sitting by the back door, ready to go outside

How to Potty Train Your Puppy: A Step-by-Step Guide

— 6/13/2026 —

Potty training is the first major project every new puppy owner faces — and the one that generates the most late-night Google searches. The good news: most puppies can be reliably housetrained in 4–8 weeks with a consistent routine. The bad news: there are no shortcuts, and you will clean up accidents.

Here's a practical, step-by-step guide based on what actually works.

Potty training boils down to two things: prevent accidents by managing your puppy's schedule, and reward success by praising immediately after they go in the right place.

The Schedule

Puppies need to go outside:

How Long Can a Puppy Hold It?

Rough guideline: age in months plus one = hours. An 8-week-old can hold about 3 hours. A 4-month-old, about 5 hours. This is a maximum during crate/sleep time, not a target during active hours.

Daily puppy potty training schedule on a kitchen whiteboard
The schedule is the strategy. Puppies thrive on routine — and so does your flooring.

The Crate Method

Crate training and potty training go hand in hand. Dogs instinctively avoid soiling their sleeping area.

When unsupervised, your puppy should be in the crate or tethered to you. Free roaming before they're trained is how accidents become habits. The crate is not punishment — introduce it gradually. See our puppy first-year timeline for crate training in context.

The Cycle

Handling Accidents

Caught in the act: Calmly interrupt ("oops!"), guide them outside, let them finish outdoors, praise and treat.

Found after the fact: Clean it up with enzymatic cleaner. That's all. Punishment after the fact — rubbing their nose in it, scolding — does nothing productive. Dogs don't connect past actions with current consequences. They learn to be afraid of you near messes, which makes them hide to go.

Common Mistakes

  • Too much freedom too soon. No unsupervised access until 4+ weeks accident-free.
  • Punishing accidents. Teaches hiding, not holding.
  • Inconsistent schedule. Random breaks = no learnable pattern.
  • Late rewards. Treat inside after coming in is too late. Reward outside, within seconds.
  • Pee pads as permanent solution. Pads teach that going indoors is acceptable.

The Timeline

Regression is normal around 4–6 months. Go back to basics: tighter schedule, more supervision. It usually lasts 1–2 weeks.

If you're bringing a new puppy home and need midday potty breaks while you're at work, our drop-in visits are designed for exactly this. Book a meet-and-greet — we love puppies, and we're not afraid of a few accidents.

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