Bringing Your New Puppy Home

Bringing your new puppy home is a very exciting time, but it can be quite an adjustment for the people and pets already living in your household.  Minimizing everyone’s stress is the key to making the introduction of your new puppy a smooth one.

Follow this checklist for bringing your new puppy home a success! (printable new puppy checklist below).

bringing a new puppy homeBringing Your New Puppy Home

In this post, we’ll cover:

  • Bringing Your New Puppy Home if You Have Cats
  • Bringing Your New Puppy Home if You Have Other Dogs
  • Bringing Your New Puppy Home if You Have Kids
  • Bringing Your New Puppy Home with Younger Children
  • Bringing Your New Puppy Home with Older Children
  • Printable New Puppy Checklist
  • Several Free Tutorials from Professional Dog Trainer, Doggy Dan
  • My #1 Recommendation for Puppy Training

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WATCH MY VIDEO: new puppy checklist

Bringing Your New Puppy Home

bringing home a new puppy to catsBringing Your New Puppy Home if You Have Cats

The new sounds, smells and activities that come with bringing your new puppy home can feel like a stressful whirlwind for cats. Reducing stress for your cat is important.

There are two important things you can do to accomplish this:

Provide a Cat Sanctuary: Make sure your cat has a way to avoid being cornered by the probably-ridiculously-enthusiastic new puppy.  You don’t want your cat to be frightened by the puppy or worse, injured or harmed.

And you don’t want the puppy to experience a very painful and bloody cat scratch across the snout!

A good way to prevent this is to use baby gates – which a cat can easily jump over to escape, yet the puppy cannot.  Another option is to install a cat door to a laundry room or basement that allows an escape for the cat (as long as the puppy can’t also fit through it).

Other things such as cat furniture, otherwise known as “carpet trees” work well because the cat can jump out of reach of the puppy.  If your kitty has a way to escape, he’ll be less fearful and more willing to check out the new pooch.

Don’t Force Things: Never force a meeting between the puppy and your cat.  Let things happen naturally, when each animal is ready. Both will likely be beyond curious about the other – they’ll check each other out as they feel comfortable.

bringing your new puppy home if you have other dogsBringing Your New Puppy Home if You Have Other Dogs

Some dogs will welcome a new puppy immediately, but others may need more time to adjust.  Follow these tips when introducing your new puppy to an older dog already living in your household:

Common Ground: Always make the first introduction of your new puppy to your dog on “common ground,” such as a living room area, away from food bowls, favorite sleeping spots or toys. This will prevent any “my territory” issues.

Put Safety First:  You should have your dog and the puppy on leashes, under your control, during the first introduction. Even as they begin to make friends, you have to be careful that a larger dog doesn’t play too rough or try to intimidate the puppy and cause harm or fear for the puppy.

Watch the Body Language: Watch your dog’s body language closely when introducing your new puppy. If your dog is showing signs of being uneasy, like cowering or tucking his tail between his legs, stay relaxed and have him focus on you, offering treats when he glances at the puppy.

The distraction will help him to relax, and food/treats always turn a nervous situation into a positive one for dogs. Also watch for any aggressive behavior by your older dog.  I strongly suggest you read this article, How To Read Dog Body Language.

Don’t Leave the New Puppy Home Alone: For safety’s sake, and you should never leave your puppy home alone with other household dogs until it has been established that they get along well.  For the first few weeks at least, put your puppy in a safe place – possibly in a separate room with a baby gate.

how to introduce a new puppy to other petsHow to Safely Socialize Your Dog with Other Household Pets

Professional Dog Trainer and Behavioral Specialist, Doggy Dan, has a free tutorial on how to safely socialize your dog with other household pets.  This is super helpful for knowing how to handle introducing your new puppy to your existing pets!

dog training

dog training for kidsBringing Your New Puppy Home if You Have Kids

It’s very sweet to watch children with puppies.  However, it’s important to take steps to make sure both the children and the puppy are safe while they play.

Get the Kids Involved! Doggy Dan has a free tutorial called, How to Get Kids Involved While Training Your Dog at Home.  This is a great way to get the kids involved in welcoming the new puppy home and also helping with puppy training.dog training

puppy training for kidsPuppy Training for Kids

There’s a website called TheFamilyDog.com that specializes in dog training for kids!  They have videos, fun activities, games, puzzles – all kids of fun ways for kids to learn to train the new puppy!

You can read my review and find out more information about it HERE.

bringing new puppy home with younger childrenBringing Your New Puppy Home with Younger Children

Here are some ways to give instruction to small children regarding the new puppy:

“Stay quiet like a mouse – if you’re loud, it might scare the puppy.”

“Touch gently” – show them not to pull the puppy’s ears or tail and to touch softly.

“Leave the puppy alone” when he’s sleeping or eating.

Remind small children often of the “puppy rules,” as young children can easily forget!

bringing your new puppy home with older childrenBringing Your New Puppy Home with Older Children

Instruction for older children might include:

“Sit quietly on the floor and let him come to you first.”

“Don’t chase or throw things at the puppy.”

“Don’t grab the puppy’s fur, face, ears or tail. Be gentle.”

“Don’t sit on, lie on or jump on the puppy!”  I remember when I was a kid my mother would use this:  “How would you like it if I did that to YOU?!”  As a parent, you should be using this opportunity to set the tone for your children about how they should treat animals.

Supervise Your New Puppy with the Kids

As your puppy adjusts to your family, he’ll become more and more comfortable playing with the kids.  However, parents should ensure the children’s safety as well as the puppy’s safety by always supervising playtime to prevent injury or abuse from occurring.

puppy training puppy coachGet Puppy Training!

There’s a fantastic  website called, The Online Dog Trainer, run by Professional Dog Trainer and Behavioral Specialist, Doggy Dan.  The website is filled with step-by-step videos coveri g every puppy training issue you can think of.

But what I love most, is that Doggy Dan put together an entire puppy training section called Project Moses, featuring step-by-step videos of him training his puppy, Moses, from the time he adopted him at eight weeks old, all the way to when Moses turned one year old.

The entire Project Moses series in included in Doggy Dan’s puppy training program called, The Puppy Coach.  Check it out!  You’ll be glad you heard about this.

the puppy coach puppy training

For More Information

Read my article, How to Get Ready for a New Puppy – What to Do Before Bringing Your Puppy Home.  Bringing Your New Puppy Home

Read my post, Bringing Home a New Pet.

peoplelovinganimals.comI Donate to Animal Charities

Thank you for visiting my website. I hope this post has helped you be prepared to bring your new puppy home!

I donate 10% of my earnings to animal charities.  You can see a list of the charities I donate to here.  If you found my site to be helpful, please share it with your friends and family.  Thank you!  Debra

For More About Puppy Training, CLICK HERE

5 thoughts on “Bringing Your New Puppy Home”

  1. great site. i was looking at getting a dog recently. i had two cats many years ago and they gave me much enjoyment. I have three kids, so i thought that it would not be fair to get a dog due to the fact that it would have to spend much time at home alone. I am a courier and it breaks my heart to see dogs kept alone by themselves for long periods during the day. Having said that, I have seen two dogs home alone together and they seem much happier. Less bothered that I am there!

  2. Hi Debra,

    This is a really helpful article. We don’t have any pets at the moment but I am thinking about getting a puppy as a gift and in order to teach some responsibility to my two young girls.
    I really appreciate your ideas on the instructions that I will need to give my girls about how to approach the new puppy. I have just gotten my younger daughter to realise that she needs to be quiet when other people are sleeping and I will have to extend that to the puppy. It seems like something so simple but I will also have to warn and watch carefully for anything like tail pulling 🙂
    Lovely advice.
    Thanks much.
    Vivia

  3. Excellent information here and sometimes this can be taken for granted.

    Just because you love a new pet does not mean the rest of the household are equally comfortable with it.

    If you have a dog, like i do (and it does not like cats at all) there needs to be a plan in place to introduce things slowly.

    I have learned a lot here, thanks for the information.

    Chris

  4. I just got my puppy today. ? The people who owned him needed to get rid of him because the older female dog could never adjust to him. She would attack him so they had to keep him in a separate room by himself most of the time. He’s 4 months old and of course a lot high strung. His name is Taco – he’s a little spicy. But I’m already in love ❤️ with him.

    1. That’s awesome! This little sweetie is so blessed to have you! I hope you got useful tips from the article. I can recommend an expensive puppy training program called The Puppy Coach. It’s only $19 and it’s a great way to start off training your puppy the right way. Here’s the link: https://PeopleLovingAnimals.com/PuppyCoach
      Let me know if you need anything specific – I’ll help in any way I can! Debra
      PS TACO! Cutest name ever!

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