Puppy Biting: 3 Positive, Punishment-Free Strategies That Work
Is your puppy turning your hands, ankles, and sleeves into chew toys?
Puppy biting is common, normal, and frustrating — but with a positive, science-backed approach, you can stop it without saying “No” or resorting to punishment.
In this guide, I share a gentle, effective 3-step strategy to stop puppy biting and start building better behavior — all based on positive reinforcement.
🐶 Why Do Puppies Bite?
Puppies naturally explore the world with their mouths. Biting can mean:
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They’re teething
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They’re overstimulated or tired
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They want to play and don’t know the rules yet
It’s not about dominance or bad behavior — it’s communication and learning.
Step 1: Rule Out Medical Issues
Before jumping into training:
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🦷 Is your puppy teething?
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🩺 Could they be in pain or uncomfortable?
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😬 Is the biting sudden or extreme?
Check with your vet to rule out teething pain, anxiety, or an underlying medical issue.
Step 2: Use Management to Prevent Practice
Management means setting your puppy up for success by changing the environment.
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When is biting happening? Evening zoomies? Right after meals?
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Use tools like:
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Crates, X-pens, or baby gates
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Enrichment toys or frozen chews
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Scheduled rest breaks
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Prevent the biting before it starts, and avoid giving them opportunities to “practice” it.
Step 3: Reinforce What You DO Want
This is where the magic happens.
Teach your puppy that calm, polite behaviors earn reinforcers, while biting gets them nothing.
Try this:
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✋ If they lick your hand — mark and reward
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🐾 Calmly settle on a mat — reward that
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🧸 Choose a chew toy over a hand — jackpot!
Over time, your puppy will learn: “Licking = praise. Biting = no fun.”
Biting Is Communication — Not Defiance
There’s no “bad dog” here.
Biting = information and communication.
Puppy biting is your dog’s way of saying:
“I’m overwhelmed, I need help, or I just don’t know the rules yet.”
Your job? Help them figure it out with kindness, consistency, and science-backed training.
🐾 Need Personalized Help?
If you’re struggling with your puppy’s behaviors, it may be time to work 1-on-1.

