Teach Happy Alone Time

Crate & Potty Training

Teach Happy Alone Time

Build your dog’s confidence when left alone, prevent separation issues, and make crate or playpen time feel safe and easy.

Training • Kind & science-based alone-time training crate comfort prevent separation anxiety
Quick Start

Goal: Your dog naps or chews calmly while you step away. Start with seconds, not minutes — and end sessions before fussing begins.


Session recipe (5–8 minutes)

  1. Light walk or sniffy game (take the edge off).
  2. In crate/pen with a stuffed Kong or chew.
  3. Step out for 30–60 seconds; return calmly.
  4. Repeat 3–5 reps, slightly increasing time if calm.
  5. Finish on a success, swap chew for a brief potty break.
Pro tip: Use low-stakes “fake departures” daily — grab keys, put on shoes, step outside for 45 seconds, come back neutral.
Foundation

Make the crate a “yes” place

  • Feed meals in the crate; drop surprise treats during the day.
  • Reserve special chews only for crate/pen time.
  • Cover 1–2 sides for cozy vibes; place in a quiet corner.
  • Keep early reps short; let calm out — don’t wait for whining.
Progression

Step-up timeline

  • Days 1–2: You in sight; 30–90s out of room.
  • Days 3–4: Brief front-door exits (1–3 mins).
  • Days 5–7: Extend to 5–10 mins, 2–3 reps/day.
  • Week 2: 15–30 mins after exercise & potty.
Troubleshoot

Common bumps

  • Whining quickly: You moved too fast — halve the time.
  • No interest in chew: Try warmer, smellier fillings; reduce meals 10%.
  • Vocal at door sounds: Add white noise or a fan.
Red flags: frantic escape attempts, drooling puddles, panting, self-injury, nonstop howling.
→ Pause the plan and contact a credentialed, force-free trainer or veterinary behaviorist.

Keep it on track

Set a simple cadence for crate/alone sessions and meds while you’re at it.