How to Stop Dogs from Chewing & Scratching Everything: A Vet’s Guide (2025) 🐶🛡️

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How to Stop Dogs from Chewing & Scratching Everything: A Vet’s Guide (2025) 🐶🛡️
By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc
Hello—I’m Dr Duncan Houston BVSc, veterinarian and Ask A Vet founder. Destructive chewing and scratching are common but often avoidable with insight and planning. In this vet‑approved guide, learn:
- 🐾 Why dogs chew and scratch—normal behavior or deeper issues
- 🧩 How to determine the motivation: teething, boredom, anxiety, escape
- 🛠 Practical solutions: management, training, enrichment, deterrents
1. Why Dogs Chew & Scratch
Chewing and scratching serve many purposes:
- Teething/exploration: Puppies explore with mouths and claws
- Boredom or lack of enrichment: Dogs need mental and physical challenges to stay content
- Anxiety or stress: Separation anxiety or barrier frustration can trigger destructive behavior
- Attention seeking or habit: Learned over time when behaviors are reinforced
- Medical causes: Pain, dental issues, or allergies may be the underlying trigger
2. Behavior Detective: The What, When & Where
- What? Are they chewing shoes, furniture, walls, or digging in yard?
- When? Only alone? While you’re home? At specific times?
- Where? At doors, barriers, crates, couches, yard areas protruding to wildlife?
Mapping patterns helps you tailor solutions—whether it's anxiety-related, boredom-driven, or instinctual behavior.
3. Step‑by‑Step Solutions
3.1 Rule Out Medical Issues
A vet check is essential to rule out pain, dental disease, allergy, infection, or pica.
3.2 Dog‑Proof Your Environment
- Keep valuables out of reach—shoes, cords, remote controls
- Use crates or gated safe zones when you can’t supervise
- Block visual triggers to reduce barrier or prey-driven behavior
3.3 Offer Enrichment & Exercise
- Long walks, fetch, training sessions, treadmill activity
- Mental games—food puzzles, nose work, Doggy day care
- Chew toys—durable, varied types and rotated to prevent boredom
3.4 Apply Deterrents & Redirection
- Use bitter-spray deterrents on off-limit items
- Redirect to acceptable chew options; reward compliance
- Avoid punishment—redirect instead of scolding to prevent fear
3.5 Manage Anxiety & Barrier Frustration
- Use crates strategically (when not stress-causing)
- Desensitize barriers; train calm behavior at crates/doors
- Consider pheromone diffusers, white noise, or calming wraps
3.6 Consistency & Supervision
Supervise closely and use baby gates or crates until safe behavior becomes habit.
4. How Ask A Vet,
- Ask A Vet App: Share behavior videos and get expert guidance on stress, training tips, and rule-out medical issues.
5. When to Seek Professional Help
- Persistent chewing or escalation (destruction of doors, walls)
- Aggressive guarding of items or reactivity when redirected
- Signs of severe anxiety—pacing, drooling, vocalizing, and self-trauma
- No improvement after consistent management and enrichment
- Consider a veterinary behaviorist or certified trainer
📌 Final Thoughts from a Vet
Destructive chewing and scratching are rarely rebellion—they signal your dog’s needs: attention, stimulation, comfort, or relief from stress. By observing carefully, vet-checking, enriching their life, and using management tools, you can redirect behaviors into positive outlets. With consistency and kindness—and support from Ask A Vet telehealth.🐾❤️