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How to Stop Your Dog from Digging: A Vet’s Guide (2025) 🐶🛠️

  • 102 days ago
  • 5 min read
How to Stop Your Dog from Digging: A Vet’s Guide (2025) 🐶🛠️

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How to Stop Your Dog from Digging: A Vet’s Guide (2025) 🐶🛠️ 

By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc

Hello—I’m Dr Duncan Houston BVSc, veterinarian and Ask A Vet founder. Digging is often normal, but destructive digging in yards or gardens can signal deeper needs or instincts. This vet‑approved guide helps you:

  • Understand why dogs dig
  • Identify specific digging motivations
  • Implement behavior‑based prevention and outlet strategies
  • Use enrichment, training, and environment modifications

1. Why Dogs Dig

  • Instinct & prey drive: Natural digging in terriers or scent-alerted dogs
  • Boredom or play: Mental and physical stimulation is often lacking 
  • Comfort (cooling/denning): Dogs dig to regulate temperature or nest
  • Hiding treasures: Burying toys/food—instinctual caching
  • Escape or barrier frustration: Digging under fences to reach stimuli or escape
  • Anxiety or stress: Displacement digging linked to separation or fear

2. Identify Motivation → Tailor Response

Observe where/when/why your dog digs to match solutions. Is it at the fence (escape), near shade (cooling), or consistently adult behaviors? Each cause calls for a different approach.


3. Targeted Strategies

3.1 Create a Designated Dig Zone

  • Sand pit or loose soil box trained with buried treats/toys
  • Interrupt unwanted digging with a redirect to the pit and praise when correct

3.2 Physical & Mental Enrichment

  • Daily exercise and training—1h+ plus puzzle toys before yard time
  • Interactive toys like Kong, Buster Cube, nose work games outdoors

3.3 Manage Yard Environment

  • Cover digging spots around fences with chicken wire, stones, or bury barrier
  • Rodent control to remove prey triggers
  • Provide shady resting areas to reduce cooling digging

3.4 Training & Redirection

  • Teach “leave it” or “off” command for instant burr-on-intervention correction
  • Reward calm alternative behaviors—sit, fetch, sniffing—when redirected
  • Avoid punitive punishment—it worsens fear or frustration

4. Special Considerations

  • Puppies: Provide digging zones, supervision, positive redirection
  • Prey breeds: Earthdog courses or scent games channel instincts safely
  • Anxious diggers: Manage separation anxiety first—crate, enrichment, counterconditioning

5. When to Seek Help

  • Persistent or escalating digging despite interventions
  • accompanied by other anxiety signs—pacing, destruction, vocalizing
  • Escape behaviors or aggressive digging at boundaries
  • If you need a structured behavior modification plan from a certified trainer or behaviorist

📌 Final Thoughts from a Vet

Digging is normal—but becoming destructive means your dog is communicating a need. By understanding the why, providing appropriate outlets, and using enrichment and training, you can redirect the behavior without frustration or punishment. With consistency—and help from Ask A Vet telehealth, a mentally balanced dog and a hole-free yard! 🐾❤️

© 2025 Dr Duncan Houston BVSc, Ask A Vet founder. For behavior video reviews, yard-proofing advice, or anxiety management support, visit AskAVet.com or download our app—because every dog deserves a safe and satisfying space. 🏡✨

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Build to Last
Easy to Clean
Vet-Designed & Tested
Adventure-ready
Quality Tested & Trusted