Why Dogs Shred Paper Products—Vet Wisdom 2025 🐶📄

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Why Dogs Shred Paper Products—Vet Wisdom 2025 🐶📄
By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc
It’s a common scenario: you return home to find tissues, toilet paper, napkins—or even important mail—ripped and scattered. While it may look like mischief, there are real reasons behind the behavior—and science‑based, compassionate ways to manage it. In 2025, veterinarians balance insight and empathy to help pet parents understand and guide this behavior. 🐾
1. Scent Attraction & Personal Odor 👃
Paper items like tissues carry your scent, which dogs find appealing. A certified animal behavior consultant explains that dogs enjoy paper that smells like you. It’s not just curiosity—it’s a sensory experience for your pet.
2. Enjoyment & Prey Drive 🧠
Shredding paper satisfies natural instincts. It's part of that predatory sequence—grab, tear, dissect, repeat. A dog behaviorist points out that shredding is simply fun and an outlet for pent-up energy. Paper offers texture, sound, and satisfaction.
3. Boredom & Anxiety 🌀
Dogs may shred out of stress or boredom. It’s a coping mechanism, especially during separation or storms. A Reddit user confirms: > “I assume boredom and separation anxiety.”
4. Pica & Compulsive Ingestion ⚠️
If your dog eats paper regularly, don’t dismiss it—it could indicate pica, an obsessive‑compulsive eating of non-food items. Common in dogs for non-nutritional reasons, but sometimes tied to medical issues like anemia or GI imbalance. This behavior can lead to blockages or toxicity.
5. Sensory Pleasure ✨
The feel of tissues can mimic natural textures like fur or feathers, offering a satisfying mouthfeel. Psychology Today describes paper as a sensory thrill for dogs, especially puppies, exploring with their mouths.
Are Paper Products Dangerous?
- Small bits may pass harmlessly, but large amounts risk blockages requiring surgery.
- Paper used for cleaning could contain harmful chemicals or toxins.
Proactive Prevention & Management
- Manage your environment: Keep paper in closed bins or out of reach.
- Substitute safe shredding: Offer cardboard boxes, shreddable toys, or flannel toys mimicking tissues.
- Impulse control training: Teach “leave it” or “drop it” and reward calm decisions.
- Distraction strategies: Redirect with toys, treats, or puzzle feeders at the first sign of interest.
- Exercise & brain play: Regular walks, games, and puzzle toys will drain excess energy that might otherwise go to shredding.
- Teach constructive shredding: Create safe “ripping boxes”—insert treats in cardboard to encourage shredding appropriate items.
- Vet evaluation for pica: If ingestion is compulsive, seek medical and behavioral assessment.
- Supervision & safe zones: Use baby gates or crates when you can’t watch your dog, and childproof paper storage.
Training Tips for “Leave It” & “Drop It”
Teaching these cues is essential:
- Offer a low-value item (paper), say “drop it.”
- When they release, immediately reward with a high-value treat or toy.
- Practice frequently in low-distraction zones.
- Gradually increase distractions as reliability improves.
Redirecting Shredding Desires
- Provide safe dismantling: Target cardboard, abuse-safe toys, and ripping games.
- Stuff boxes with goodies or toys for controlled shredding sessions.
- Use sniff puzzles and food toys to channel focus away from forbidden items.
When to Seek Professional Help
If paper-shredding is obsessive, leads to ingestion, or persists despite management and training, a veterinary behaviorist can assess for underlying anxiety, compulsion, or nutritional imbalance.
Ask A Vet, Woopf & Purrz Support 🧡
At Ask A Vet, we offer behavior consultations, training plans, and puzzle enrichment tools from Woopf and chew-access outlets via Purrz. Use our app to track progress, chat with vets, and get tailored recommendations anytime.
2025 Action Plan 🚀
- 📥 Secure paper waste and replace accessible paper with shreddable toys.
- 🐾 Teach “leave it” & “drop it” early and positively.
- 🧩 Offer shredding-focused enrichment and puzzle play.
- 🩺 Rule out medical issues if ingestion persists.
- 📱 Use the Ask A Vet app for guidance and tracking tools.
FAQs 💬
• My dog just rips, doesn’t eat—should I worry?
If nothing is ingested and no blockage signs, it’s more of a nuisance than a danger—but still redirecting is recommended.
• They eat the paper—now what?
See a vet promptly. Rule out pica, GI blockages, or toxicity depending on the amount and frequency.
• Can I just ignore it until they tire?
Not entirely. The thrill can turn destructive—address with training, enrichment, and environmental changes.
• Will chew toys stop shredding?
Yes, especially if they satisfy texture and tearing needs. Flannel toys with crinkle sounds are ideal.
Conclusion ❤️
Shredding paper is rooted in instinct, sensory reward, boredom, or even medical causes. But with 2025’s holistic, vet-guided approach—covering environment, training, enrichment, and health—you can guide this behavior into healthy outlets. With tools like Ask A Vet, Woopf, and Purrz, you’ll lay the groundwork for safer, happier habits. 🐶
Need help now? Visit AskAVet.com and download the Ask A Vet app for expert advice and behavior support anytime.