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You’re Not a Bad Pet Parent If Your Dog Jumps on People in 2025 – Vet‑Approved Fixes 🐶🩺

  • 62 days ago
  • 5 min read
You’re Not a Bad Pet Parent If Your Dog Jumps on People in 2025 – Vet‑Approved Fixes 🐶🩺

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You’re Not a Bad Pet Parent If Your Dog Jumps on People in 2025 – Vet‑Approved Fixes 🐶🩺

By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc

When your dog jumps up, it's not misbehavior—it’s a way of asking for attention or saying “hello.” You’re not a bad pet parent—your pup is just communicating in the language they know. In 2025, positive, vet‑approved strategies help you gently teach more polite greetings, while preserving your loving bond. Ready to turn pesky hops into heartfelt hellos? Let’s dive in! 🐾❤️


✅ Section 1: Understand the “Why” Behind Jumping

Jumping is instinctive and social. Dogs rise up to meet at face level—it often gets attention, positive or negative—but any attention boosts the behavior.

Even scolding or pushing off can act as a reward—dogs learn quickly, and repetition makes habits stick.

🚫 Section 2: Step-by-Step Guide to Polite Greetings

  1. Stop All Attention on Jump: As soon as paws leave the ground, freeze—don't push, shout, or make eye contact. Wait for calm.
  2. Provide a Calm Alternative: Teach “sit” or “place.” Ask calmly and reward landing before greeting.
  3. Practice with Reinforcement: Have treats on hand. Reward when all four paws are down.
  4. Use a Management Buffer: Use crates, gates, or a leash to limit jumping during greetings. Release only when calm.
  5. Involve Visitors: Instruct guests: "Ignore the dog unless they sit; then reward." It takes consistency.

🛠 Section 3: Troubleshooting Common Challenges

  • Dog re-jumps mid-greet: Ask for sit again, reward before greeting continues.
  • Zero response: Step back; reduce distractions; reinforce with valuable treats.
  • Air-pushing while frozen: Don't physically push; ignore until calm. Gradually use sit/place instead.
  • Guest inadvertently encourages: Remind them to remain passive until the dog is calm and seated.

📋 Section 4: Quick Reference Table

Behavior Common Reaction Vet‑Approved Fix
Jump on guest Pet/Scold Ignore until 4‑on‑floor → ask sit → reward calm
The leash slip during the greeting Hasty petting Use a gate/leash. Ask to sit before greeting
Repeated jumping Even playful attention Teach “place,” manage visitor expectations

🌍 Section 5: Why This Positive Approach Wins

  • Minimizes confusion—no physical punishment or emotion-based reinforcement.
  • Teaches what to do, not just what not to do—giving your dog a clear path.
  • Engages guests in training—consistency helps generalize polite greetings outside your home.
  • Preserves relationships and builds calm, trust-based interactions in 2025 and beyond.

📱 Section 6: Ask A Vet App Support

  • 📹 Send greeting videos for analysis—get professional feedback on your timing and technique.
  • 🧩 Receive personalized training plans—tasked with gatherings/triggers/guest training.
  • 💬 Access live coaching—for reinforcement, patience guidance, and managing setbacks.

❤️ Final Thoughts

Your dog jumping doesn’t make you a bad pet parent—it makes you human. With vet-approved kindness, timing, and clarity, we can teach more polite alternatives and maintain the joy of their greeting energy. Every calm sit speaks volumes. Here’s to homecomings that are safe, loving, and heartwarming—no hops required. 🐶✨

Want tailored help stopping the jumping? Visit AskAVet.com or download the Ask A Vet app for expert video review, custom training strategies, and live coaching every step of the way.

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