Pot-Bellied Pig Care
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Pot-Bellied Pig Care: The Real Veterinary Guide to Behavior, Feeding, and Preventing Problems
By Dr Duncan Houston
Most pot-bellied pigs that end up rehomed, surrendered, or euthanised are not “bad pigs.”
They are poorly managed pigs.
They are overfed, under-stimulated, inconsistently trained, or misunderstood.
That is the difference.
Pigs are one of the most intelligent domestic animals you can own. They learn quickly, remember everything, and will test boundaries constantly. If the structure is right, they are calm, social, and highly trainable. If it is wrong, they become destructive, aggressive, or stressed.
This guide explains what actually drives pig behaviour and health, how to prevent the common problems owners run into, and how to recognise early warning signs before things escalate.
Quick Answer
Pot-bellied pigs need strict feeding control, consistent routines, enrichment, and clear behavioural boundaries to stay healthy and manageable. The biggest risks are obesity, food aggression, boredom, and inconsistent handling. If your pig shows sudden behaviour changes, refuses food, becomes aggressive, or changes elimination habits, act early and reassess management immediately.
Why Most Pig Problems Are Management Problems
In clinical practice, most issues seen in pet pigs are not medical first.
They are:
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Feeding problems
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Structure problems
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Environment problems
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Behaviour reinforcement problems
What This Means
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Aggression is often learned
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Obesity is almost always preventable
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Destructive behaviour is usually boredom
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House training issues are often stress or inconsistency
Clinical Insight
Owners often assume pigs are “naturally difficult.” In reality, pigs are extremely logical. They repeat what works. If a behaviour is rewarded once, they will try it again.
Understanding Pig Psychology (This Changes Everything)
Pigs operate on:
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Hierarchy
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Routine
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Reward
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Predictability
They are constantly asking:
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Who is in control?
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When is food coming?
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What works to get what I want?
Why This Matters
If you are inconsistent:
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The pig becomes anxious
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The pig tests more
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The pig escalates behaviour
If you are consistent:
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The pig settles
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The pig becomes predictable
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The pig becomes easier to manage
Behaviour: What Is Normal vs What Is a Problem?
Normal Pig Behaviour
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Rooting
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Grunting
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Exploring
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Testing boundaries
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Food-seeking
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Sleeping in blocks throughout the day
Problem Behaviour
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Pushing or nudging for food constantly
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Vocal escalation when food is delayed
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Ignoring commands
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Mild destructiveness
Dangerous Behaviour
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Biting
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Charging
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Guarding food
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Challenging handlers
Emergency Behaviour
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Sudden collapse
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Refusal to eat
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Severe lethargy
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Persistent vocalisation with pain
Decision Checkpoint
If behaviour is escalating, do not wait for it to “settle.” It usually gets worse without intervention.
Feeding: The Single Biggest Risk
The Core Rule
Pigs should not be fed based on appetite.
They should be fed based on requirement.
Why Overfeeding Happens
Pigs:
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Always act hungry
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Learn quickly how to get more food
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Associate people with feeding
This leads to:
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Chronic overfeeding
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Reinforced begging behaviour
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Food aggression
What Happens If You Overfeed
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Obesity
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Joint disease
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Reduced lifespan
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Reduced mobility
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Increased aggression around food
Clinical Insight
Food aggression is often not personality. It is a pig that has learned food is inconsistent or competitive.
Decision Checkpoint
If your pig is:
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gaining weight
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slowing down
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pushing harder for food
you are already overfeeding or under-structuring feeding.
Weight Management: The Silent Problem
Obesity is one of the most common issues in pet pigs.
Signs include:
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Rounded body shape
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Reduced activity
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Difficulty moving
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Skin folds increasing
What This Leads To
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Arthritis
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Heart strain
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Reduced quality of life
Real-World Insight
Most owners do not recognise obesity early because weight gain is gradual. By the time it is obvious, it is already a problem.
Housing and Environment: Where Behaviour Is Built
What Pigs Actually Need
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Space to move
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Secure boundaries
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Safe surfaces
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Temperature control
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Enrichment opportunities
Indoor vs Outdoor Pigs
Indoor pigs:
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Need more enrichment
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Require stricter feeding control
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Are more prone to boredom
Outdoor pigs:
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Need secure fencing
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Require weather protection
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Still need enrichment
Decision Checkpoint
If your pig is:
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destructive
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restless
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constantly seeking stimulation
the environment is not meeting its needs.
Enrichment: The Missing Piece in Most Homes
Pigs are natural foragers.
Without this:
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They become bored
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Behaviour deteriorates
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Stress increases
What Works Best
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Rooting areas (soil, sand)
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Food puzzles
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Rotating toys
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Scatter feeding
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Environmental changes
Clinical Insight
Many behaviour problems resolve when enrichment improves. Owners often underestimate how much stimulation pigs need.
Training: How to Get It Right
Best Approach
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Reward-based
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Consistent
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Calm
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Structured
What Not to Do
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Punish
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Shout
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Be inconsistent
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Reward unwanted behaviour
Food as a Tool
Food is:
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The strongest motivator
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The biggest risk
Use small rewards carefully.
Decision Checkpoint
If your pig is:
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opening cupboards
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breaking into food areas
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escalating behaviour
it has learned your system has gaps.
Social Structure and Dominance
Pigs naturally establish hierarchy.
If not managed:
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They may challenge humans
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Behaviour escalates
What Works
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Consistent rules
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Controlled feeding
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Predictable routine
Clinical Insight
A pig that feels it is in charge becomes difficult to manage. A pig that understands structure becomes easier over time.
Health Problems You Must Watch For
Obesity and Metabolic Disease
Most common issue.
Urinary or Gastrointestinal Issues
Signs:
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Straining
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Vocalising during elimination
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Behaviour changes
Stress-Related Conditions
Signs:
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Repetitive behaviour
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Skin lesions
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Reduced appetite
Reproductive or Prolapse Issues
Emergency signs:
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Tissue protrusion
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Severe distress
Decision Checkpoint
Any pig that:
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stops eating
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changes elimination
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becomes lethargic
should be assessed quickly.
Severity Framework: How Worried Should You Be?
Low Risk
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Stable behaviour
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Normal appetite
Moderate
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Behaviour changes
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Appetite variation
High Risk
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Aggression
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Refusal to eat
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Elimination changes
Critical
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Collapse
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Severe distress
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Prolapse
When Is This an Emergency?
Act immediately if:
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No food intake for 24 hours
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Severe lethargy
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Collapse
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Painful elimination
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Prolapse
What Should You Do Right Now?
If something changes:
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Check feeding consistency
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Assess environment
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Observe behaviour patterns
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Review recent changes
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Reduce stress
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Seek veterinary help if needed
Common Mistakes
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Overfeeding
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Inconsistent rules
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Lack of enrichment
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Poor housing setup
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Ignoring early signs
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Reinforcing bad behaviour
How to Get It Right Long-Term
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Control feeding strictly
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Maintain routine
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Provide enrichment daily
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Set clear boundaries
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Monitor behaviour and health
FAQs
Are pigs aggressive by nature?
No. Most aggression is learned or management-related.
Can pigs be trained easily?
Yes, with consistency and reward-based methods.
Why does my pig always act hungry?
Because pigs are highly food-driven, not because they need more food.
Can pigs live indoors full-time?
Yes, but enrichment and structure are critical.
When should I call a vet?
If appetite, behaviour, or elimination changes significantly.
Final Thoughts
Pot-bellied pigs are not difficult animals.
They are precise animals.
They respond exactly to how they are managed.
The key drivers of success are:
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structure
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feeding control
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enrichment
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consistency
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early intervention
Most problems do not appear suddenly.
They build over time.
The earlier you adjust, the easier it is to fix.
If you want help reviewing pig behaviour, feeding strategies, or early warning signs, ASK A VET™ can help you make better decisions before problems escalate.