Furniture chewing is usually a mix of normal dog behavior and a missing need—teething relief, stress reduction, boredom, or lack of supervision. The fastest fix combines immediate interruption, safer chew options, and a simple training routine that makes the right choice easy and rewarding. Use the steps below to stop damage today while building habits that last.
| Trigger | What it looks like | Best immediate action | Long-term fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Teething/young puppy | Gnawing corners, frequent mouthiness | Swap to a chilled rubber chew; praise | Rotate textures; short training; vet-approved teething support |
| Boredom | Chews after naps or when household is busy | Redirect to puzzle feeder or sniff game | Increase daily exercise + enrichment schedule |
| Separation stress | Chews near doors/windows; drooling/pacing | Short crate/pen session with long-lasting chew | Graduated departures; consult a trainer/vet for anxiety plan |
| Attention-seeking | Chews only when people are present | Quietly redirect and reward correct behavior | Reinforce calm behaviors; remove the payoff of big reactions |
Use management (crate/pen or a gated safe room), provide a long-lasting approved chew or stuffed toy, and practice short departures that gradually increase. Avoid giving full access to furniture until calm alone-time is reliable.
They can help as a temporary layer, but they work best alongside supervision, redirection to appropriate chews, and training. Test on a hidden area first and reapply as directed.
Get help if chewing is sudden, obsessive, paired with anxiety signs, involves swallowing objects, or includes growling/guarding. A vet can rule out medical causes, and a qualified trainer can build a safe behavior plan.
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