Puppy Schedule by Age: The Week-by-Week Guide

Puppies thrive on routine, and the right routine changes significantly between 8 weeks and 6 months. What works for a brand-new 8-week puppy is not what an independent 5-month puppy needs. This is the schedule guide that changes with your dog.

Quick answer

A puppy schedule is built on four pillars in sequence: toilet trip, feed, play/training, sleep. Repeat all day. The intervals between cycles lengthen as the puppy matures. The structure stays the same — the duration of each component changes with age.

The universal puppy schedule structure

Before the age-specific schedules, understand the underlying pattern. Every puppy schedule, regardless of age, follows the same four-step cycle:

  1. Toilet — first thing, every time
  2. Feed (at meal times) or structured activity
  3. Play / training / socialisation
  4. Sleep

The cycle repeats throughout the day. What changes with age is how long each step lasts and how many cycles fit into a day. An 8-week puppy might cycle through this every 90 minutes. A 6-month puppy might cycle twice in a day.

8–10 weeks: arrival and establishment

What’s developmentally happening

Your puppy is in the primary socialisation window and in the fear imprint period simultaneously. They are forming lasting associations with everything they encounter. Sleep dominates — 16–20 hours daily. Bladder capacity is minimal. Training sessions should last no longer than 3–5 minutes.

TimeActivityDuration
7:00 AMToilet trip (immediately from crate)5–10 min
7:15 AMBreakfast (meal 1 of 4)10 min
7:30 AMToilet trip (post-meal)5 min
7:45 AMPlay and gentle exploration20–30 min
8:15 AMNap (in crate)1–2 hours
10:00 AMToilet trip5 min
10:15 AMMid-morning meal (meal 2 of 4)10 min
10:30 AMToilet trip (post-meal)5 min
10:45 AMTraining session (sit, name recall)3–5 min
11:00 AMPlay / socialisation / handling20 min
11:30 AMNap1–2 hours
1:30 PMToilet trip, lunch (meal 3 of 4), toilet30 min
2:00 PMCalm play / chew time30 min
2:30 PMNap1.5–2 hours
4:30 PMToilet trip, activity, socialisation45 min
5:30 PMDinner (meal 4 of 4)10 min
5:45 PMToilet trip (post-meal)5 min
6:00 PMFamily time, calm activity45 min
7:00 PMToilet trip, begin wind-down30 min
9:00 PMFinal toilet trip10 min
9:15 PMCrate / sleepUntil 12–1 AM wake-up for toilet
On the 8-week schedule: This looks intensive because it is. An 8-week puppy needs a toilet trip every 30–60 minutes when awake. The schedule reduces in frequency significantly by 12 weeks — but the first month requires this level of management.

10–12 weeks: building independence

What’s changing

Bladder capacity is increasing. The puppy can begin holding for 3–4 hours overnight. Meals drop from 4 to 3 times daily (drop the mid-morning meal first). Training sessions can extend to 5–7 minutes. Socialisation remains the absolute priority.

TimeActivity
7:00 AMToilet, breakfast, toilet
7:30 AMPlay, training (5–7 min), exploration
9:00 AMNap (1.5–2 hours)
11:00 AMToilet, short outing if vaccinated / carried socialisation
12:00 PMLunch, toilet
12:30 PMPlay, training, socialisation activities
2:00 PMNap (1.5–2 hours)
4:00 PMToilet, enrichment activity (snuffle mat, puzzle feeder)
5:30 PMDinner, toilet
6:00 PMFamily time, calm socialisation with visitors
8:30 PMWind-down, final toilet, crate

12–16 weeks: the consolidation phase

What’s changing

Vaccinations are complete — outdoor socialisation begins properly. Training foundation deepens: sit, down, stay, recall, loose lead beginnings. Puppies begin to calm down slightly as the neural pruning of late puppyhood begins. Crate acceptance should be well-established.

TimeActivity
7:00 AMToilet, breakfast, toilet
7:30 AMWalk (15–20 min max) or outdoor play, socialisation
9:00 AMTraining session (7–10 min) + chew time
10:00 AMNap (1–2 hours)
12:00 PMLunch, toilet, brief activity
1:30 PMNap or calm enrichment
3:30 PMToilet, outing or garden play
5:30 PMDinner, toilet
6:30 PMTraining session, calm family time
9:00 PMFinal toilet, crate / sleep

4–6 months: approaching adult patterns

What’s changing

Teething peaks between 14 and 20 weeks — the right toys matter enormously during this period. Two meals per day. Walk duration increases (a rough guide: 5 minutes per month of age, per walk). Training becomes more complex. Adolescence begins at the end of this period — brace for a temporary regression.

TimeActivity
7:00 AMToilet, breakfast
7:30 AMMorning walk (20–30 min)
8:30 AMTraining session (10–15 min) + settling time
10:00 AMRest / chew time / enrichment activity
12:30 PMToilet, calm midday activity
2:00 PMRest (many puppies still nap at this age)
4:30 PMToilet, afternoon walk (20–30 min)
6:00 PMDinner, toilet
7:00 PMTraining, calm family interaction
9:30 PMFinal toilet, settle / sleep
Exercise guidance for puppies Over-exercising puppies before their growth plates close (approximately 12–18 months depending on breed) can cause lasting joint damage. The “5 minutes per month of age” guideline for structured walks is a sensible baseline — but free play in safe spaces is generally fine at any age. Large and giant breeds need more caution than small breeds.

How to adapt this schedule for your life

These schedules are frameworks, not mandates. The principles that must hold regardless of your specific timing:

  • Toilet trip always before anything else in the morning
  • Toilet trip within 15 minutes of every meal
  • Naps enforced — an overtired puppy is a dysregulated puppy
  • Training before play (training is more cognitively demanding and should happen when the puppy is fresh)
  • Wind-down period before sleep (no high-arousal play in the 20 minutes before crate time)

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