Animal Behavior College Blog

Where Animal Lovers Pursue Animal Careers

  • Home
  • Training
    • Dogs
      • Breed Spotlight
    • Cats
  • Grooming
  • Health
  • Safety
  • Lifestyle
  • Career
  • Resources
    • Products
  • Fun
    • Games
You are here: Home / Training / Dogs / Dog Pawing Behavior: What It Means and How to Stop It

Dog Pawing Behavior: What It Means and How to Stop It

June 7, 2018 By Fanna Easter 2 Comments

FacebookTwitterPinterestGoogle+Share

How to Stop a Dog From Pawing and Scratching People

Dog Paws
lobodaphoto/Adobe Stock

As a professional dog trainer, I’ve witnessed dogs pawing people, which leave long scratches on arms and legs behind. Many years ago, during a private dog training lesson, a Great Dane welcomed me at the front door with a massive swat across my back. Wow, that scratch burned, bled and bruised over the next couple of days. The pet owner and I immediately put a plan into place to prevent it from happening again. If your dog paws at you or your guests, check out these tips to avoid painful dog scratches.

Why Dogs Paw

Dogs paw at people for numerous reasons. They paw mostly because it’s been rewarded. When a dog paws a person, the person will most likely turn around and look at the dog, which is considered a reward for some dogs. Additionally, pet owners may respond to dog paws by:

  • Petting their dog.
  • Continuing to pet their dog.
  • Picking up their dog’s paw and moving it.
  • Giving bits of food under a table when the dog paws a leg.

Teaching a dog to “shake” can increase pawing behavior. When dogs learn that “shake” makes treats appear, they will offer a “shake” behavior more often. Plus, dogs will try out their new behavior with guests in hope of treats. 🙂 Instead of teaching a dog to “shake,” teach him a stationary behavior, such as “sit.” This prevents a dog from pawing guests, and it’s a great behavior to reward.

How to Stop Dog Pawing Behavior

When behaviors are no longer rewarded, they will disappear. When a dog paws at you, take a step back and wait until all four feet touch the ground. The moment all four feet touch the ground, say “yes” and reward your dog. Of course, most dogs will paw right afterwards because they’re not sure which behavior provided the treat. Reward only when all four on the floor again.

Continue to practice daily, and wait for your dog to make a choice—watching your dog make a decision is a glorious thing to watch. Some dogs will gently place their paw on a person, think for a few seconds, then drop their paw to the ground. Reward good choices every time!

To prevent your dog from jumping up and pawing guests, teach him to “touch” guest’s hands with his nose. This keeps all four feet on the ground, gives your dog a chance to decide if he wants to greet a guest and offers a form of physical contact (like petting) for your guest.

If you don’t reward it, the behavior will disappear. 🙂

Related Posts

  • Who Should Walk Through The Door First?Who Should Walk Through The Door First?
  • Does Positive Reinforcement Really Work?Does Positive Reinforcement Really Work?
  • Does Permission-Based Dog Training Work?Does Permission-Based Dog Training Work?
  • Dogs Find Choices Very RewardingDogs Find Choices Very Rewarding

Filed Under: Dogs, Training Tagged With: Dog Behavior, dog pawing at me, dog paws at me, dog paws me, dog paws person, dog scratched me, dog scratches me, dog training, dog training tips, how to teach a dog, how to train a dog, puppy scratches me, stop dog from scratching people

FacebookTwitterPinterestGoogle+Share

About Fanna Easter

Fanna Easter is a freelance writer and professional dog trainer; she has earned several national behavior certifications (CPDT-KA, KPA CTP). Currently, she is the owner of Positive Pooch Dog Training & Behavior. She shares her home with her beloved Bull Terrier, Rottweiler and darling husband.

Comments

  1. Adrienne Hoefler says

    July 20, 2018 at 12:10 pm

    We have recently taken in a Australian Shepherd. Sweet as can be but no one can sit anywhere near her without her paw consistently pawing us and pulling at us with her big thick nails over and over and over even when giving her attention. It’s to the point I feel angry with her because it’s not getting though how frustrated we are. She was an outside dog so not used to be around people often. Will it upset her stomach to reward her with treat for as long as I feel it will take to stop this habit, I’m nervous I will not have the patience to keep this up for a long period and that my children and husband will not be on the same page as bnb I am. Anymore advice? Has this always seemed pretty successful? I’m feeling desperate!

    Reply
    • Fanna Easter says

      July 20, 2018 at 12:22 pm

      Hello! When giving treats, reward her when she stops pawing you (all four paws are on the floor). Give her lots of yummy treats, however keep the treat size to pea-size. And yes, positive reinforcement works and quickly!

      Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

Follow us!

Dog Training Youtube Channels

Animal Behavior College is an animal career training school that offers dog training, veterinary assistant, dog grooming and cat training certifications.

Contact us at 800-795-3294.

www.animalbehaviorcollege.com

Recent

  • Pet Theft Awareness – How to Protect Your Pet
  • The Importance of Dental Cleanings – National Dental Month 2019
  • National Seeing Eye Dog Day – January 29, 2019
  • Pros & Cons of a Vet Assistant Career
  • To Vaccinate or Not: That is (NOT) the Question
Dog Trainer School
Veterinary Assistant Program
Dog Grooming School
Cat Training Program
Animal Behavior College
Copyright © 2018. All Rights Reserved.