Surviving the Teenage Terror Phase
What even is canine adolescence?
Just like human teenagers, dogs go through a well-documented developmental stage between roughly 6 and 18 months of age, sometimes stretching to 2–3 years in large breeds. This isn't your imagination, and it definitely isn't your dog "forgetting" their training out of spite.
Adolescence is a biologically programmed phase driven by a surge of hormones and sweeping changes in the brain. Understanding the science behind it is the first step to not losing your mind.
- 0-6 months - Puppyhood
- 6-18 months - Adolescence
- 1-2 years - Young Adult
- 3+ years - Social Maturity
Timelines vary significantly by breed size — giant breeds like Great Danes may not reach social maturity until age 3–4.
What's actually happening in that furry brain?
Adolescent dogs show measurably reduced responsiveness to commands from their owners, but not from strangers. Sound familiar? The researchers compared it directly to human teenage rebellion, noting it correlated with insecure attachment, just as in adolescent humans.
The prefrontal cortex is under construction
The prefrontal cortex, the region responsible for impulse control, decision-making, and emotional regulation, is literally still being wired up during adolescence. This is true in humans, and it is equally true in dogs. Your dog isn't being naughty; their brain's braking system is offline.
A hormone flood
Testosterone in male dogs can rise to 5x adult levels during adolescence before eventually settling. In both sexes, cortisol, estrogen, and other hormones fluctuate wildly, making your dog more reactive, more distractible, and more likely to make impulsive decisions, like lunging at a squirrel mid-crosswalk or YOU!
Fear periods resurface
Many dogs experience a second fear period between 6–14 months. Things they were perfectly fine with as puppies, the vacuum cleaner, the skateboarder, the neighbour's hat, can suddenly become alarming. This is normal and temporary, but requires careful management.
Pushing every single boundary
This is the phase where your dog "forgets" sit, ignores recall, and looks directly at you before doing exactly what you said not to do. Here's how to handle it without undoing all your hard work.
Rebuild foundational cues in low-distraction environments. Adolescence isn't regression — it's a growth phase. Keep sessions short (3–5 minutes) and high reward.
Kibble won't cut it anymore. Use high-value treats, chicken, cheese, hot dog. The competing stimuli in the environment are now much more exciting.
Prevention is easier than correction. Use baby gates, long lines, and crates to prevent rehearsal of unwanted behaviours while training catches up.
Inconsistency is the enemy. If the rule is "no counter surfing," it must be the rule every single time — from every single person in the household.
Leash manners: The eternal struggle
Pulling on a leash is one of the top complaints during adolescence, and one of the top reasons dogs end up in shelters. The good news: it's very fixable with the right approach.
Why do they pull?
Dogs don't pull to dominate you. They pull because the world is incredibly interesting and they move faster than us. Every smell is a text message. Every other dog is a potential new best friend. Pulling has also been accidentally trained by owners who keep moving forward when the leash is tight, rewarding the pull with forward motion.
A helpful cue to train alongside loose leash walking: "Let's go." Used as a reset when your dog gets distracted, it redirects attention back to you and reestablishes walking direction. Pair it with a treat at your side every time.
Other challenging behaviours & what to do
Selective hearing (ignoring recall)
Recall tends to collapse during adolescence. The key is to never let recall become a "fun is over" signal. Call your dog, give a jackpot treat, then let them go play again. Make coming back the best thing that has ever happened to them. Never punish a dog for coming back slowly, you'll only make it worse.
Zoomies and arousal spikes
The adolescent dog's ability to regulate arousal is limited. Frenetic random activity periods (FRAPs, yup, that's the scientific term) and inability to settle are normal. Build in structured decompression, long sniff walks, food puzzles, and enforced rest, to reduce arousal build-up throughout the day.
Reactivity toward other dogs
As the adolescent dog becomes more socially selective, some previously dog-friendly pups become reactive. This is biologically normal, dogs become pickier about their social partners as they mature. Avoid flooding (forcing contact). Use distance, desensitization, and counter-conditioning. If reactivity is escalating, consult a certified behaviourist.
Keeping perspective
The single most important thing to know: this phase ends. Most dogs begin to settle noticeably between 18 months and 2 years. The ones who come out the other side with solid foundations are dogs whose owners stayed consistent, kept training positive, added A LOT of mental enrichment, managed the environment smartly, and didn't take the chaos personally.
Every great dog was once an impossible adolescent. Science says so. Experience proves it. The chaos is temporary. The bond you're building right now? That's forever.
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