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Dog Potty Training Aids Explained: Sprays, Pads, and Attractants That Work

Dog Potty Training Aids Explained: Sprays, Pads, and Attractants That Work

The Pet Parent Podcast · Total Pet Parent

April 1, 202635m 27s

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Show Notes

Ever stood in the pet store aisle overwhelmed by dozens of potty training sprays and pads, wondering which ones actually work? In this episode, Kenji Takahashi shares hard-won lessons from helping his sister house-train a Golden Retriever puppy—despite his expertise being in fish tanks, not dogs. He breaks down exactly what separates effective training aids from expensive air fresheners and explains why matching products to your dog's age and training stage makes all the difference.

  • Effective potty training sprays contain pheromone compounds or scent markers that trigger dogs' natural instincts—products listing only essential oils like lavender or eucalyptus without these attractants won't communicate "go here" to your puppy.
  • Puppies under six months respond better to pheromone-based attractants because their scent-marking instincts aren't fully developed, while older dogs and rescues often need products with territorial scent markers.
  • Quality training pads have at least five layers including a super-absorbent polymer core—cheap pads skip the distribution layer, causing liquid to pool and creating negative associations when puppies step in it.
  • Pad size matters more than most people realize: puppies circle before squatting, so undersized pads lead to missed edges. Sizing up dramatically improved one Golden Retriever's success rate from inconsistent to 90 percent.
  • Products that eliminate odors for humans don't necessarily remove the scent markers dogs use to identify potty spots, creating competing needs between removing wrong-spot smells and preserving attractant scents in designated areas.
  • For outdoor spot training, buy attractant sprays in 16 to 32 ounce bottles—small four-ounce bottles run out after just one week of twice-daily applications.

Read the full article: https://totalpetparent.com/dog-potty-training-aids-explained