Rainy days can feel extra long when you have a puppy.
One minute your puppy is curled up like an angel. The next, they are biting your sleeves, stealing socks, barking at every noise, chewing the coffee table, or zooming around the living room like they have discovered a secret energy button.
When walks are shorter, the backyard is too muddy, and outdoor play is off the table, your puppy still needs something to do. Puppies do not stop needing exercise, training, sniffing, chewing, and attention just because the weather is bad.
The good news is that you do not need a huge house, a perfect routine, or a pile of expensive toys.
The best indoor activities for puppies on rainy days are simple, safe, and realistic. They help your puppy use their brain, move their body gently, satisfy their need to chew, and learn how to settle indoors.
This guide will give you easy rainy day puppy activities you can actually use at home, even if you live in an apartment, have a busy schedule, or your puppy has a very short attention span.
Quick Answer: What Are the Best Indoor Activities for Puppies on Rainy Days?
The best indoor activities for puppies on rainy days include kibble scatter games, snuffle mats, lick mats, beginner puzzle toys, gentle tug, indoor hide-and-seek, soft fetch, scent games, safe chews, short training sessions, and calm “go to your bed” practice.
The goal is not to exhaust your puppy with nonstop play. The real goal is to balance five things: sniffing, chewing, licking, learning, gentle movement, and rest.
When you rotate those activities throughout the day, your puppy is more likely to feel satisfied without becoming overtired or overstimulated.
Why Rainy Days Are So Hard for Puppies
Rain changes your puppy’s normal day.
On a sunny day, your puppy may get to sniff grass, explore the yard, walk around the block, hear new sounds, see people, and burn energy outdoors. Even a short walk gives your puppy a lot of information to process.
On a rainy day, many of those outlets disappear.
That unused energy often comes out in ways that look like “bad behaviour,” such as:
- Biting hands, sleeves, pants, or ankles
- Chewing furniture, rugs, or baseboards
- Barking at windows or hallway sounds
- Stealing socks, shoes, towels, or paper
- Jumping on people
- Racing around the house
- Whining or pacing
- Refusing to settle
- Getting rough during play
Most of the time, your puppy is not trying to be difficult. They are trying to meet a need.
Puppies need more than physical exercise. They also need enrichment. Enrichment means activities that let your puppy do normal dog behaviours in a safe way, like sniffing, chewing, licking, searching, problem-solving, playing, and resting.
Rainy days are actually a great chance to build those skills.
Instead of thinking, “How do I wear my puppy out?” it helps to think, “How can I give my puppy the right kind of outlet?”
For a deeper beginner guide, you can link here to your main post on enrichment for puppies.
The Rainy Day Puppy Formula
A good rainy day plan does not need to be complicated.
Use this simple formula:
Sniff + Chew + Lick + Learn + Move + Rest
Each part helps your puppy in a different way.
Sniffing gives your puppy a calm mental workout.
Chewing gives their mouth something appropriate to do.
Licking can help some puppies slow down.
Training builds focus and confidence.
Gentle movement helps release physical energy.
Rest prevents overtired, bitey behaviour.
This matters because many puppies who seem “hyper” are actually overstimulated or tired. If you keep adding wild games, they may get more bitey, not calmer.
A better approach is to alternate exciting activities with calming ones.
For example:
- Snuffle mat breakfast
- Short potty break
- Gentle tug for 3 minutes
- Training practice
- Frozen lick mat
- Nap
That kind of routine gives your puppy variety without turning your living room into a circus.
17 Indoor Activities for Puppies on Rainy Days
1. Kibble Scatter Game
The kibble scatter game is one of the easiest indoor activities for puppies on rainy days because it turns a normal meal into a sniffing activity.
Instead of feeding your puppy from a bowl, scatter a small handful of kibble on the floor and let them search for each piece.
This works well because sniffing is mentally satisfying without being too wild. It gives your puppy a job to do and can help them slow down.
How to do it:
Start in a small, clean area. Sprinkle a few pieces of kibble where your puppy can easily see them. Once they understand the game, scatter the kibble over a slightly larger area.
You can also scatter kibble on a towel or blanket, but only if your puppy does not chew or swallow fabric.
Make it easier: Use a tiny area and place the kibble in plain sight.
Make it harder: Scatter the kibble around chair legs or in the folds of a towel.
Best for: Young puppies, fast eaters, apartment puppies, and puppies who need a calm activity.
Safety tip: Skip the towel version if your puppy tries to shred or eat fabric.
2. Puppy Hide-and-Seek
Puppy hide-and-seek is fun, simple, and secretly useful for recall training.
Your puppy gets to search for you, and you get to practice calling them in a happy, low-pressure way.
How to play:
Start very easy. Hide behind a doorway, beside the couch, or just around a corner. Call your puppy’s name once in a cheerful voice. When they find you, praise them and give a small treat.
Keep it light and fun. The goal is not to trick your puppy. The goal is to help them feel successful.
Make it easier: Let your puppy watch where you hide.
Make it harder: Hide in another room or behind a partially open door.
Best for: Puppies who love attention, people, and interactive games.
Safety tip: Do not hide anywhere your puppy has to jump, climb, or squeeze into a tight space.
3. Snuffle Mat Meal
A snuffle mat is one of the best puppy enrichment tools for bad weather days.
Instead of eating from a bowl, your puppy has to sniff through fabric strips to find their food. This slows down mealtime and gives your puppy a calm mental workout.
How to use it:
Sprinkle your puppy’s kibble on top of the mat. For the first few tries, keep the food easy to find. Once your puppy understands the game, tuck some kibble deeper into the fabric.
Make it easier: Place the kibble right on top.
Make it harder: Hide the kibble deeper in the mat.
Best for: Puppies who eat too fast, get bored indoors, or need a quieter activity.
Safety tip: Supervise your puppy and remove the mat when the food is gone. Some puppies may try to chew the fabric.
4. Beginner Puzzle Toy
Puzzle toys can be great for rainy days, but puppies need beginner-friendly puzzles.
A puzzle that is too hard can frustrate your puppy. When that happens, they may stop solving the toy and start chewing it instead.
Look for a simple puzzle with large pieces, easy movement, no tiny removable parts, and a non-slip base.
How to use it:
Place a few pieces of kibble inside the puzzle. Show your puppy how one part moves, then let them try. Help them if they get stuck.
Keep the first session short. A few successful minutes are better than a long, frustrating game.
Make it easier: Leave compartments partly open.
Make it harder: Close the compartments fully or use fewer treats.
Best for: Food-motivated puppies who enjoy problem-solving.
Safety tip: Do not leave your puppy alone with a puzzle toy.
5. Frozen Lick Mat
A frozen lick mat is a great calming activity after play, during grooming, or when your puppy needs help settling.
Licking gives your puppy something repetitive and focused to do. For many puppies, that can be more calming than another round of fetch or tug.
Puppy-safe topping ideas:
- Soaked kibble
- Wet puppy food
- Plain pumpkin
- Plain yogurt, if your puppy tolerates dairy
- Mashed banana
- Puppy-safe peanut butter with no xylitol or “birch sugar”
Spread a thin layer of food across the mat. For a longer-lasting activity, freeze it before giving it to your puppy.
Make it easier: Use a fresh, soft spread without freezing.
Make it harder: Freeze the mat or press food deeper into the grooves.
Best for: Puppies who need calming enrichment, crate support, or a quiet activity.
Safety tip: Always check peanut butter labels. Avoid xylitol, chocolate, sweeteners, grapes, raisins, onions, and anything unsafe for dogs.
6. Towel Roll-Up Game
The towel roll-up game is a simple DIY enrichment activity that uses your puppy’s nose and brain.
You only need a towel and a few pieces of kibble.
How to do it:
Lay a clean towel flat on the floor. Sprinkle a few pieces of kibble across it. Roll the towel loosely and let your puppy nudge it open with their nose.
Start with a very loose roll. Your puppy should be able to figure it out without getting frustrated.
Make it easier: Roll the towel only once.
Make it harder: Roll it tighter or add a few folds.
Best for: Puppies who like sniffing and gentle problem-solving.
Safety tip: Stop the game if your puppy starts biting, shredding, or swallowing the towel.
7. Muffin Tin Puzzle
A muffin tin puzzle is an easy homemade puppy puzzle.
It is cheap, quick to set up, and perfect for beginners.
What you need:
- A muffin tin
- A few pieces of kibble
- Puppy-safe balls or toys that are too large to swallow
Place kibble in some of the muffin cups. Cover the cups with balls or toys. Let your puppy sniff and move the objects to find the food.
Make it easier: Leave some cups uncovered.
Make it harder: Cover every cup and place food in only a few of them.
Best for: Beginner puppies and food-motivated puppies.
Safety tip: Use balls that are much too large for your puppy to swallow.
8. Gentle Indoor Fetch
Indoor fetch can be helpful, but it should stay soft and controlled.
This is not the time for hard balls, slippery floors, stairs, or wild jumping. Rainy day fetch should be short, gentle, and low-impact.
How to play:
Use a soft toy or soft ball. Roll it a short distance across a carpeted room or hallway. Encourage your puppy to chase it and bring it back.
If your puppy does not want to drop it, trade for a treat instead of grabbing it from their mouth.
Make it easier: Roll the toy instead of throwing it.
Make it harder: Ask for a sit before each toss.
Best for: Puppies who need gentle movement indoors.
Safety tip: Avoid slippery floors, fast turns, stairs, and high jumps.
9. Gentle Tug With Rules
Tug can be a great puppy game when it is gentle and structured.
It gives your puppy an appropriate way to use their mouth, and it can help teach useful skills like “take it,” “drop,” and “sit.”
How to play:
Offer a soft tug toy. Let your puppy grab it. Move the toy gently side to side, keeping it low to the ground. Pause often.
Practice trading the toy for a treat, then giving the toy back. This teaches your puppy that dropping the toy does not end the fun forever.
Make it easier: Play for only 30 to 60 seconds at a time.
Make it harder: Add cues like “take it,” “drop,” and “sit.”
Best for: Mouthy puppies, playful puppies, and puppies learning bite control.
Safety tip: Stop if your puppy’s teeth touch your skin or they become too rough.
10. Puppy Nose Work Cups
Nose work games are perfect for rainy days because they use your puppy’s strongest sense: smell.
The cup game is simple and works even in a small space.
How to play:
Place a treat under one plastic cup or small bowl. Let your puppy sniff and choose. When they find the right cup, lift it and let them eat the treat.
At first, let your puppy watch you hide the treat. Once they understand, make it slightly harder.
Make it easier: Use two cups and let your puppy watch.
Make it harder: Use three cups and slowly move them around.
Best for: Puppies who love sniffing and food games.
Safety tip: Do not use glass or breakable cups. Stop if your puppy tries to chew the cups.
11. Indoor Puppy Obstacle Course
An indoor puppy obstacle course can be fun, but it should not be intense agility training.
Puppies are still growing. Keep everything low, slow, and safe.
Simple obstacle ideas:
- Walk around a chair
- Step over a flat towel
- Walk across a blanket
- Go through a cardboard tunnel
- Sit on a mat
- Touch your hand with their nose
- Walk between two pillows
Guide your puppy with treats and praise. Keep it easy and cheerful.
Make it easier: Use only one or two stations.
Make it harder: Add simple cues for each station.
Best for: Curious puppies who need gentle movement.
Safety tip: Avoid jumping, stairs, slippery floors, unstable furniture, and anything that could fall.
12. Find the Toy
“Find the toy” is a nice indoor game because it teaches your puppy to search for something other than food.
It also makes toys more exciting, especially if your puppy gets bored easily.
How to play:
Choose one toy your puppy likes. Let them sniff it. Place it nearby and say “find it.” When your puppy touches, sniffs, or picks up the toy, praise them.
As they improve, hide the toy slightly behind furniture or under the edge of a blanket.
Make it easier: Keep the toy in plain sight.
Make it harder: Hide the toy in another room.
Best for: Puppies who enjoy toys and gentle brain games.
Safety tip: Use a toy your puppy cannot easily destroy or swallow.
13. Training Treat Trail
A training treat trail combines sniffing and basic puppy training.
It is simple, but it encourages your puppy to slow down, follow a path, and focus at the end.
How to do it:
Place a few pieces of kibble in a short trail across the floor. Let your puppy follow the trail. At the end, ask for one easy cue, such as “sit,” “down,” “touch,” or “look.”
Reward your puppy when they finish.
Make it easier: Use a short trail and one easy cue.
Make it harder: Add turns or ask for two simple cues.
Best for: Puppies who need mental stimulation and short training practice.
Safety tip: Use part of your puppy’s meal so you do not overdo treats.
14. Cardboard Box Search
A cardboard box can become a simple rainy day enrichment station, but only for puppies who do not eat cardboard.
Some puppies sniff, step inside, and explore. Other puppies shred and swallow pieces. Know your puppy before using this activity.
How to do it:
Use a clean box with all tape, staples, and labels removed. Place a few pieces of kibble or a toy inside. Let your puppy explore.
For a harder version, place a towel inside the box and hide kibble in the folds.
Make it easier: Use an open box with food visible.
Make it harder: Hide food under a towel inside the box.
Best for: Curious puppies who explore gently.
Safety tip: Skip this activity if your puppy swallows cardboard, paper, or fabric.
15. Calm Chew Time
Chewing is a normal puppy need, especially during teething.
On rainy days, your puppy may chew more because they have fewer outdoor outlets. Instead of waiting for them to chew your furniture, offer a safe chew before the biting starts.
Puppy chew ideas:
- Puppy-safe rubber teething toys
- Soft puppy chew toys
- Food-stuffed rubber toys
- Frozen soaked kibble in a puppy-safe toy
- Puppy dental chews made for your puppy’s age and size
- Frozen whole carrots, if suitable for your puppy
Avoid:
- Cooked bones
- Rawhide
- Antlers
- Hooves
- Very hard bones
- Hard chews that do not bend
- Toys with small removable parts
- Loose rope toys if your puppy shreds them
- Broken toys
Best for: Teething puppies, bitey puppies, and puppies who need help settling.
Safety tip: If a chew feels rock-hard, it may be too hard for puppy teeth. Ask your vet if you are unsure.
16. “Go to Your Bed” Game
This is one of the most useful rainy day puppy activities because it teaches your puppy where to settle.
Many puppies do not naturally know how to relax. They need to learn that a bed, mat, crate, or playpen can be a calm place.
How to play:
Place a treat on your puppy’s bed and say “bed” or “place.” When your puppy steps onto the bed, praise them.
Repeat several times. Once your puppy understands, reward them for sitting or lying down on the bed.
Keep it positive and easy. This should feel like a game, not a punishment.
Make it easier: Stand close to the bed.
Make it harder: Send your puppy to the bed from farther away.
Best for: Puppies who wander, pace, bark, or struggle to settle indoors.
Safety tip: Do not use the bed, crate, or mat as punishment.
17. Rainy Day Puppy Busy Box
A rainy day puppy busy box is a small collection of toys and enrichment items you save for bad weather days.
This makes rainy days easier because you do not have to come up with a new idea every time your puppy gets restless.
What to include:
- A lick mat
- A snuffle mat
- A safe chew
- A soft indoor toy
- A beginner puzzle toy
- A towel for towel games
- A treat pouch
- A food-stuffable toy
Do not give everything at once. Choose one activity at a time and rotate them through the day.
For example:
Morning: Snuffle mat breakfast
Midday: Gentle tug and short training
Afternoon: Frozen lick mat
Evening: Safe chew and “go to your bed” practice
Best for: Busy puppy owners who want a simple rainy day plan ready to go.
A Simple Rainy Day Puppy Routine
A good rainy day routine should include potty breaks, food enrichment, short training, gentle play, chewing, and naps.
Here is a realistic example you can adjust.
Morning
Take your puppy outside for a quick potty break, even if it is raining. Keep it calm and simple.
Then serve breakfast in a snuffle mat, puzzle toy, or kibble scatter game.
After breakfast, do a short training session. Practice easy cues like:
- Sit
- Down
- Touch
- Come
- Name response
- Look at me
Then offer a nap.
Midday
Try a gentle movement game, such as soft indoor fetch, hide-and-seek, tug, or a low obstacle course.
After play, switch to something calming like a lick mat or chew.
Then give your puppy another rest period.
Afternoon
Use a scent game, towel roll-up, muffin tin puzzle, or toy search.
If your puppy starts biting harder, barking more, or ignoring simple cues, they may not need another game. They may need a nap.
Evening
Keep evening enrichment calmer.
Try a short training game, frozen lick mat, safe chew, or “go to your bed” practice.
Avoid wild games right before bedtime if your puppy struggles to settle at night.
How to Choose the Right Rainy Day Activity
Not every activity works for every puppy. The best choice depends on what your puppy is doing in that moment.
Use this simple guide.
If your puppy is bitey
Try a safe chew, frozen lick mat, tug with rules, or a short sniffing game.
Biting often means your puppy needs to chew, is teething, is overstimulated, or is overtired.
If your puppy is zooming
Clear the area first. Block stairs, remove slippery rugs, and avoid chasing your puppy.
After the zoomies slow down, offer a calming activity like a chew, lick mat, or snuffle mat.
If your puppy is barking at the window
Move them away from the window and give them a job in another room.
Try a treat scatter, snuffle mat, or easy training session.
If your puppy is bored but calm
Try a puzzle toy, towel roll-up, muffin tin puzzle, or “find the toy.”
If your puppy is getting frustrated
Make the game easier.
Puppies do not need hard puzzles to benefit from enrichment. They need activities they can actually solve.
If your puppy will not settle
Try this order:
- Quick potty break
- Calm sniffing game
- Frozen lick mat or safe chew
- Quiet crate, bed, or playpen time
- Nap
Sometimes the best indoor activity for a wild puppy is sleep.
Best Indoor Enrichment Toys for Puppies
You do not need a huge collection of toys. A few good puppy enrichment tools can make rainy days much easier.
Snuffle Mat
A snuffle mat is great for meals, boredom, slow feeding, and calm sniffing.
Look for:
- Washable material
- Non-slip base
- Durable stitching
- No tiny parts
- A simple design
A snuffle mat may not be a good choice yet if your puppy shreds fabric or eats non-food items.
Lick Mat
A lick mat can be helpful for calming enrichment, grooming practice, crate time, or quiet afternoons.
Look for:
- Puppy-safe material
- Easy cleaning
- Grooves that are not too deep
- Suction cups if using during baths or grooming
If your puppy tries to chew the mat instead of licking it, remove it and try again later with supervision.
Beginner Puzzle Toy
A beginner puzzle toy gives your puppy a simple problem to solve.
Look for:
- Easy difficulty level
- Large pieces
- No small removable parts
- Sturdy design
- Easy cleaning
Start with simple puzzles before moving to harder ones.
Treat-Dispensing Toy
A treat-dispensing toy can make meals last longer and keep your puppy busy.
Look for:
- Correct size for your puppy
- Soft enough for puppy teeth
- Easy to clean
- Durable enough for your puppy’s chewing style
These are best for puppies who like to roll, nudge, or chew to get food.
Soft Indoor Toy
A soft toy or soft ball is better than a hard ball for indoor fetch.
Look for:
- Lightweight design
- No hard bounce
- No small parts
- A size too large to swallow
Soft toys are best for gentle fetch, toy search, and supervised play.
Safety Tips for Indoor Puppy Activities
Indoor enrichment should be fun, but safety still matters.
Supervise New Activities
Always watch your puppy when introducing a new toy, chew, puzzle, lick mat, or DIY game. Puppies explore with their mouths, and some will chew or swallow things you do not expect.
Use the Right Size
Toys and chews should be large enough that your puppy cannot swallow them. They should also match your puppy’s age, breed size, and chewing style.
Remove Broken Toys
Throw away toys with loose pieces, torn fabric, sharp edges, broken plastic, or stuffing coming out.
Be Careful With Food
Use puppy-safe foods only. Avoid xylitol, chocolate, grapes, raisins, onions, garlic, cooked bones, and foods your vet has told you to avoid.
If your puppy has a sensitive stomach, introduce new foods slowly.
Avoid Chews That Are Too Hard
Hard chews can be risky for puppy teeth. Avoid antlers, hooves, hard bones, and chews that feel rock-solid.
When in doubt, ask your vet.
Keep Indoor Exercise Low-Impact
Avoid high jumps, stairs, slippery floors, fast turns, and rough play. Puppies are still growing, so keep movement gentle.
Watch for Overstimulation
If your puppy starts biting harder, barking more, jumping, or ignoring cues, take a break.
They may need a nap, not another game.
Common Rainy Day Puppy Mistakes
Mistake 1: Trying to Tire Your Puppy Out With Constant Play
More play is not always the answer.
Too much excitement can make your puppy more hyper, bitey, and difficult to settle.
Use a mix of sniffing, chewing, licking, training, gentle play, and rest.
Mistake 2: Skipping Naps
Puppies need a lot of sleep. A puppy who has been awake too long may act wild even if they are actually tired.
If your puppy becomes extra bitey or chaotic, try a calm nap routine.
Mistake 3: Making Enrichment Too Hard
If a game is too difficult, your puppy may get frustrated and start chewing the toy.
Start easy. Build difficulty slowly.
Mistake 4: Using Too Many Treats
Use part of your puppy’s regular meal for enrichment. This keeps activities fun without adding too many extra calories.
Mistake 5: Leaving Every Toy Out All Day
If every toy is always available, toys can become boring.
Rotate them. Keep a few special toys for rainy days.
Mistake 6: Forgetting Potty Breaks
Rain does not pause potty training. Your puppy still needs regular potty breaks, even if they are quick.
Mistake 7: Only Using Physical Games
Running and tug can help, but mental activities often tire puppies out in a calmer way.
Sniffing games, puzzle toys, and training can be just as useful as movement.
When Indoor Activities Are Not Enough
Indoor activities can help a lot, but they are not a magic fix for every puppy problem.
Your puppy may also need:
- More sleep
- More consistent potty breaks
- A better daily routine
- Basic training
- Safer chew options
- Crate or playpen practice
- More management with baby gates
- Help from a qualified trainer
- Advice from a vet
If your puppy seems extremely anxious, destructive, aggressive, or unable to settle at all, it is a good idea to get professional help.
Enrichment is powerful, but it works best as part of a bigger routine.
Final Thoughts: Rainy Days Can Build Better Puppy Habits
Rainy days with a puppy can be challenging, but they do not have to turn into a full day of biting, barking, and chaos.
The best indoor activities for puppies on rainy days are simple. A handful of kibble, a towel, a snuffle mat, a lick mat, a safe chew, and a few short games can make a big difference.
The key is balance.
Give your puppy chances to sniff, chew, lick, think, move gently, and rest. Keep activities short. Make games easy at first. Supervise new toys and chews. And remember that sometimes the best activity for a wild puppy is a calm nap.
A rainy day can actually become a great chance to practice training, build confidence, and teach your puppy how to settle indoors.
For more ideas, link here to your full guide on puppy enrichment ideas.
FAQ
What are the best indoor activities for puppies on rainy days?
The best indoor activities for puppies on rainy days include snuffle mats, lick mats, scent games, beginner puzzle toys, gentle tug, indoor hide-and-seek, soft fetch, safe chews, and short training games. A good rainy day routine should include both active games and calming activities.
How do I tire out a puppy indoors?
To tire out a puppy indoors, use a mix of mental stimulation and gentle movement. Try a scent game, short training session, puzzle toy, soft fetch, and then a calming chew or lick mat. Avoid nonstop rough play because it can overstimulate your puppy.
What can I do with a bored puppy on a rainy day?
Give your puppy a simple enrichment activity like a kibble scatter, towel roll-up, snuffle mat, muffin tin puzzle, or frozen lick mat. If your puppy becomes bitey or wild, they may be tired and need a nap instead of more play.
Are puzzle toys good for puppies?
Yes, puzzle toys can be great for puppies when they are beginner-friendly and supervised. Choose simple puzzle toys with large pieces, easy movements, and no small removable parts.
Can puppies use lick mats?
Many puppies can use lick mats with puppy-safe foods. Start with a thin layer of food and supervise your puppy. Remove the mat if your puppy tries to chew it.
What are good rainy day activities for apartment puppies?
Good rainy day activities for apartment puppies include snuffle mats, lick mats, scent games, towel roll-ups, hide-and-seek, gentle tug, place training, and beginner puzzle toys. These activities work well in small spaces.
Why does my puppy get more hyper indoors?
Your puppy may be bored, overstimulated, overtired, teething, or missing their normal outdoor routine. Try a calm sniffing game, safe chew, or lick mat, then offer a nap.
How long should indoor puppy activities last?
Most puppy activities should be short. Five to ten minutes can be enough for young puppies. Watch your puppy’s behaviour and stop before they become frustrated, tired, or overstimulated.
What should I do if my puppy bites during indoor play?
Pause the game and redirect your puppy to a toy or chew. If they keep biting, they may be overstimulated or overtired. Try a calm activity like a lick mat, then give them a quiet rest period.
Do puppies still need potty breaks when it rains?
Yes. Rain does not stop potty training. Your puppy still needs regular potty breaks, even if they are short. Keep rainy potty trips calm, quick, and consistent.
