Why Dachshunds struggle with digging
Digging is one of the most common complaints Dachshund owners bring to trainers — this breed's bold, independent nature makes it a predictable pattern rather than a personal failing. As a moderate-energy breed, the Dachshund's version of this problem is more often emotional than athletic — focus extra attention on the anxiety and routine components below.
Dachshund trait profile
Dogs dig for specific, diagnosable reasons: terriers and dachshunds dig because they were bred to; hot dogs dig cool pits in shade; bored dogs dig for the sheer joy of a project; some dig after moles and grubs they can hear; others dig along fence lines to escape. The pattern of holes tells you which dog you have — cooling pits appear in shade, prey-digging follows tunnels, escape-digging hugs the fence.
The Dachshund fix-it plan
- 1
Diagnose the digging
Days 1–3Goal: Know which problem you're solving
- Map the holes: shade (cooling), fence line (escape), scattered lawn (fun/boredom), tracking lines (prey).
- Note when it happens: only when alone points to boredom or anxiety; hot afternoons point to cooling.
- Check the exercise budget honestly — most recreational diggers are under-exercised for their breed.
- 2
Build the legal option
Days 4–10Goal: Give the instinct a home
- Create a dig zone: a sandpit, a kiddie pool of sand/soil, or a marked corner with loose earth.
- Seed it daily with half-buried toys and chews; celebrate enthusiastically when your dog digs there.
- Make crime harder: lay chicken wire flat under mulch in raided beds, fill favorite holes with a soil-and-stone mix.
- 3
Fix the underlying cause
Days 7–28Goal: Reduce the pressure to dig
- Boredom diggers: add sniff walks, food puzzles, and 10 minutes of daily training.
- Cooling diggers: provide real shade, a cooling mat or paddling pool, and bring the dog in during heat.
- Escape diggers: bury wire along the fence base AND address the reason they want out (boredom, intact-dog roaming, fear of noises).
Common mistakes Dachshund owners make
- Punishing holes after the fact — the dog cannot connect it and just learns to dig when you're not looking.
- Filling holes with water and pushing the dog's head toward it — an old cruel myth that teaches fear, not landscaping.
- Providing a dig zone but never salting it with treasure, then wondering why it's ignored.
- Treating escape-digging as a fencing problem only, without asking why the dog wants to leave.
Dachshund breed notes
Dachshund note
Dachshunds combine three training challenges: hound independence (recall needs premium pay and a long line for life in open areas), a hardwired dig-and-bark package (give both legal outlets), and a long back that makes jumping-based games risky — train with ramps and floor work, and never let corrections involve grabbing or lifting roughly. Potty training runs long in this breed; keep the system tight. Because digging is a known pattern in this breed, expect to maintain the management steps longer than the protocol's minimum — think of them as breed equipment, not a temporary phase.
Want the full picture of what makes this breed tick? See the complete Dachshund training guide or the all-breeds digging guide.
When to see a professional
If digging is frantic, focused on exits, and happens only when alone, treat it as separation distress rather than recreation. Compulsive digging that continues indoors (bedding, sofas, floors) at high intensity is worth discussing with your vet or a behaviorist.