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Breed how-to · Dachshund · 1–2 weeks

How to Teach a Dachshund to Go to Mat

Reviewed by Sarah Mitchell, CPDT-KA · Updated

The short answer

Put a mat down, and reward any interest in it — a look, a step, a paw. Shape toward all four paws on, then a down, then duration. Add the cue 'mat' once the dog charges over reliably. The mat becomes a paycheck zone, which is exactly why it fixes doorbell chaos and dinner begging.

Difficulty
Time
1–2 weeks
Method
Positive reinforcement (shaping + duration building)

Why this works for Dachshunds

Dachshunds are independent-leaning, which doesn't mean go to mat is out of reach — it means your pay rate and consistency matter more than repetition count. Budget the full 1–2 weeks and celebrate small wins. With moderate energy, Dachshunds hold focus well in short sessions — two or three 3-minute sessions a day beat one long drill.

Dachshund trait profile

Energy3/5
Trainability2/5
Barkiness5/5

Go-to-mat gives your dog a job in exciting moments — instead of barking at the door or begging at the table, they have a specific, rewarded place to be. It's the workhorse cue behind fixing many behavior problems.

Step-by-step: teaching your Dachshund to go to mat

  1. 1. Make the mat magic

    Place the mat down and toss a treat on it. Reward every interaction — looking at it, stepping toward it, standing on it. Pick up the mat between sessions so it stays special.

    Tip Use a distinct mat, not the everyday bed — the visual clarity speeds up learning.

  2. 2. Shape all four paws, then a down

    Hold out for two paws, then four, then a sit or down on the mat. Feed several treats in a row when the dog lies down — downs on the mat pay best.

  3. 3. Add the cue and distance

    Say 'mat' as the dog heads over. Then cue from one step away, then across the room. Reward on the mat every time.

  4. 4. Build duration with a food toy

    Give a stuffed chew or scatter treats on the mat to build relaxed minutes. Release with "free" before the dog decides to leave on their own.

  5. 5. Deploy at real triggers

    Practice with a knock at the door, then the doorbell, then real guests. The mat is where good things happen when exciting things occur.

    Tip Station the mat where the dog can see the door but not crowd it.

Common mistakes Dachshund owners make

  • Using the mat as punishment — it must only ever predict good things.
  • Adding duration and distance at the same time.
  • Leaving the mat out 24/7 during training, which dilutes its meaning.
  • Expecting a mat-stay through the doorbell before building up through easier triggers.

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.

Want the full picture of what makes this breed tick? See the complete Dachshund training guide or the all-breeds go to mat guide.

Dachshund go to mat FAQs

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