Why this works for Dachshunds
Dachshunds are independent-leaning, which doesn't mean leave it 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
Leave it can save your dog's life — chicken bones, medications, toxic foods, and dead things on walks are all one 'leave it' away from an emergency vet visit.
Step-by-step: teaching your Dachshund to leave it
1. The closed-fist game
Treat inside your closed fist, presented at nose height. Your dog will nudge, lick, paw. Say nothing. The instant they pull back — even slightly — mark and reward from the other hand.
Tip Never give the treat they left. The reward always comes from somewhere else.
2. Open hand
Present the treat on your open palm. If the dog dives in, close your fist. Reward the moment they hold back from the open hand.
3. Add the cue
When your dog reliably backs off, say 'leave it' as you present the hand. The words come before the temptation.
4. To the floor
Place a treat on the floor under your shoe, then next to your shoe, then in the open. Cue "leave it," reward from your hand each time they choose you over the floor.
Tip Keep a foot ready to cover the treat if they lunge — never let a "leave it" fail into a win.
5. Real-world proofing
Practice on walks with planted items, then with real distractions — food scraps, other dogs, squirrels at a distance. Pay generously for every success.
Common mistakes Dachshund owners make
- Giving the dog the item they just left — it teaches them "leave it" means "wait, then take."
- Using an angry tone. Leave it is a game, not a threat.
- Skipping steps and testing on the roast chicken counter-surf too soon.
- Forgetting to reward — an unpaid leave-it stops working fast.
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 leave it guide.