How to Stop Your Dog Jumping on Guests

Calm Humane Training That Works

If your dog jumps on guests the moment the door opens, it doesn’t mean they’re rude, dominant, or badly trained.

It means your dog is over-excited and missing impulse control skills — and those skills can be taught calmly.

This guide will show you why dogs jump on people and exactly how to stop it using humane, practical training that works in real homes.


Why Dogs Jump on Guests

Dogs jump because:

  • Excitement spikes quickly
  • They want attention
  • Jumping has worked before

From your dog’s point of view:

Jumping makes people react — and reactions are rewarding.

Even pushing your dog away or saying “no” can reinforce the behavior.


Why Common Advice Often Fails

Many owners try:

  • Shouting “down”
  • Pushing the dog away
  • Repeating commands

These methods usually fail because they:

  • Happen after the jump
  • Increase excitement
  • Don’t teach an alternative behavior

Stopping jumping isn’t about force — it’s about teaching a calmer option.


The Calm Solution: Teach What to Do Instead

Jumping stops when your dog learns:

Calm behavior makes people appear.

This requires management + impulse control training, not punishment.


Step-by-Step: How to Stop Jumping on Guests

Step 1: Prevent Jumping While Training

Until training is solid, prevent practice.

Use:

  • A baby gate
  • A leash indoors
  • A tether point

Every successful jump strengthens the habit.


Step 2: Reward “Four on the Floor”

Practice before guests arrive.

  1. Stand still
  2. Wait for all four paws on the floor
  3. Mark (“Yes”) and reward before jumping starts
  4. Repeat until calm is offered automatically

This builds the pause your dog is missing.


Step 3: Teach a “Place” or Sit Station

Give your dog a clear job when the door opens.

  • Dog goes to mat
  • Dog sits or lies down
  • Door opens only while calm

If your dog gets up:

  • Door closes
  • Try again

This connects directly to impulse control training.


Step 4: Practice With Fake Guests

Don’t wait for real visitors.

Practice with:

  • Family members
  • Friends who follow instructions

Reward:

  • Calm waiting
  • Sitting instead of jumping

Short, frequent sessions work best.


Step 5: Coach Your Guests

Before guests enter, ask them to:

  • Ignore jumping
  • Avoid eye contact
  • Greet only when the dog is calm

Consistency speeds progress dramatically.


What Not to Do

Avoid:

  • Kneeing your dog
  • Shouting
  • Holding collars
  • Shock or prong collars

These increase arousal and make learning slower.


How Long Does It Take?

Most dogs improve within 1–2 weeks when:

  • Jumping is prevented consistently
  • Calm behavior is rewarded early
  • Everyone follows the same rules

If Jumping Is Part of a Bigger Problem

If your dog also:

  • Bites during play
  • Steals objects
  • Can’t settle indoors

You’re likely dealing with low impulse control overall.

👉 Start here: Impulse Control for Dogs: How to Stop Jumping, Biting, and Wild Behavior


Start With Calm

You don’t need perfection — just clarity.

Teach your dog:

  • What calm looks like
  • When calm works
  • That jumping is unnecessary

Calm greetings are learned, not forced.


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