Help! My Rescue Dog is Scent Marking in the House · The Wildest

Skip to main content

Ask a Trainer

“How Can I Train My Adult Rescue Dog to Stop Scent Marking All Over the House?”

Celebrity dog trainer Victoria Stilwell on how to keep your dog from using your living room as a toilet.

by Victoria Stilwell, CCPDT | expert review by Danielle Vrabel, CPDT-KA
Updated August 24, 2022
White dog laying on the couch looking guilty
carlesmayet / Adobe Stock
The letter "W" from the Wildest logo

Your pet wants you to read our newsletter. (Then give them a treat.)

Sign up for product updates, offers, and learn more about The Wildest, and other Mars Petcare brands. Must be over 16 years to sign up. See our privacy statement to find out how we collect and use your data, to contact us with privacy questions or to exercise your personal data rights.

"We adopted a young male dog from a puppy mill who is an ideal playmate for our female dog and is perfect in all ways but one: though we walk him multiple times a day, take him out after meals and pay close attention to him, he still pees in the house, and will even lift his leg on us! We’ve taken him to the vet and he received a clean bill of health. How can we stop our dog from scent marking our house — and ourselves?"


Scent marking is a very normal and common behavior, particularly in male dogs, but it becomes a big problem when marking occurs in your house. Dogs mark to advertise their presence and to claim territory and resources. Pee and poop contain pheromones, or chemical messages, that convey information — age, gender, health, and reproductive status — about the dog doing the marking.

Resources such as toys, food bowls, chew treats, bones, and beds are the most likely objects to be marked. As you’ve experienced, a dog will also actually mark a person or something that smells heavily of that person, such as a sofa or bed.

Even though marking can have a dominant and competitive component, it may also occur if a dog is overstimulated — for example, during or after vigorous play — or becomes anxious in a particular situation, such as when a person leaves. This common expression of anxiety in dogs is often mistaken for spite, resulting in punishment, which only serves to increase the anxious behavior. Scent marking is also more common in multi-dog households where dogs compete for space, resources, and human attention.

Unlike with submissive urination which is typical in puppies, both sexes scent mark, but intact males are the worst offenders, as signaling sexual availability and claiming territory is “encouraged” by the presence of testosterone. In many cases, neutering can significantly reduce a dog’s desire to scent mark, but some continue even after they have been neutered.

How to Stop a Dog from Marking

Although this is a difficult behavior to break, taking the following steps can improve the situation.

Prevent Scent Marking in the First Place

  1. Remove high-value resources that encourage competitive marking, and do not allow the dog or dogs who scent mark to roam freely throughout the home.

  2. Prevent access to favorite marking spots by restricting the dog(s) to a dog-proofed room or crate when you are unable to actively supervise them.

  3. Avoid competitive or vigorous play indoors, as excess activity encourages urination.

  4. When cleaning up accidents, it is important to be sure that there is no underlying urine smell left. As we know dogs have a very strong sense of smell. If an animal had an accident, another dog with marking issues will smell that and want to mark over it. Be sure to avoid strong smelling cleaners, such as things with ammonia or vinegar, those smells may encourage your dog to pee over that.

Train Your Dog to Stop Scent Marking

You must catch your dog in the act. Never punish your dog for markings that you find later. 

  1. If your dog is about to mark, interrupt the behavior with a short, sharp vocal noise.

  2. Immediately redirect them to something more positive, or take him outside and reward them for the desired behavior.

  3. Repeat. Continue to provide your dog with positive reinforcement of desired behaviors. It may take some time for your dog to begin making the connection, but most dogs respond quickly. Human patience and sensitivity is the key to success.

Pro Tip: You can also help an indoor-marking dog succeed by walking them in new and different areas; this will encourage them to mark outside rather than in your home.

How to House Train a Puppy Mill Dog

Training young adult dogs who are not housebroken to go to the bathroom appropriately can also be a challenge. Most dogs raised in a normal domestic situation respond well to a good house-training schedule, but those who have lived in puppy mills are notoriously difficult. 

Dogs are essentially clean animals and do not like to toilet where they sleep and eat, but because puppy mill dogs are confined to cramped cages, they are forced to do just that. This makes crate training (a usually successful way to house train a dog) much less effective. However, even puppy mill dogs can be taught to toilet appropriately. You'll need to go back to house training basics. Here's how:

  1. Allow access to outside areas every hour, then make less-frequent trips as the dog builds up control.

  2. Follow a schedule to establish a ritual of behavior, which will eventually become predictable and reliable.

The bottom line: Every dog needs to feel confident about going to the bathroom. Punishing accidents will only scare the dog into finding ways to toilet in secret — so avoid doing so at all costs.

victoria stilwell - Victoria Stilwell Enterprises, LLC

Victoria Stilwell, CCPDT

Victoria Stilwell is a world-renowned dog trainer, certified by the Animal Behavior and Training Associates Inc. and star of It’s Me or the Dog. A bestselling author, TV personality, and founder of both the Victoria Stilwell Academy and Positively (where she is editor-in-chef), Stilwell frequently appears in the media as a pet expert and is widely recognized and respected as a leader in the field of animal behavior.

She also serves on the Advisory Boards for DogTV, Dognition, The Grey Muzzle Organization, RedRover, W-Underdogs and Canine Assistants, and she is a member of the U.S. Association of Pet Dog Trainers (APDT) and the International Association of Animal Behavior Consultants (IAABC).