Is Hand-Feeding Your Dog a Good Idea?

There are many benefits to feeding your dog or puppy by hand โ€“ and only a couple of situations when itโ€™s not advisable.

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Many trainers feed very little of their dogsโ€™ daily ration from a bowl, but instead, hand-feed the dogโ€™s meals to him over the course of the day. Every interaction with a dog is an opportunity for training. Setting aside a portion (or all!) of your dogโ€™s morning and evening meals and delivering that food by hand throughout the day as your dog complies with requests, along with catching your dog in the act of being good, helps drive up your rate of reinforcement and builds value for the behaviors youโ€™d like to see more often. Hand-feeding is also a great way to help a puppy consistently practice basic skills (such as sit, down, wait, come, etc.) and overall polite behavior.

In addition, for dogs who are generally confident but who have many interests, of which you are just one โ€“ in other words, dogs who are easily distracted โ€“ hand-feeding for a period can help increase the dogโ€™s attention to you as the handler by associating you with meals and feeding.

Hand-feeding can help establish a relationship between you and a new dog, or your dog and a new person in your life..

When is hand-feeding not a good idea?

While hand-feeding can be used to help establish a relationship with a dog, when used with particularly shy and fearful dogs, it can cause additional stress. Similarly, some people will try to use food or treats to build a fearful dogโ€™s comfort with strangers. The hope is that the dog will associate the presence of the โ€œscary personโ€ (โ€œYikes!โ€) with the presence of the food (โ€œYum!โ€), but what often happens (especially with dogs who really like food), is that the allure of the food temporarily overrides their unease about the person โ€“ but only for as long as it takes to grab the food. Once the food is in their mouth, they instantly realize the โ€œscary personโ€ is too close for comfort. In this case, the food is more of a trap than a tool to help change the dogโ€™s association.

A better approach in the case of the โ€œstrangers are scaryโ€ problem is for the owner to deliver food in the presence of the โ€œscary personโ€ while the person is noticeable, but far enough away so as not cause significant concern. Take a similar approach if you are trying to use food to bond with a highly fearful dog, by being close enough to him that he associates your presence with the food, but not so close that it takes a major act of courage (or desperation) to eat it.

What to watch for when hand-feeding a dog

Hand-feeding can increase some dogsโ€™ lack of self-control around food. Many dogs are overly excited by food and may jump up or lunge at their ownerโ€™s hands as they attempt to get the food. To help teach impulse control in this situation, ask your dog to sit and hold a piece of low-value food in your open palm. Attempt to move your palm closer to your dog. If he moves toward the food, close your fist and, if needed, ask him to sit again. As your dog can control himself as your food hand gets closer, use your opposite hand to deliver food to his mouth and invite him to โ€œtake it!โ€

โ€œSelf-controlโ€ will look different for different dogs. For especially excitable dogs, self-control might initially mean she holds a sit for two seconds while your open hand is 12 inches above her head. If your dog tends to jump on you when you have food, use a leash to tether her to a sturdy object and stand just beyond the length of the leash. With consistency, your dog will learn the fastest way to get the food is to exercise patience around the food.

If your dog bites down too hard when taking food from your hand, try these tips.

What about dogs who only eat when hand-fed?

In some cases, a dog will get used to being fed by hand and might balk at eating from a bowl. In such cases, a little โ€œtough loveโ€ might be in order. Present your dogโ€™s meal in a bowl and give him five minutes to eat. If he doesnโ€™t, pick up the bowl and try again later. A healthy dog wonโ€™t starve himself when food is available, even if this technique means he skips a few meals while he waits to see if youโ€™ll revert to feeding by hand.

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Stephanie Colman has been a contributor to Whole Dog Journal since January 2010, with multiple articles recognized by the Dog Writers Association of America.ย ย Colman has an extensive background in positive-reinforcement dog training, having spent more than 15 years teaching group and private training classes focused on basic manners, problem solving, sport-dog training, therapy dog prep, and more.ย ย Sheโ€™s also competed at high levels in a variety of dog sports including obedience, agility, Rally, hunt tests, lure coursing, and working trials.ย ย She currently serves as the puppy program coordinator at Guide Dogs of America, where she leverages her dog training and journalism/PR backgrounds to recruit and support the organizationโ€™s volunteer puppy raisers.ย ย In addition to Whole Dog Journal, her work has also been published in APDT Chronicle of the Dog, Off-Lead Animal Behavior, and the book Magical Dogs: Love and Lessons from our Canine Companions.ย ย She holds a B.A. in Journalism and an M.A. in Mass Communication from California State University, Northridge.ย ย Find her on Twitter and Instagram as @caninestein, or on LinkedIn atย https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-colman/.