Separation Anxiety in Rescue Dogs: Prevention & Treatment
One of the most common challenges with rescue dogs. Learn how to prevent, manage, and treat separation anxiety.
What is Separation Anxiety?
Separation anxiety is a stress response that occurs when a dog is left alone. It's especially common in rescue dogs who may have been abandoned before.
Signs of Separation Anxiety:
Prevention: Start Early
Start practicing alone time from day one — even before your dog shows any signs of anxiety.
Practice departures without leaving — Pick up keys, put on shoes, then sit back down
Start with seconds, not minutes — Leave the room for 10 seconds, return calmly
Gradually increase duration — 30 seconds, 1 minute, 5 minutes, 15 minutes
Keep departures boring — No dramatic goodbyes or excited returns
Create a positive alone-time association — Frozen Kong only when you leave
The Graduated Departure Method
Step 1: Leave the room for 5 seconds. Return. Treat.
Step 2: Leave for 30 seconds. Return calmly.
Step 3: Leave for 2 minutes.
Step 4: Leave the house for 5 minutes.
Step 5: Leave for 15 minutes.
Step 6: Leave for 30 minutes.
Step 7: Leave for 1 hour.
If your dog panics at any step, go back to the previous step. Pushing too fast makes anxiety worse.
When to Seek Professional Help
Consult a veterinary behaviorist or certified trainer if:
In the EU, medications like fluoxetine and clomipramine are available by prescription and can be very effective alongside behavioral therapy.
helpFrequently Asked Questions
How long can I leave a rescue dog alone?expand_more
As a general rule, adult dogs should not be left alone for more than 4-6 hours. Rescue dogs may need shorter periods initially. Build up gradually.
Will getting a second dog fix separation anxiety?expand_more
Usually not. Separation anxiety is about being separated from YOU, not about being alone. A second dog may actually double your challenges.
Part of Your Rescue Journey
Track every step of your adoption — from research to 3 months at home.
