Guides · Puppy days
Cavapoo Training & Socialisation: A Starter Guide
Cavapoos are among the easiest small breeds to train — clever, eager to please and food-motivated. The secret is starting early, keeping it positive, and getting socialisation right in the first few months.
Start early: the socialisation window
The most important training you'll ever do isn't "sit" — it's socialisation. Up to around 16 weeks of age, puppies are unusually open to new experiences, and positive exposure now shapes a confident adult. Introduce your Cavapoo gently and positively to new people, calm vaccinated dogs, sounds (traffic, hoover, doorbell), surfaces, handling and car trips. Before vaccinations are complete, carry them out to experience the world safely. This window doesn't come back, so make the most of it.
The basics to teach first
Keep it simple and build in this rough order: their name and eye contact, recall (the most important safety cue — make coming to you the best thing ever), sit and down, gentle lead walking, and settle (relaxing on a mat). Recall and lead manners pay off most, so practise them daily in short bursts.
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Training treat pouch
Keeps rewards to hand so you can mark good behaviour instantly — timing is everything with a clever dog.
Long training line
A 5–10m line lets you practise recall safely in open spaces before your dog is reliable off-lead.
House and crate training
Toilet training and crate training go hand in hand and start on day one — we cover the full first-week routine in bringing your puppy home. The essentials: take them out frequently and reward going in the right place, never punish accidents, and use the crate as a positive den rather than a punishment. Consistency and routine do the heavy lifting.
Why positive methods matter for Cavapoos
Cavapoos are bright but sensitive — they learn fast with reward-based training and can shut down or grow anxious with harsh corrections or shouting. Reward what you want, ignore or redirect what you don't, and keep sessions short (a few minutes), frequent and fun. That clever Poodle brain also needs a job, so fold in training games and puzzle toys from our toy guide.
Preventing the common problems
A little foresight avoids the classic Cavapoo issues. Teach bite inhibition and redirect puppy mouthing onto chews. Build independence gradually so your devoted dog learns being alone is fine — the single best defence against this breed's tendency toward separation anxiety. And keep socialising beyond puppyhood; confidence is maintained, not banked once.