Everything you need to know for your puppy’s first month home. Feeding, crating, sleep, leash introduction, socialization, grooming, and first vet visit, all from 20-plus years of breeding and placing champion American Akitas.
The first 30 days with your American Akita puppy are the most important of the next 12 years. The habits, routines, boundaries, and trust you establish in this window shape everything that follows. Getting this period right does not require perfection. It requires consistency, patience, and a clear understanding of what your puppy needs at each stage.
This guide covers everything you will encounter in your puppy’s first month home, organized by topic so you can find exactly what you need when you need it. Before your puppy arrives, read it from start to finish. After arrival, use it as a reference. If you are still deciding whether the American Akita is right for you, start with our guide Is an American Akita Right for You? All our guides are available on the American Akita Resources page.
The most common mistake new owners make is not preparing before pickup day. Walking into the first week without the right setup in place makes everything harder for both you and your puppy. Here is everything to have ready before your Apexx Akitas puppy comes home.
Decide before pickup day which areas of the home the puppy will have access to and which areas are off limits. Establish this boundary and stick to it from day one. Changing the rules mid-training creates confusion. Puppies learn faster when boundaries are clear and consistent from the start.
Identify where the crate will live permanently. The crate should be in a quiet area but not isolated. Many owners place it in the bedroom for the first weeks so the puppy can hear and smell the family at night, which reduces separation anxiety significantly.
The first 24 hours set the emotional tone for the weeks ahead. Your puppy has just left its mother, littermates, and the only environment it has ever known. Everything is new. Your role in this window is to be calm, predictable, and present without overwhelming the puppy with excitement, new people, or new experiences.
Keep the energy calm at pickup. Excited, loud energy from humans transfers directly to the puppy and makes the transition harder. Speak quietly, move calmly, and give the puppy time to approach you on its own terms rather than reaching for it immediately. The image at the top of this guide shows exactly the right energy at a first meeting: calm, low, and patient.
Have a second person in the car to hold the puppy on the way home, or bring a crate with familiar bedding. Do not let the puppy roam loose in the vehicle. Motion sickness is common in young puppies. Bring a towel and enzymatic cleaner just in case.
Take the puppy directly to its designated toilet area before going inside. Stay there until the puppy eliminates, then praise calmly. This establishes the toilet area from the very first moment. Then bring the puppy inside and let it explore the accessible areas of the home at its own pace without forcing interaction.
The first night is often the hardest. Your puppy will likely cry. This is normal and not an indication that something is wrong. Do not take the puppy into your bed in response to crying. This establishes a pattern that is very difficult to undo. Instead, place the crate near your bed so the puppy can hear and smell you. A warm water bottle wrapped in a blanket and a piece of clothing with your scent in the crate both help significantly.
For the first two weeks feed exactly what your breeder was feeding, in the same amounts, at the same times. A puppy experiencing a transition in environment, social group, and routine does not also need a food transition. Digestive upset during the first weeks is stressful for both the puppy and the owner and is largely avoidable.
If you want to transition to a different food, begin the transition after the puppy has settled, using a gradual 7 to 10 day changeover mixing the new food in increasing proportions with the old.
At 8 weeks, American Akita puppies should eat three times per day at consistent times. A sample schedule:
Consistent feeding times make housetraining significantly easier because elimination follows eating on a predictable schedule. At around 12 weeks you can transition to two meals per day. At 6 months two meals per day is sufficient for most American Akita puppies.
Follow the guidelines on your specific food packaging as a starting point, adjusted for your puppy’s actual body condition. You should be able to feel the puppy’s ribs easily without pressing hard but not see them. If ribs are clearly visible, increase the portion. If you cannot feel them at all, reduce it. Your veterinarian will assess body condition at the first visit and can provide specific guidance.
Fresh water should be available at all times except in the hour before crating for the night, when limiting water access reduces overnight accidents. Never restrict water during the day.
No table scraps, no bones except raw meaty bones specifically appropriate for puppies, no grapes, raisins, onions, garlic, chocolate, xylitol, or macadamia nuts. These are toxic to dogs. Establish from day one that the puppy does not receive food from the table or from human plates.
Crate training is one of the most valuable things you can do for your American Akita in the first 30 days. A dog that is comfortable in its crate has a safe, calm space it can retreat to for rest, has boundaries that prevent destructive behavior when unsupervised, and travels safely. Crate training is not punishment. It is structure, and structure is what American Akitas thrive on.
Place the crate in the designated area with the door open. Put comfortable bedding and a chew toy inside. Let the puppy explore it on its own without forcing entry. Feed meals inside the crate with the door open initially, then closed briefly, then for longer periods as the puppy becomes comfortable. Build duration gradually over days, not hours.
Wait for a pause in the crying before opening the crate. Even a 10-second pause is enough. Opening the crate in response to active crying teaches the puppy that crying is the exit mechanism. This is one of the most common mistakes owners make and one of the most consequential for long-term crate comfort.
American Akita puppies are generally clean dogs that do not want to soil their living areas. This breed characteristic works in your favor for housetraining but it does not replace the need for a consistent schedule and immediate reinforcement.
Take the puppy to its designated toilet area:
When the puppy eliminates in the correct spot, praise immediately and calmly. The reinforcement must happen within seconds of elimination to be associated with the correct behavior. Delayed praise is not effective. Do not wait until the puppy returns inside to praise.
Accidents are information, not failures. They mean the schedule is not tight enough or the puppy was given more freedom than it was ready for. Clean thoroughly with enzymatic cleaner, tighten the schedule, and supervise more closely. Never scold a puppy for an accident that you did not witness in real time. The association cannot be made after the fact and punishment after the fact creates confusion and anxiety.
The American Akita will eventually weigh 100 to 130 pounds. A dog that pulls on the leash at that size is not manageable regardless of the owner’s strength. Leash manners established in puppyhood make adult ownership dramatically easier and safer. Leash introduction begins here at Apexx Akitas before the puppy comes home.
Watch how our puppies are introduced to the leash in this real footage from Apexx Akitas:
Start with the collar only for the first day or two so the puppy gets used to wearing it. Then attach the leash and simply let the puppy drag it around under supervision for short periods. This removes the strangeness of the leash before you add the pressure of being guided by it.
When you first pick up the leash end, follow the puppy rather than restraining it. Let the puppy lead for short sessions while you walk alongside it. Gradually begin introducing gentle direction by calling the puppy toward you and rewarding movement in your direction. Keep early sessions under five minutes. Puppy attention spans are short and ending on a positive note is more valuable than extended sessions that end in frustration.
The socialization window for dogs closes at approximately 14 to 16 weeks of age. What your puppy is exposed to during this period shapes its responses to those experiences for life. An American Akita that is not deliberately socialized during this window will be harder to manage around strangers, new environments, and novel situations as an adult.
This does not mean exposing the puppy to everything at once. It means deliberate, positive, controlled exposure to the people, sounds, surfaces, and situations it will encounter throughout its life.
Until your puppy is fully vaccinated, avoid areas with high dog traffic such as dog parks, pet store floors, and areas where unknown dogs defecate. Puppy classes held indoors on cleaned surfaces with vaccinated puppies are generally considered acceptable by veterinarians during this period. Ask your vet specifically about their recommendations given your local disease prevalence.
Schedule your first veterinary appointment within 48 to 72 hours of bringing your puppy home. This serves as a health baseline, catches any issues that may not have been apparent at placement, and begins the veterinary relationship that will span the puppy’s entire life.
A standard puppy wellness exam covers weight and body condition, heart and lung sounds, eye and ear examination, dental development, joint palpation, skin and coat condition, and umbilical area. The vet will review the vaccination schedule and recommend the next steps based on what your breeder has already administered.
For an American Akita, look for a veterinarian with large breed experience who is familiar with the health concerns specific to the breed. Mention at your first visit that the breed is predisposed to hip dysplasia, autoimmune thyroiditis, and VKH syndrome so these conditions are on the vet’s radar. A vet who is not familiar with Akita-specific health concerns may miss early indicators. Use the same verification approach from our 15 Questions guide to evaluate your veterinarian. See our complete American Akita Health Problems guide and Health Testing Standards for the full list of conditions to discuss with your vet.
The American Akita has a thick double coat that requires regular maintenance throughout its life. The habits you establish in the first 30 days determine how cooperative your dog will be for grooming at 100-plus pounds. A dog that is comfortable with brushing, bathing, blow drying, ear cleaning, and nail trimming as a puppy is a pleasure to groom as an adult. A dog that has never been handled for grooming is a significant challenge.
Watch how our puppies are introduced to blow drying at Apexx Akitas:
Begin brushing from the first week home. Use a soft slicker brush initially and work up to a pin brush and undercoat rake as the puppy grows. Keep early sessions short, two to three minutes maximum, always ending before the puppy becomes resistant. The goal in the first month is cooperation and positive association, not thorough coat maintenance.
American Akita puppies do not need frequent bathing. Once every four to six weeks is sufficient unless the puppy gets into something requiring immediate cleaning. Use a gentle puppy shampoo and rinse thoroughly. The double coat holds shampoo deeply and incomplete rinsing causes skin irritation.
The American Akita coat holds water and a puppy that is not blow dried after bathing will remain damp for hours, which creates skin issues and significant discomfort in cooler weather. Introduce the blow dryer early at a low heat setting and low speed, treating the experience as a socialization opportunity. Our puppies are introduced to this process here before placement as you can see in the video above.
Touch and handle the puppy’s paws daily from day one. When the puppy is comfortable with paw handling begin introducing the nail clippers by touching them to the paw without clipping. Trim one nail at a time initially using sharp stainless steel clippers. Avoid the quick, the pink vein visible in light-colored nails. If you are uncomfortable with nail trimming your veterinarian or a professional groomer can demonstrate the technique at the first visit.
The American Akita double coat regulates temperature in both heat and cold. Shaving damages the coat permanently and disrupts the dog’s natural temperature regulation. The coat should never be shaved regardless of season or temperature.
The first 30 days is not the time for advanced obedience. It is the time to establish the relationship, the routine, and a small number of foundational behaviors that create a framework for everything that follows. Keep training sessions short (three to five minutes), positive, and consistent.
A professional trainer with working breed experience is a worthwhile investment for any American Akita owner, especially in the first year. The time to engage a trainer is before problems develop, not after. Look for a trainer experienced specifically with dominant or independent breeds who uses positive reinforcement combined with clear structure. See our guide on how to find a reputable American Akita breeder for the same due diligence framework applied to trainers. Ask your breeder for recommendations. At Apexx Akitas we maintain relationships with trainers we trust and can point placed families in the right direction. Read what our placed families say about their experience and ongoing support.
The first week is almost always the hardest. By the end of week two most American Akita puppies have established basic routines and are sleeping through the night or close to it. Here is a realistic picture of what weeks two through four typically look like.
Short, controlled outings on clean surfaces in low-risk areas can begin immediately. Avoid dog parks, pet store floors, and high-traffic areas until your puppy is fully vaccinated at approximately 16 weeks. Leash introduction in your yard or driveway can and should begin in the first week home.
At 8 weeks, no more than two to three hours at a time during the day. The puppy cannot hold its bladder longer than this and extended isolation creates anxiety and destructive behavior. If your work schedule requires longer absences, arrange for a midday dog walker or puppy check-in from the first week.
Yes. Puppies explore the world with their mouths and bite inhibition is a learned behavior. Redirect biting onto appropriate chew toys immediately and consistently. Yelp and withdraw attention when biting is too hard. Never use your hands as play toys. Bite inhibition typically improves significantly between 12 and 16 weeks as the puppy matures.
Start basic training from the day the puppy comes home. Name recognition, sit, come, and crate entry can all begin at 8 weeks in short three to five minute sessions. Formal obedience classes can begin as soon as the puppy is vaccinated enough to attend safely, typically around 10 to 12 weeks for puppy-specific classes held in controlled environments.
Young puppies sleep 16 to 18 hours per day. This is normal and essential for healthy development. Do not interpret sleeping as lethargy or illness. Allow the puppy to sleep when it needs to rather than stimulating it constantly. Overtired puppies become manic and difficult to manage, much like overtired toddlers.
Mild appetite reduction in the first 24 to 48 hours is common due to stress and transition. If the puppy is not eating at all after 48 hours, contact your veterinarian. Continue the exact food and schedule from your breeder and avoid adding extras or changing foods during the transition period.
Every Apexx Akitas puppy arrives with a foundation already in place. Full OFA health testing, Early Neurological Stimulation, leash introduction, and lifetime breeder support included with every placement.