Potty Training Success

Article signalsWritten by Best French Puppies Team Reviewed by Best French Puppies breeder standards team Updated May 31, 2026

Consistency and patience are the foundations of a well-trained Frenchie. Because French Bulldogs are intelligent but can be stubborn, following a strict routine from day one is essential.

1. Set Up the “Puppy Toilet”

Before your puppy arrives, choose a permanent spot for their bathroom.

  • The Gear: We highly recommend using a Puppy Dog Toilet (tray with a mesh grate). This keeps their paws dry and secures the potty pad.
  • Location: Place it in a quiet but accessible corner, preferably within their playpen area during the first few weeks.

2. Recognize the Signs

Watch your puppy’s body language closely. A puppy usually needs to “go” when they:

  • Start sniffing the floor intently.
  • Walk in circles or act restless.
  • Begin to whine or move away from their play area.

3. The Routine: Action and Command

  • Timing: Take your puppy to their potty tray immediately after eating, after waking up from a nap, and after a play session.
  • The Command: As soon as you place them on the tray, use a consistent verbal cue like “Go potty” or “Business time.” This helps the puppy associate the word with the action.
  • The Reward: The moment they finish, give them enthusiastic praise and a tiny, healthy treat. Positive reinforcement is the fastest way to success!

4. Handling Accidents

Accidents will happen—it’s part of the learning process.

  • Stay Calm: Never scold or punish your puppy for an accident. This only teaches them to fear you or hide when they need to go.
  • Clean Up: Use an enzymatic cleaner (not ammonia-based) to thoroughly clean the spot. This removes the scent that might otherwise attract the puppy back to the same “wrong” place.

5. Consistency is Key

Stick to the same schedule and the same commands every single day. Frenchies thrive on routine, and your persistence will pay off with a clean, house-trained companion.

Helpful care steps buyers should review next

Care-focused articles often attract families who are already comparing daily routines, vet planning, feeding decisions, or first-week setup before they bring home a puppy. These posts work better when they also connect readers to breeder standards, available puppies, and the core care resources that answer the next question.

  • Use care posts to understand the routine, but confirm how breeder support, feeding transition, and health preparation are handled before a puppy comes home.
  • Move from general care reading into the main care guide when you want one cleaner checklist instead of scattered tips.
  • Connect care planning with the breeder and available-puppy pages so the buyer journey stays practical, not purely informational.

These related pages help readers move from care research into the pages that matter most before reservation or delivery.

What should families confirm after reading a French Bulldog care article?

Most families want breeder support, feeding or routine-care guidance, health-focused preparation, and where to get direct answers confirmed before a puppy comes home.

Why should care articles link into breeder and availability pages?

Care research often happens close to the buying decision, so these articles work better when they connect routine guidance with breeder standards, current availability, and the real next-step pages buyers need.

Which pages should readers review after a care-intent article?

The strongest next steps are the main care guide, breeder trust page, available puppies page, and direct contact page so care planning stays connected to the actual reservation journey.