A dog that destroys furniture, barks incessantly, digs up the garden, or paces and whines is often not a badly behaved dog. It is a bored, understimulated dog that has run out of acceptable ways to occupy itself and has started inventing its own. Physical exercise is essential, but it addresses only one of a dog's fundamental needs. Mental stimulation, the opportunity to sniff, forage, problem-solve, and use its brain, is just as important for a dog's wellbeing and is the piece most owners miss.
The ideas below are grouped by category and require different levels of preparation and cost. Start with whichever appeals most and build from there. The best enrichment routine is the one you actually do consistently.
Why Mental Stimulation Matters as Much as Physical Exercise
Dogs were bred for specific working purposes over thousands of years. Whether herding, hunting, guarding, or retrieving, working dogs needed to think, problem-solve, and make decisions constantly throughout their working day. Modern pet dogs receive a fraction of the cognitive challenge their ancestors did, and the deficit shows up as behavioural problems. Research in canine behaviour consistently shows that dogs given adequate mental stimulation alongside physical exercise are calmer, less reactive, less destructive, and more resilient to stress than dogs given physical exercise alone.
The key insight for busy owners is this: a 20-minute sniffing session or training session can provide more genuine tiredness than a 45-minute walk at pace. Mental work is exhausting. Use it strategically.
The Five Categories of Dog Enrichment
Olfactory Enrichment
Activities that engage the dog's extraordinary sense of smell. Sniff walks, nose work, scatter feeding, and hide-and-seek games all use the olfactory system and are deeply tiring and satisfying.
Easy to startCognitive Enrichment
Activities that require problem-solving: puzzle feeders, interactive toys, training new behaviours, trick learning, and games that require the dog to make choices and think.
Moderate effortPhysical Enrichment
Activities beyond the standard walk: swimming, agility, fetch variations, flirt poles, and exploration of novel environments. Physical enrichment is most effective when combined with cognitive challenge.
Moderate effortSocial Enrichment
Positive interactions with people and other dogs, training sessions with the owner, play dates with compatible dogs, and exposure to new environments and experiences.
Easy to startEnvironmental Enrichment
Changes to the dog's environment that provide novel sensory experiences: new objects, textures, scents, sounds, and access to different spaces at home and outdoors.
Easy to startSniffing and Nose Work: The Most Underused Enrichment
A dog's nose is estimated to be between 10,000 and 100,000 times more sensitive than a human's. Smell is the dog's primary way of experiencing the world, and the majority of pet dogs are given almost no opportunity to use this extraordinary capability meaningfully. Nose work activities are the single highest-impact enrichment addition for most dogs.
The sniff walk (decompression walk)
This is the simplest enrichment activity you can implement today. On a long lead (4 to 6 metres), let your dog lead the walk, following its nose wherever it wants to go at whatever pace it chooses. No pulling forward, no "let's go," no agenda. The dog decides the route and the pace. This feels unproductive to many owners who are used to brisk goal-oriented walks, but the mental work involved in freely processing all that olfactory information is profound. A 20-minute sniff walk often leaves dogs visibly calmer and more settled than much longer conventional walks.
Scatter feeding
Instead of serving meals in a bowl, scatter your dog's kibble across a patch of grass or a snuffle mat. The dog must use its nose to find every piece. A typical meal served this way takes 15 to 20 minutes to finish and provides significant olfactory stimulation. It is free, immediate, and requires nothing except the dog's regular food.
Nose work and scent detection
Formal nose work involves training the dog to find a specific target odour (typically birch, anise, or clove essential oil on a cotton swab) hidden in an area, a vehicle, containers, or on the handler's body. This sport is structured, deeply engaging, and suitable for dogs of all ages and physical abilities, including elderly or injured dogs who cannot do high-impact exercise. Nose work classes are available in most areas and the sport can also be started at home from beginner resources.
Feeding Enrichment: Turning Every Meal into Mental Work
Giving a dog its daily food in a bowl removes every opportunity for natural foraging behaviour. Enrichment feeders use that same food to provide meaningful activity instead.
- Stuffed Kong (frozen): Mix kibble with wet food, banana, or pumpkin puree. Seal the end with peanut butter (xylitol-free) and freeze overnight. Occupies most dogs for 20 to 45 minutes.
- Snuffle mat: A mat with rubber or fabric strips in which kibble is hidden. Provides moderate nose work and slows fast eaters. Easy to wash.
- Licki mat: A textured mat spread with wet food, Greek yoghurt, or peanut butter. Licking is calming for dogs and provides a sustained, low-effort enrichment activity. Freeze for longer duration.
- Puzzle feeders: Commercial puzzle toys require the dog to slide, lift, or spin components to release food. Start with easy puzzles and progress to more complex levels as the dog improves.
- Muffin tin game: Put kibble in the cups of a muffin tin and cover each cup with a tennis ball. The dog must remove the balls to access the food. Free, immediate, endlessly adjustable.
- Scatter feeding on grass or in the garden: The simplest upgrade from a bowl. Requires zero equipment.
- Towel roll: Lay a towel flat, scatter kibble across it, then roll it up loosely. The dog unrolls it to find the food. Free and recyclable.
- Cardboard box foraging: Put scrunched newspaper and kibble or treats inside a cardboard box. Let the dog dig and search. Most dogs enjoy the destruction aspect as much as the foraging.
DIY Enrichment: Low-Cost, High-Impact Projects
You don't need expensive toys to provide excellent enrichment. Many of the most effective activities use household items. Always supervise your dog with DIY items to ensure they do not ingest non-food materials.
1. The Muffin Tin Puzzle
What you need: A muffin tin, tennis balls (or similar sized toys), and kibble/treats.
How to: Place a few pieces of kibble in each cup of the muffin tin. Cover each cup with a tennis ball. Your dog must figure out how to remove the balls to get the food. This builds problem-solving skills and paw-eye coordination.
2. The Cardboard Box Dig
What you need: A cardboard box, shredded newspaper or paper strips, and treats.
How to: Fill the box with shredded paper and hide treats throughout. Let your dog dig and shred the paper to find the rewards. This satisfies the natural instinct to dig and forage. Recycle the box afterward.
3. The Towel Roll
What you need: An old towel and kibble.
How to: Lay the towel flat and scatter kibble across it. Roll the towel up tightly or loosely depending on your dog's skill level. Let your dog unroll the towel to find the food. This is a great low-impact activity for rainy days.
4. The "Find It" Scent Game
What you need: High-value treats.
How to: Ask your dog to "stay" or have someone hold them. Hide a treat in an easy location (like behind a door frame). Say "Find it!" and encourage them to search. Gradually increase the difficulty by hiding treats in harder-to-reach places or under blankets.
Training as Enrichment: Teach Something New Every Week
Training sessions are among the richest cognitive enrichment activities available to dogs. Learning requires focus, memory, and decision-making. Even basic obedience trained to a high standard is mentally demanding. Short, positive sessions of five to ten minutes two or three times a day produce far better results than occasional long sessions and keep the dog's brain consistently engaged.
Skills and tricks to teach progressively
- Foundation: sit, stay, down, come, leave it, loose lead walking
- Intermediate: go to your place, roll over, spin both directions, weave through legs, touch a target with nose or paw
- Advanced: retrieve specific named objects, tidy toys into a basket by name, find hidden family members by name, close doors and drawers
- Sports: agility foundation skills, nose work, rally obedience, trick dog titles
Cooperative Care: Enrichment Through Choice
Modern enrichment isn't just about toys; it's about giving dogs agency. Cooperative care involves teaching dogs to actively participate in their own grooming and veterinary care. This reduces stress and builds trust.
- Start Button Behaviors: Teach your dog to offer a chin rest or paw touch to signal they are ready for a procedure (like nail trimming or ear cleaning). If they pull away, stop. This teaches them they have control.
- Happy Vet Visits: Visit the vet clinic just for treats and praise, without any procedures. This changes the emotional association from "scary" to "positive."
Indoor Enrichment for Bad Weather Days
Every dog owner needs a toolkit of indoor activities for days when outdoor exercise is limited by weather, illness, or logistics.
- Indoor hide and seek: Ask the dog to wait, hide somewhere in the house, then call it. Celebrate enthusiastically when found. Build to hiding in more challenging locations.
- Which hand game: Put a treat in one fist, present both closed fists to the dog, and let it nose or paw the correct hand. When it identifies the right hand, open and reward. Simple, quick, and builds scent discrimination.
- Tug: Structured tug with rules (give, take, drop) is excellent physical and mental exercise, tires dogs quickly, and builds impulse control when done with a clear start and stop signal.
- Staircase fetch: In a home with stairs, throw a ball up the stairs. The dog's effort going up and controlled descent on the way back is more tiring than flat-ground fetch. Only suitable for healthy adult dogs, not puppies or dogs with joint problems.
- Box unpacking: Hide treats in nested boxes within boxes, taped loosely shut. Let the dog problem-solve through the layers. Provides foraging, nose work, and appropriate destructive outlet.
- New trick training session: Pick one new trick and spend two to three five-minute sessions working on it. A tired dog results regardless of the weather outside.
- Sensory boxes: Fill a cardboard box with materials of different textures, dried herbs, crinkled paper, empty toilet rolls, and scatter treats throughout for foraging and sensory exploration.
- Window watching with commentary: Set up a comfortable window perch and let the dog watch outdoor activity. Some dogs find this highly stimulating; others find it arousing. Know your dog.
Enrichment for High-Drive and Working Breeds
German Shepherds, Border Collies, Australian Shepherds, Malinois, and other high-drive breeds require significantly more enrichment than the average family dog. Standard puzzle feeders and occasional scatter feeding will not cut it for a breed that was designed to work at complex tasks for hours. These dogs benefit from:
- Formal dog sports: agility, Schutzhund, herding trials, flyball, disc dog, or canine freestyle
- Advanced nose work: progressing to competitive levels of scent detection
- Daily structured training working on complex or chained behaviours
- Trick sports and canine enrichment titles through organisations like the American Kennel Club or Do More With Your Dog
For breed-specific enrichment recommendations, see our guides on the German Shepherd, Border Collie, and Australian Shepherd.
Enrichment for Senior Dogs
Older dogs still need and benefit from mental stimulation, but their capacity for high-intensity physical activity may be reduced. Enrichment is often even more important for senior dogs, as it maintains cognitive function and slows the progression of cognitive decline. Gentle nose work, licki mats, sniff walks, and calm training sessions keeping well-known skills fresh are all ideal for aging dogs. For health context on aging dogs that affects enrichment planning, see our senior pet care guide and senior dog health guide.