Dog aggression towards visitors: causes and what to do
Worried about how your dog responds to visitors to your house? Our advice can help you and your dog now.

Dogs that behave aggressively to visitors are usually having a tough time. They may be worried, anxious or over-aroused. Resulting in them feeling the need to defend their home, family, themselves or things they value.
Aggressive behaviours towards visitors are upsetting for all involved, especially your dog. With the right support, time and consistency, you can teach your dog the skills needed to cope with visitors.
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Quick wins: What to do right now if your dog is being aggressive to visitors
It’s normal for us to have deliveries, or friends, family and tradespeople visit. But our dogs don’t understand why these people come to the house. While some dogs find visitors exciting, others might feel worried, uncertain or protective of their home. They don’t behave this way because they’re jealous or dominant.
If your dog shows aggressive behaviour towards visitors, there are some steps you can take right now to help.
Prioritise safety:
- Ask your visitor to stop what they’re doing and move away from your dog to give them space.
- Encourage your dog behind a barrier, like a baby gate or closed door.
- Avoid raising your voice or telling your dog off. This can increase their anxiety and could make the situation worse. Instead, do your best to stay calm, gentle and encouraging.
When the situation is over:
- Seek appropriate first aid or veterinary assistance where needed.
- Make a record of the incident. This will help you understand what caused the behaviour and avoid similar situations in future. Your vet will find this information useful too.
- Seek qualified professional support. Our behaviour services include clinical behaviourists, behaviour coaches and qualified experts who can support you.
In the following days:
- Avoid further visitors to the house for the time being. If visitors, home appointments or deliveries can’t be rescheduled, make sure your dog is safely behind a barrier before opening the door.
- Give your dog one to two quiet days to lower their stress levels and avoid trigger stacking. Provide lots of opportunities for enrichment, napping and chewing.
- Avoid busy walks as your dog’s resilience and tolerance levels will be reduced.
- You’re not alone. Aggression towards visitors is a common unwanted behaviour in dogs, and support is available.
If you’d like to chat things through with a qualified professional, speak to our free Behaviour Support Line.
Why is your dog aggressive to visitors?
How to stop your dog being aggressive with visitors
Your dog could start feeling anxious or excited the moment there’s a knock on the door. If these feelings result in aggressive behaviour towards visitors, we recommend keeping your dog separate and avoiding visitors while you seek the support of a clinical behaviourist.
While professional support is being put in place, you can teach your dog to feel calmer when they hear the doorbell or a knock.

Creating a safe space for your dog

How to stop your dog jumping up at people
Daily habits that make a difference
A consistent daily routine can help your dog cope better, and feel safer, when you have visitors.
Here are some things you can try to keep visits successful:
- Keep changes to routine minimal to avoid upset or anxiety.
- Consistently use reward-based training methods. Avoid any training methods that use fear, intimidation or pain which could decrease your dog’s confidence.
- Allow choice. Make sure your dog can always retreat when things get too much. A safe space can help with this. If your dog is worried, making them “face their fear” could risk aggressive behaviour.
- Stay calm and positive. This is especially important if conflict occurs. Avoid telling your dog off , as this could make things worse. Be reassuring, steady and gentle instead of tense, sudden and loud.
- Make sure your dog has enough dog-appropriate daily exercise and physical stimulation. This is especially important before visitors arrive, so they can relax.
- Provide mental stimulation with toys, chews and enrichment activities. Skills like paying attention to you and settling are also useful when you have visitors.
- Reward calm, relaxed behaviour when you see it. You can also reward your dog when they show bravery – this will help their confidence to grow.
- Mirror the energy you want to see from your dog. If you and your visitors are calm and relaxed, your dog will be calmer and more relaxed too.
- Reduce stress. Allow your dog the time to de-stress as needed. This might mean having a day or two with more enrichment, play and napping. Especially if they’ve had a challenging day.
- Sometimes, social pressures cause owners to say yes to visitors interacting with their dog. Even if they know their dog won’t enjoy it. Telling your visitors when they can and can’t interact with your dog keeps everyone safer and less stressed.
- Consider muzzle training. While a muzzle won’t help your dog to feel better about visitors coming to your house, it might help you to feel more confident and relaxed.
Common scenarios and triggers
It’s important to recognise that under the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991, it’s against the law to let a dog be dangerously out of control. This applies in public and in private. For example, a park, your home, or a neighbour’s house. This section of the law is not breed specific and applies to all dogs.
When to seek professional help
Vet check
Changes in a dog's behaviour are often influenced by their physical health, even when there are no obvious signs of pain or illness. Some medical issues are subtle, develop gradually, or are masked by dogs coping well, so even very attentive owners may not notice anything wrong.
You should seek veterinary advice if your dog suddenly starts to display aggressive behaviour or if there are changes in your dog’s usual behavioural responses.
A visit to your vet is a supportive first step. It could rule out any medical causes or fix the behaviour. Knowing your dog is healthy will make any behaviour support and training clearer, fairer, and more effective for you and your dog.
To help your vet assess your dog's behaviour, it can be helpful to bring along any videos, diaries or notes you have to your appointment at the vets. Speak to your vet when booking if you think it'd be useful to have a detailed conversation before the physical exam.
Behaviourist support
When your dog is aggressive towards visitors it can be extremely challenging. We understand how isolating it can be. We’re here for you, and you’re dog.
Contact our Behaviour Support Line, request a call back from an expert, or book a support package now. We help thousands of dog owners, just like you, with judgement-free advice every year. Our team can offer a wide range of support depending on what you feel is best for you – even if it's just to check you're on the right track.
FAQs about dog aggression towards visitors
Contact our behaviour services
Whether you’re facing a tricky behaviour or feeling completely overwhelmed, we’re here to help. Our team of experts can offer advice, training and support.
Call us on 0303 003 6666 or
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