Most puppies at this age sleep about 18 to 20 hours a day, split between naps, meals, play, training, and toilet trips.
An 11-week-old puppy is still a baby, so sleep takes up most of the day. If your pup dozes off after breakfast, wakes for ten minutes of play, then crashes again, that pattern is normal.
The hard part is reading the rhythm. A pup that bites at shoelaces, zooms in circles, and turns into a tiny gremlin is often overtired, not “full of beans.” Once you spot that shift, naps get easier and evenings get calmer.
What Normal Sleep Looks Like At 11 Weeks
Most 11-week-old puppies land in the 18 to 20 hour range over a full day. Some sit a little under that. Some drift a little over it. Breed, size, home routine, and how busy the day has been all shape the total.
What matters most is the full pattern, not one sleepy afternoon or one lively evening. Young puppies often flip between three modes: asleep, just waking up, and briefly wild.
Daytime Naps Come In Waves
At 11 weeks, naps often show up after each meal, each toilet trip, each training game, and each social moment. One pup may nap for thirty minutes, pop up for a quick chew, then doze off again. Another may sleep for two hours straight in a crate or bed. Both can be fine.
According to AKC guidance on puppy sleep, puppies often sleep 18 to 20 hours a day, and many are ready for a nap after play or a walk. That lines up with what many new owners see at home: short activity bursts, then a steep drop into sleep.
Night Sleep Is Still Broken
Even a sleepy 11-week-old puppy may not sleep right through the night yet. Small bladders, a new home, and plain old baby nerves can break up overnight rest. One toilet break in the small hours is still common. Some pups need more than one during the first stretch after moving in.
A broken night does not mean anything is wrong. It usually means your puppy is still building a bedtime pattern. Calm lighting, a last toilet trip, and a sleep spot that feels safe often do more than extra play in the evening.
11 Week Old Puppy Sleep Needs Through The Day
A loose daily rhythm works better than watching the clock like a hawk. Your pup does not need a military schedule. Still, a repeating pattern of toilet, food, play, training, and rest can make the whole house feel less chaotic.
AKC’s puppy schedule advice points to the same idea: young puppies do better with regular feeding, regular toilet breaks, short play sessions, and planned nap time in a quiet spot.
| Time Block | What Often Happens | What You Can Do |
|---|---|---|
| Early morning | Wake-up, toilet trip, short burst of energy | Go outside right away, then keep the first play session brief |
| After breakfast | Another toilet trip, then drowsiness | Offer a quiet nap spot before the puppy gets cranky |
| Mid-morning | One short training or play block, then sleep | Stop while your pup is still happy, not spun up |
| Late morning | Longer nap window | Let the puppy rest without being passed around the house |
| Lunch period | Food, toilet, gentle activity | Keep it simple and watch for sleepy cues soon after |
| Early afternoon | Another solid nap | Use a crate, pen, or bed in a low-noise area |
| Late afternoon | Play, chew time, toilet trips, then dozing | Break activity into short blocks instead of one long session |
| Early evening | Witching-hour energy, nipping, zoomies | See it as a tired sign and shift toward calm, not rough play |
| Before bed | Short calm period, final toilet trip | Dim the room, keep voices low, then settle your pup |
| Overnight | Sleep with one or two wake-ups for some pups | Take the puppy out quietly and return straight to bed |
This table is not a strict script. The point is the pattern: awake time stays short, naps stay frequent, and calm returns before your pup tips into chaos.
Sleep Cues You Should Learn Early
Puppies rarely say, “I’m tired now.” They show it in messy little ways. Once you know the signs, you can get ahead of the meltdown instead of chasing it after it starts.
- Sudden nipping after a nice play session
- Zooming from room to room with no real aim
- Barking or whining when nothing obvious is wrong
- Grabbing clothes, rugs, or the lead
- Ignoring a toy they liked ten minutes ago
- Flopping down, then popping back up again
Those cues often mean your puppy needs less action, not more. Take them to the toilet, lower the noise, place them in their sleep spot, and let the body switch off. Many pups fall asleep within minutes once the room stops asking things from them.
What A Good Sleep Spot Looks Like
A good sleep spot is simple: safe, easy to reach, and boring in the best way. A crate can work well. So can a pen with a bed, or a bed tucked into a quiet corner.
PDSA’s first day and night advice says puppies often need a set bedtime, a quiet sleep area, and night toilet breaks during the first weeks. That fits many 11-week-old pups, especially if they’ve only just left their litter.
How To Build Better Sleep Without Overdoing It
Keep Wake Windows Short
At this age, one good hour awake can be plenty. Some puppies fade sooner. If you stack food, play, visitors, grooming, and training into one long stretch, sleep tends to get ragged and behavior tends to get sharp. Short, clean blocks work better.
Use A Simple Loop
Try this order:
- Toilet
- Food or water
- Five to fifteen minutes of play or training
- Another toilet trip
- Nap
That loop sounds plain because it is plain. Plain works. Your puppy gets enough stimulation to learn, then enough stillness to recover.
Don’t Chase A Tired Puppy With More Activity
Owners often see evening zoomies and think, “My pup still has energy to burn.” Sometimes that’s true. Plenty of the time, the opposite is true. A tired puppy can look wired. If biting and bouncing spike at the same hour every day, try shifting to a calm chew, a toilet trip, soft voices, and bed.
| If You Notice | Likely Reason | Next Move |
|---|---|---|
| Nipping ramps up at night | Overtired puppy | Toilet, dim lights, settle for a nap or bedtime |
| Short naps all day | Too much noise or too much handling | Move sleep to a quieter spot and cut the interruptions |
| Whining after being settled | May need the toilet or a brief reset | Take out quietly, then return to bed with no play |
| Falls asleep on the floor mid-play | Wake time ran too long | Shorten the next play block before nap time |
| Restless after late visitors | Too much stimulation | Give the next few hours a calm pace |
| Wakes early every day | Bedtime may be too early or there was an early noise | Test a small routine shift and keep mornings quiet |
When Extra Sleep Or Poor Sleep Needs A Vet Call
Most sleepy 11-week-old puppies are just being puppies. Still, a sharp change in sleep can point to illness. Call your vet if your pup is hard to wake, skips meals, has diarrhea, vomits, seems sore, cries when picked up, or goes flat and withdrawn. A puppy that cannot settle at all or pants when the room is cool needs a closer look.
One lazy day after a busy visit may be no big deal. A pattern that feels off, paired with appetite or toilet changes, deserves a call.
A Steady Rhythm Beats A Perfect Schedule
If you’re wondering whether your 11-week-old puppy is sleeping too much, the answer is usually no. At this age, long sleep totals are ordinary. The real goal is not keeping your pup awake. It’s setting a day that alternates short bursts of life with plenty of rest.
Once that rhythm clicks, many little problems start to shrink. Nipping gets milder. Bedtime gets smoother. Often, they just need sleep.
References & Sources
- American Kennel Club.“How to Make Sure Your Puppy Gets Enough Sleep.”States that puppies often sleep 18 to 20 hours a day and do well with naps after activity.
- American Kennel Club.“Puppy Schedule: Daily Routine for New Puppies.”Sets out regular feeding, toilet breaks, short play sessions, and planned nap time for young puppies.
- PDSA.“First Day And Night With Puppy.”Explains bedtime routine, quiet sleep space, early-night comfort, and the chance of night toilet breaks.
