Mini dachshunds usually pee every 2 to 6 hours by day, with puppies needing far more trips than healthy adults.
Mini dachshunds are small dogs with small tanks. That’s the plain truth. A young puppy may need to go out every hour or two when awake, while a settled adult often does fine with three to five bathroom trips across the day.
The part that trips owners up is this: there isn’t one magic number. Age, sleep, meals, play, water intake, crate time, weather, and house-training all change the rhythm. So if you’re asking how often your little sausage dog should pee, the best answer is an age-based range plus a watchful eye on your own dog’s pattern.
How Often Do Mini Dachshunds Pee At Each Age?
For most mini dachshunds, age matters more than the word “mini.” Young puppies have tiny bladders and shaky control. Adults can hold it much longer. The American Kennel Club notes that healthy adult dogs usually urinate three to five times a day, while puppies need many more breaks and often follow the month-plus-one rule during crate time.
That rule is simple: take your puppy’s age in months and add one. That gives you a rough upper limit for how many hours your puppy can stay dry in a crate. It is not a target for normal daytime freedom. When awake, most puppies still need breaks more often than that. AKC’s puppy potty training timeline lays that out clearly.
Mini dachshunds also tend to live close to the floor, move fast, and give short warning signs. You may get only a few seconds between sniffing and squatting. That makes timing matter just as much as bladder size.
What The Usual Range Looks Like
- 8 to 10 weeks: often every 45 to 90 minutes when awake.
- 10 to 12 weeks: often every 1 to 2 hours.
- 3 to 4 months: often every 2 to 3 hours.
- 5 to 6 months: often every 3 to 4 hours.
- Adult mini dachshunds: often every 4 to 6 hours by day, or about 3 to 5 outings in 24 hours.
Those ranges fit many dogs, not every dog. A puppy that just woke from a nap, drained a water bowl, and tore around the living room may need to pee right now, even if the clock says it’s “too soon.”
When You Should Expect An Extra Trip
VCA’s house-training advice says puppies need elimination breaks after waking, after meals or a big drink, during bursts of play, and every one to two hours when awake. That lines up with what most owners see at home: the bladder clock speeds up when the day gets busy. VCA’s house-training notes also point out that some puppies may need a trip every half hour during high-energy play.
If your mini dachshund is still young, build the day around those trigger moments instead of waiting for a signal that may come too late.
| Age Or Stage | Typical Daytime Pee Rhythm | What Owners Usually Notice |
|---|---|---|
| 8 weeks | About every 45 to 60 minutes when awake | Little warning, fast squats, many post-nap trips |
| 9 to 10 weeks | About every 60 to 90 minutes | Busy play brings sudden urges |
| 11 to 12 weeks | About every 1 to 2 hours | May stay dry a bit longer between meals |
| 3 months | About every 2 hours | Can start to follow a steady daytime rhythm |
| 4 months | About every 2 to 3 hours | Fewer random accidents with close supervision |
| 5 to 6 months | About every 3 to 4 hours | Better control, though play and drinks still reset the clock |
| 7 to 12 months | About every 4 hours for many dogs | House-training gets more reliable |
| Adult | About every 4 to 6 hours, or 3 to 5 times daily | Pattern is steady unless water, weather, or health shifts |
Why A Mini Dachshund May Pee More Than You Expect
Small dogs can look “fully trained” one week and have a rough day the next. That doesn’t always mean anything is wrong. It may just mean the schedule drifted. Dinner ran late. A nap stretched longer than usual. Rain slowed the potty trip. One miss turned into two.
Mini dachshunds also get distracted outdoors. They’ll start sniffing, chase a smell, forget to empty fully, then pee on the rug ten minutes after coming back in. If that sounds familiar, stay outside a little longer after the first squat so your dog has time to finish.
Common Pattern Shifts That Are Still Normal
- More peeing after heavy play
- More trips in cold or wet weather
- More urgency after a large drink
- Shorter daytime gaps during puppy teething and growth spurts
- A brief setback after a house move, travel day, or new routine
Most owners do best with a written potty log for a few days. Jot down wake time, meals, drinks, outings, accidents, and dry stretches. A pattern usually pops out fast, and once you see it, the schedule gets easier to fix.
How To Set A Potty Schedule That Actually Works
A good potty plan is boring on paper and golden in real life. Feed at steady times. Take your mini dachshund to the same toilet spot. Wait quietly. Reward the second the job is done. Then give a few minutes of freedom or play after the pee, not before. That teaches your dog why that outdoor stop matters.
For puppies, this rhythm works well:
- Out first thing in the morning
- Out after every meal
- Out after naps
- Out after big drinks
- Out after rowdy play
- Out before crate time
- Out right before bed
Don’t wait for crying at the door as your main cue. Many mini dachshunds never give a loud warning. Their cue may be a quick circle, a stare, a burst of sniffing, or a sudden trot toward a quiet corner.
If you use a crate, stay realistic. The crate can help build bladder control, but it won’t make a young puppy “hold it” on command. The schedule still does the heavy lifting.
| Situation | What It Often Means | Best Next Step |
|---|---|---|
| Pees right after waking | Normal full bladder | Carry or leash straight to the potty spot |
| Pees twice on one outing | Did not empty fully at first | Stay out a few extra minutes |
| Accident 10 minutes after play | Stimulation reset the bladder clock | Schedule a playtime potty break |
| Frequent squats with little urine | Could be irritation or infection | Call your vet |
| Sudden house-soiling in a trained dog | Schedule slip or a health issue | Restart the routine and watch for other signs |
When Frequent Peeing Stops Being Normal
A mini dachshund that suddenly starts asking out every few minutes is not just being stubborn. That kind of change deserves attention. According to VCA, dogs with urinary tract infections may try to urinate often, strain, whine, pass tiny amounts, lick the area a lot, or have strong-smelling urine. VCA’s UTI page for dogs also notes that a break in house-training can be a warning sign.
Call your vet soon if your dog:
- Strains to pee
- Produces only drops
- Has blood in the urine
- Cries while peeing
- Starts having accidents after months of staying dry
- Drinks far more water than usual
- Seems dull, off food, or restless
That last point matters. The useful question is not only “How often does my mini dachshund pee?” It is also “Has my dog’s pattern changed?” A stable routine tells you a lot. A sudden swing tells you even more.
What Most Owners Can Expect Over Time
By about six months, many mini dachshunds can stay dry for longer stretches and settle into a rhythm you can count on. Some get there sooner. Some take longer, especially with inconsistent timing or mixed signals about where to go.
Adult mini dachshunds usually land in a simple groove: a morning pee, one or two daytime outings, an evening trip, and a last call before bed. That’s why adult dogs often fit the normal three-to-five-times-a-day range. Puppies are a whole different story, and that’s where most frustration lives.
If you match the schedule to the dog in front of you, progress tends to come steadily. Not in a perfect straight line. But steadily enough that accidents get rarer, warnings get clearer, and both of you relax.
References & Sources
- American Kennel Club.“Puppy Potty Training Schedule: A Timeline for Housebreaking Your Puppy.”Used for the month-plus-one crate rule, potty timing after meals and naps, and normal training expectations by age.
- VCA Animal Hospitals.“House Training for Puppies and Dogs.”Used for awake-time potty frequency, post-meal timing, play-related breaks, and practical house-training routines.
- VCA Animal Hospitals.“Urinary Tract Infections (UTIs) in Dogs.”Used for warning signs such as frequent urination, straining, strong odor, and sudden breaks in house-training.
