Easy Dog Enrichment Activities for Rainy Indoor Days
Slug: dog-enrichment-activities-indoor-rainy-daysPillar: Pet Care > Beginner Pet GuidesKeyword: dog enrichment activities indoorsExcerpt: Keep your dog mentally stimulated and calm on rainy days with these easy indoor enrichment activities that cost little or nothing.Tagline: Keep your dog happy and stimulated without going outside
Dogs need more than physical exercise — they need mental stimulation too. A bored dog is often a destructive or anxious dog. On rainy days when a long walk isn't possible, enrichment activities can tire out your dog's brain just as effectively as a run around the park. Here are the best indoor activities to try, no matter your dog's size or breed.
What Is Dog Enrichment?
Enrichment means giving your dog activities that engage their natural instincts — sniffing, chasing, problem-solving, and foraging. A sniff-heavy activity, for example, is genuinely tiring for a dog; their nose processes information at a level that uses real mental energy. A 15-minute sniff game can equal a 30-minute walk in terms of how calm and settled it leaves your dog.
1. Snuffle Mat Feeding
Instead of putting your dog's kibble in a bowl, scatter it across a snuffle mat (a mat made of fabric strips that hides the food). Your dog has to use their nose to find every piece. You can buy snuffle mats online from around £10, or make one yourself using a rubber sink mat and strips of fleece fabric.
2. The Muffin Tin Game
Place a few treats in some cups of a muffin tin, then cover every cup with a tennis ball. Your dog has to figure out which cups have treats and remove the balls to get them. It's simple, free, and surprisingly engaging for dogs of any age.
3. Hide and Seek With Treats or Toys
While your dog waits in another room (or stays in a sit-stay), hide a handful of treats or their favourite toy around your home. Then let them search. Start easy — behind a cushion, under a chair — and make it progressively harder as they get better at the game.
4. Kong or Licki Mat
Stuff a Kong toy with a mix of kibble, peanut butter (xylitol-free), banana, and plain yogurt, then freeze it overnight. A frozen Kong can keep most dogs occupied for 20–40 minutes. Licki mats work similarly and are easier to clean.
5. Indoor Nose Work
Nose work is a scent-based activity used by professional trainers. The basic version at home: take three cardboard boxes, hide a treat in one, and let your dog sniff them out. Once they consistently find it, add more boxes and use more complex hiding spots. This activity can be levelled up indefinitely.
6. Training New Tricks
Learning uses a lot of mental energy. A 10-minute training session teaching your dog a new trick — spin, paw, touch your hand, find it — is deeply satisfying for most dogs. Keep sessions short (5–10 minutes) and end on a success. Positive reinforcement only.
7. Tug of War
A game of tug with a rope toy is a great way to exercise your dog indoors and build your bond. Contrary to old advice, tug does not make dogs aggressive — it actually builds impulse control when played with clear rules (you start it, you end it, the dog drops on cue).
8. The "Which Hand" Game
Put a treat in one hand, hold both fists out, and let your dog choose. When they paw or nose the correct hand, open it and reward them. It sounds simple, but it engages concentration and nose work simultaneously.
For more pet care guides, visit our Pet Care section. And if you're just getting started with a new dog, our Practical Living hub has plenty of tips for setting up your home.
FAQ
How long should indoor enrichment sessions be?
Most enrichment activities work best in 10–20 minute sessions. Dogs can get frustrated if an activity is too hard or too long. Observe your dog — if they disengage, end the session positively and try again later.
Are enrichment toys safe to leave with my dog unsupervised?
Some are, some aren't. Kongs and snuffle mats are generally safe unsupervised. Cardboard boxes, paper bags, and toys with small parts should be used under supervision only.
My dog isn't interested in enrichment activities. What should I try?
Start with high-value treats (cheese, cooked chicken) and very easy challenges. Some dogs need to build confidence in puzzle-solving before they engage enthusiastically. If disinterest persists, check with your vet — it can occasionally signal underlying anxiety or pain.
Do enrichment activities work for puppies?
Absolutely, and they're especially valuable for puppies who can't yet go on long walks (before full vaccination). Keep sessions very short (3–5 minutes) and very easy to avoid frustration.










