Why Does My Puppy Sleep Over 10 Hours a Day?
Understanding Your Newborn Puppy's Sleep Patterns — and When to Worry
If you've just brought home (or are caring for) a newborn puppy, you might be alarmed by how much it sleeps. A puppy under one month old can sleep 18 to 22 hours a day — barely waking except to nurse. Before you panic, know this: for a young puppy, this is completely normal. Here's the science behind why.
(Under 4 weeks)
Eyes & Ears
Environment Temp
Expected
1. Physical Development — The #1 Reason
🧠 Brain & Body Build During Sleep
The first month of a puppy's life is the golden period for nervous system, bone, and muscle development. Just like a computer needs to reboot during system installation, a puppy's body does its most critical construction work during deep sleep.
During deep sleep stages, growth hormone secretion peaks, directly promoting tissue growth, bone elongation, and muscle fiber development. Every hour of sleep is an hour of active construction — not idleness.
⚡ Limited Energy Reserves
A newborn puppy's stomach is tiny. It can only hold a small amount of milk at a time, yet its metabolism runs incredibly fast. Here's the math:
- Most energy → growth, not activity
- Waking activities are exhausting — just nursing and crawling burns a massive portion of available calories
- Crash after feeding is normal — falling asleep immediately after nursing is the body's way of redirecting energy to development
2. Immune System Is Still Developing
🛡️ Sleep = Immune Investment
During the first few weeks of life, a puppy relies primarily on colostrum (first milk) from the mother for passive immunity. Its own immune system won't begin functioning independently until several weeks in.
At this fragile stage, sleep serves a vital protective function:
- Reduces energy expenditure — Resources saved from activity are redirected to immune function
- Concentrates defenses — The body can focus on fighting potential pathogens instead of powering movement
- Counterintuitive truth — A puppy that seems hyperactive and refuses to sleep may actually be showing an abnormal health signal
3. Limited Senses & Mobility
👀 Just Opening Eyes to the World
Newborn puppies are born with their eyes and ear canals closed. They typically begin opening around 10–16 days, and even then, vision and hearing are extremely blurry and underdeveloped.
Vision
Eyes open at 10–14 days, but sight is very blurry for weeks. Puppies can barely distinguish shapes, let alone explore.
Hearing
Ear canals open at 14–16 days. Sounds are muffled and difficult to locate. The world is still largely silent.
Mobility
Limbs are weak and uncoordinated. Puppies can only crawl — not walk. Exploration is physically impossible at this stage.
With such limited ability to perceive or interact with the environment, the natural and logical response is simple: eat, sleep, repeat. There's simply nothing else for a newborn puppy to do — and that's perfectly fine.
Puppy Sleep Timeline: What to Expect
0–7 Days: Neonatal Period
Sleeps 22 hours/day. Eyes and ears closed. Can only crawl in small circles to find warmth and milk. Essentially a "sleep-eat" machine.
7–14 Days: Transitional Period
Eyes begin to open (still very blurry). Sleep drops slightly to 20–22 hours/day. Begins to respond to light and movement.
14–21 Days: Awareness Period
Eyes fully open, ears begin functioning. Sleep decreases to 18–20 hours/day. First wobbly attempts at walking. Starts noticing littermates.
21–28 Days: Socialization Begins
Sleep around 16–18 hours/day. Walking improves. Begins playing with littermates. More awake time, but still sleeps the majority of the day.
🚨 When Should You Be Concerned?
While heavy sleeping is normal, certain red flags warrant an immediate vet visit. Don't ignore these warning signs:
| Warning Sign | What to Look For | Urgency |
|---|---|---|
| ✗ Won't Nurse | Sleeps so deeply it can't be woken, or wakes but shows no interest in nursing | High — Seek vet immediately |
| ✗ No Weight Gain | Weight stays flat or drops despite regular sleep and feeding | High — Possible malnutrition |
| ✗ Physical Symptoms | Vomiting, diarrhea, painful crying during sleep, rapid breathing, hot dry nose | High — Possible illness |
| ✗ Extreme Weakness | Even when awake, can't lift its head; limbs feel cold to the touch | Critical — Emergency |
🛏️ Keeping Your Sleeping Puppy Safe
Newborn puppies cannot regulate their own body temperature. This makes the sleeping environment critically important:
- Temperature: 29–32°C (84–90°F) — Use a heating pad under half the bedding (so puppies can move away if too warm)
- No cold drafts — Keep the whelping box away from windows, doors, and air conditioning vents
- Clean bedding daily — Soiled bedding invites bacteria and infection
- Prevent crushing — Monitor the mother dog closely; she can accidentally lie on a puppy. Use a whelping box with pig rails (safety rails)
- Check on them regularly — A quick visual check every 2–3 hours ensures no puppy is separated from the litter or in distress
The Bottom Line
For a puppy under one month old, sleeping 18–22 hours a day is not a problem — it's a necessity. Their bodies are working overtime behind the scenes: building the brain, strengthening bones, developing immunity, and conserving every calorie for growth.
Don't worry if: your puppy sleeps almost all day, wakes only to eat, and gains weight steadily.
Do worry if: your puppy won't nurse, loses weight, shows physical distress, or seems extremely weak even when awake.
That tiny sleeping ball of fur? It's not being lazy. It's building the foundation for a lifetime of tail wags, zoomies, and unconditional love. Let it sleep.
