A little preparation goes a long way before your puppy walks through the door. Puppy-proof your home by securing electrical cords, removing toxic plants, and blocking off areas that are not yet safe for exploration. Purchase the basics: a crate sized for your puppy’s adult size, food and water bowls, a collar with an ID tag, a leash, and age-appropriate chew toys. Choose a veterinarian before your puppy arrives so you can book that first appointment right away.
The first week is about adjustment. Keep the home calm and limit visitors so your puppy can settle in without being overwhelmed. Establish a consistent routine for feeding, bathroom breaks, and sleep from day one. Puppies thrive on predictability. Schedule your first wellness visit with Universal Pet Hospital within the first few days of bringing your puppy home. Early examination allows us to check for congenital issues, confirm vaccination history from the breeder or shelter, and build a preventive care plan tailored to your puppy. Call (650) 362-7969 to book. [Link to: /services/pet-care-services/]
The following schedule is a general guide based on AVMA recommendations for California. Your puppy’s exact schedule may vary based on their age at first visit, prior vaccination history, and lifestyle. We will confirm the right plan at your first appointment.
| Age | Vaccine | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6 to 8 weeks | DA2PP (distemper, adenovirus, parvovirus, parainfluenza) | Core | First of a puppy series. Often given by breeder or shelter before adoption. |
| 10 to 12 weeks | DA2PP booster + Leptospirosis (first dose) | Core + Lifestyle | Lepto is strongly recommended in Palo Alto due to local wildlife activity. Two-dose series required. |
| 14 to 16 weeks | DA2PP booster + Leptospirosis booster + Rabies | Core | Final puppy DA2PP. Rabies required by California law at or after 12 weeks. Must be performed by a licensed veterinarian. |
| 12 to 16 months | DA2PP booster + Leptospirosis annual + Rabies (if 1-year vaccine used) | Core | First adult boosters. Rabies may be given as a 1-year or 3-year vaccine depending on the product used. |
| Every 1 to 3 years | DA2PP (per veterinary recommendation) + Rabies (per California law) | Core | Adult schedule. California requires rabies to be current at all times. |
In addition to core vaccines, some puppies benefit from lifestyle vaccines based on where they live and how they spend their time. In Palo Alto, we pay particular attention to the following.
Leptospirosis is a bacterial disease spread through the urine of infected wildlife, including raccoons, rats, skunks, and coyotes, all of which are active throughout Palo Alto and the surrounding hills. Dogs typically contract it by drinking from or walking through contaminated standing water. After the Bay Area’s wet winter seasons, puddled water in parks such as Mitchell Park, Greer Park, and the Pearson-Arastradero Preserve can pose a real risk. Santa Clara County has confirmed dog cases, and the American Animal Hospital Association recently updated its guidelines to recommend leptospirosis vaccination for all dogs. We recommend it as part of your puppy’s routine schedule. The vaccine requires an initial two-dose series and annual boosters to remain protective.
Bordetella is a highly contagious respiratory infection spread through close contact with other dogs. If your puppy will visit dog parks such as Peers Park or Hoover Park, attend puppy classes, go to grooming facilities, or be boarded, Bordetella vaccination is strongly recommended. It is available as an injectable or intranasal vaccine.
Canine influenza (dog flu) is worth discussing if your puppy will spend time around groups of dogs. Ask us at your next appointment whether your puppy’s social schedule warrants this vaccine.
Spaying and neutering provides significant health benefits, including reducing the risk of certain cancers and infections, and helps prevent unintended litters. The right timing depends on your puppy’s breed and size. Larger breeds benefit from waiting longer to allow hormones to support healthy skeletal development. Universal Pet Hospital performs all spay and neuter procedures with full anesthesia monitoring to keep your puppy safe throughout.
| Breed Size | Adult Weight | Recommended Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Small breed | Under 25 lbs | 5 to 6 months |
| Medium breed | 25 to 50 lbs | 6 months |
| Large breed | 50 to 100 lbs | 9 to 15 months, after growth plates close |
| Giant breed | Over 100 lbs | 18 to 24 months |
These are general guidelines. We will help you choose the right timing for your individual puppy at your wellness visit. [Link to: /services/surgical-services/]
Puppies have very different nutritional needs than adult dogs. Look for a commercial food labeled “complete and balanced for puppies” or “for all life stages” meeting AAFCO (Association of American Feed Control Officials) standards. This label means the food meets minimum nutrient requirements for a growing puppy.
If your puppy has specific health needs such as a food sensitivity or a condition requiring special nutritional support, our team can help you select an appropriate therapeutic diet. Speak with us before making significant diet changes. [Link to: /services/nutrition-counseling/]
Parasite prevention is one of the most important things you can do for your puppy and your household. Many parasites are zoonotic, meaning they can spread from pets to people.
Roundworms and hookworms are extremely common in puppies, including those from reputable breeders. Most puppies are born with them or acquire them from their mother’s milk. We recommend fecal testing at your first visit and deworming as indicated. A regular monthly preventive helps control ongoing risk, especially in puppies who visit dog parks.
Fleas are a year-round concern in the Bay Area’s mild climate. Ticks, including the western black-legged tick (the Lyme disease vector), are present in wooded and grassy areas throughout the region, including Foothills Park and the Pearson-Arastradero Preserve. Year-round preventive is the most reliable approach.
Heartworm is transmitted by mosquitoes and is present in California, particularly in areas near standing water and in warmer months. Year-round heartworm prevention is recommended and available in convenient monthly products that often cover intestinal parasites as well.
Giardia is a waterborne intestinal parasite common in areas where dogs share water sources, including dog parks. Signs include soft stools, diarrhea, and weight loss. If your puppy visits Palo Alto’s dog parks regularly, periodic fecal screening is a good idea.
Children are at higher risk of contracting roundworms and hookworms from infected soil. Wash hands thoroughly after handling puppies, and keep children from playing in areas where dogs have used the bathroom.
Consistency is the foundation of successful house training. Puppies have small bladders and need to go out frequently, generally every one to two hours for very young puppies, and after every meal, nap, and play session.
A crate is not a punishment. Used correctly, it becomes your puppy’s safe space and dramatically speeds up house training. Introduce the crate gradually with positive experiences. A puppy can generally hold their bladder for one hour per month of age, plus one, so a 2-month-old puppy needs a break every three hours at most.
The socialization window closes at approximately 12 weeks of age. During this period, positive exposures to new people, sounds, surfaces, animals, and situations shape your puppy’s confidence for life. Missing this window is one of the most common causes of fear-based behavior in adult dogs.
Socialization is so important that the American Veterinary Society of Animal Behavior recommends starting puppy classes as early as 7 to 8 weeks of age, provided the facility requires vaccination records and the puppy has had at least one dose of core vaccines. Avoid dog parks and unknown dogs on the ground until your puppy’s vaccine series is complete at 14 to 16 weeks.
Teach your puppy to accept handling from day one. Practice touching paws, looking in ears, and opening the mouth gently, pairing each touch with a small food reward. This makes veterinary visits, nail trims, and grooming much easier throughout your dog’s life. Dr. Randhawa is Fear Free Certified, which means our team uses low-stress handling techniques at every appointment to help your puppy build positive associations with veterinary care from the start.
Supervise every interaction between your puppy and children, especially young ones. Teach children to approach the puppy calmly, to sit on the floor rather than reaching down, and to let the puppy come to them. Give your puppy a safe retreat space, such as their crate, that children are taught not to enter. A puppy that feels cornered or overstimulated may nip, which is a normal puppy behavior, but one that requires consistent redirection.
Introduce your new puppy to resident dogs on neutral ground, such as a quiet street or park, rather than inside the home. Keep early interactions brief and positive. Watch for stiff body language, whale eyes, or growling, and separate calmly if either dog becomes uncomfortable. Most dogs adjust within one to two weeks.
Keep your puppy on leash during initial cat introductions and allow your cat to exit the room freely at any point. Give your cat vertical escape routes such as cat trees or shelves and a puppy-free zone with their litter box and food. Rushing this process often leads to long-term tension between pets. Take it at the cat’s pace.
Puppies explore the world with their mouths, which means they will occasionally swallow things they should not. Foreign-body ingestion is one of the most common reasons puppies require emergency veterinary care.
Signs of a possible blockage: vomiting, loss of appetite, straining to defecate, abdominal pain, or lethargy. If you see any of these signs, call Universal Pet Hospital immediately at (650) 362-7969. Do not wait to see if it resolves on its own. [Link to: /services/emergency-urgent-care/]
For a full list of toxic plants, visit the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center or call them at (888) 426-4435 if you suspect your puppy has ingested something harmful. [Link to: /pet-resources/]
Puppies are born without teeth. Their 28 deciduous (baby) teeth begin to erupt around 3 to 6 weeks of age. Between 3 and 7 months, these are replaced by 42 permanent adult teeth. Teething puppies chew to relieve discomfort. Provide appropriate chew toys and redirect any chewing of furniture or clothing immediately.
Occasionally a baby tooth does not fall out on its own when the adult tooth erupts beneath it. This is called a retained deciduous tooth and is most common in small breeds. It can cause crowding, misalignment, and early dental disease. If you notice two teeth in the same position, let us know at your next appointment. Retained teeth are typically removed while your puppy is under anesthesia for another procedure such as their spay or neuter.
Some puppies develop bite misalignment as their jaw grows. Significant malocclusion can cause pain and difficulty eating and may require veterinary dental evaluation.
Small soft lumps at the belly button or in the groin area may be hernias. Many small umbilical hernias close on their own, but some require surgical repair. We will check for hernias at your puppy’s first examination.
In male puppies, one or both testicles should descend into the scrotum by 8 weeks of age. If a testicle has not descended by 16 weeks, it is considered retained. Retained testicles have a significantly higher risk of becoming cancerous and must be removed surgically. This is another reason neutering is recommended.
Starting a grooming routine early is one of the best investments you can make for your dog’s comfort and behavior at the vet and the groomer throughout their life.
Professional grooming timing depends on your dog’s coat. Double-coated and long-haired breeds typically benefit from professional grooming every 6 to 8 weeks. For puppies that are anxious about grooming, or dogs with matting that requires sedation for safe removal, Universal Pet Hospital offers medical grooming services in a calm, veterinary setting. [Link to: /services/medical-grooming-services/]
Palo Alto is a beautiful place to raise a puppy, with a wealth of parks and trails. A few local health considerations are worth knowing before you explore.
Palo Alto’s parks and neighborhoods are home to raccoons, rats, skunks, and coyotes, all of which can carry leptospirosis bacteria in their urine. After wet winter and spring weather, standing water in city parks can become contaminated. Santa Clara County has confirmed dog cases in recent years. Prevent your puppy from drinking from puddles, ponds, or streams at Mitchell Park, Greer Park, the Pearson-Arastradero Preserve, or anywhere standing water is present. The leptospirosis vaccine, which we recommend as part of your puppy’s routine schedule, is the most effective protection available.
Foxtail grass seeds are a serious hazard for dogs in California, particularly from late spring through summer when the grasses dry out. Their barbed awns can embed in paws, work their way into the skin, enter the nose or ears, or even migrate into internal tissues, causing serious infection. After any outing to grassy areas, especially the Pearson-Arastradero Preserve or Foothills Park, check your puppy’s paws, between the toes, ears, and muzzle carefully. Signs of a foxtail include sudden lameness, head shaking, pawing at the face, or a swelling that appears without explanation.
Rattlesnakes are present in Santa Clara County, particularly in foothill and open space areas including Foothills Park and the Pearson-Arastradero Preserve. Keep your dog on leash on trails, stay on the path, and do not allow your dog to investigate rock piles, dense brush, or log piles. If your dog is bitten, keep them as calm as possible and get to a veterinarian immediately. Call (650) 362-7969 during clinic hours. Rattlesnake bites are time-critical emergencies.
Coyotes are active throughout Palo Alto, particularly near the hills and open spaces at dawn and dusk. Small dogs and puppies are at greatest risk. Keep small dogs on leash in areas where coyotes have been reported, and do not leave any dog unattended in an unfenced yard after dark.
Palo Alto has four fenced off-leash dog parks: Mitchell Park Dog Park, Greer Park Dog Park, Hoover Park Dog Park, and Peers Park Dog Park (the newest and largest at 0.7 acres of grass). Dog parks are wonderful for socialization but carry a higher risk of disease transmission through shared water sources and close contact. Wait until your puppy’s vaccine series is complete at 14 to 16 weeks before visiting any dog park. Once vaccinated, consider bringing your own water, and skip the visit if your puppy is unwell.
Under Palo Alto Municipal Code 6.16.010, all dogs four months and older must be licensed with the city and vaccinated against rabies. Licensing is renewed annually or in line with your dog’s rabies vaccine validity. Dogs must be kept on leash in all public places except designated off-leash areas (Municipal Code 6.16.100). The maximum number of dogs per household in Palo Alto is three.
Dr. Randhawa is Fear Free Certified, which means our team uses gentle, low-stress handling techniques and takes your puppy’s emotional state seriously at every appointment. We go at your puppy’s pace, use food rewards throughout examinations, and give your puppy space to settle if they need a moment. You will never be rushed.
Happy visits are brief, low-stakes visits to the clinic where your puppy gets weighed, receives treats from the staff, and goes home. No needles, no stressful procedures, just positive associations with the clinic environment. These visits are an underutilized tool for building a puppy that looks forward to vet visits rather than dreading them. Ask us about scheduling happy visits between wellness appointments.
Call Universal Pet Hospital at (650) 362-7969 if you have any concerns about your puppy’s health. We accept urgent cases for dogs during clinic hours, Monday and Wednesday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday from 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. We are closed Tuesday. [Link to: /services/emergency-urgent-care/]
Pet insurance is one of the best investments you can make for your puppy, and the earlier you purchase it, the better. Most policies do not cover pre-existing conditions, so buying before your first veterinary visit, or as early as possible, gives you the broadest coverage. The following US providers are among those commonly used by our clients (this is an educational list, not an endorsement):
Universal Pet Hospital accepts Trupanion with direct billing, which means we can bill them directly at the time of your visit. Flexible financing options are also available.