One of the best and most humbling things a family can do is bring home an Australian Labradoodle puppy. One week you’re holding a fluffy 8-week-old baby in your arm. The next thing you know, you’re chasing a young dog who is full of happiness and confidence across the kitchen because she thinks your shoes are chew toys.
What happens in the middle is nothing short of amazing.
This guide shows you important events in your Australian Labradoodle puppy’s first year, from when they leave us to when they are a comfortable 1-year-old. This month-by-month overview will help you feel ready, confident, and excited about every step of the journey, whether you’re on a waitlist, just got approved, or are bringing your puppy home next week.
What Makes the Australian Labradoodle Different From the Start
Before we get into the monthly milestones, it’s important to know why this breed grows the way it does and why the groundwork that is built before you get your puppy is so important.
The Australian Labradoodle is not a crossbreed that was made in the first generation. It takes generations of careful, planned breeding to develop a real multigenerational Australian Labradoodle. This means mixing genes to make a dog that is always smart, gentle, intuitive, and doesn’t shed much or at all. Multigen lines are much more predictable than F1 or F1B doodles when it comes to coat type, size, and temperament.
This is important for development because puppies raised by ethical breeders come to your home already shaped by weeks of careful socialization, early neurological stimulation (ENS), early scent introduction (ESI), and structured exposure to the sights and sounds of everyday family life. That head start has a direct effect on how quickly they adjust, how confident they feel, and how easily the first year goes.
Even the best-prepared puppy still needs you, though. The first year is a team effort, and the best thing you can do is understand what your puppy is going through each month.
The First 8 Weeks: What Happened Before You Arrived
Most families get to know their Australian Labradoodle puppy when it is 8 weeks old. They don’t always know how much has already happened by that time.
Puppies are born into a world of smells and warmth for the first two weeks of their lives. Their eyes and ears are still closed. They sleep almost all the time, nurse all the time, and depend on their mother for everything from keeping them warm to feeding them to making them feel safe, which is important for their emotional growth.
Responsible breeders use Early Neurological Stimulation (ENS) from days 3 to 16. This is a routine developed by the U.S. Military and utilized in the U.S. Military’s “Super Dog” programs to produce dogs with superior performance, health, and stress tolerance. It includes mild, short handling exercises to make the nervous system stronger, help the dog handle stress better, and help it adjust to new situations over time. Many breeders also start Early Scent Introduction (ESI), which helps the brain grow and gets the puppy ready to be naturally curious.
Eyes open by the third and fourth weeks. Hearing gets better. Puppies start to play with their litter mates by wagging their tails, barking, and responding to human sounds. This is when your dog’s emotional impressions start to form, which will be the basis for how he or she interacts with the world.
Weeks 5 and 6 are full with new things to learn and people to meet. Puppies start to play-fight, learn how to not bite, explore different sounds and textures, and have their first gentle introductions to grooming, collars, and crates. How the babies are treated during this time has a direct effect on how calm or reactive they will be as adults.
By weeks 7 and 8, personality traits start to stay constant. Some puppies are brave explorers. Others are quiet and watchful. Some are eager and want nourishment, while others are more independent. At this point, responsible breeders do temperament tests to ensure the perfect family for every puppy. This is a step that helps both sides succeed in the long run.
This extensive list of Australian Labradoodle puppy milestones from birth to 8 weeks is one of the best tools for learning about what ethical breeders do during these important first eight weeks.
When your puppy comes home at 8 weeks, they are not a blank slate. They are a little, emotionally ready friend who is ready to bond, but they also need a steady schedule, patience, and a smooth adjustment.
Month 2 (Weeks 8–12): The Arrival, Adjustment & Socialization Window
What’s happening developmentally: Your puppy is in the middle of the primary socialization window, which is one of the most important times in their life. The brain is quite open to new experiences between the ages of 8 and 12 weeks. What your puppy sees and does now, whether good or bad, will leave a lasting impression on people, places, and situations.
Homecoming Week: Set the Tone Early
The first two days at home should not be full of excitement, company, or bustle. Your puppy has just left behind everything it knows: its mother, litter mates, and the sounds and smells of the only home it has ever known. Some puppies will calm down fast. Others might talk a lot at night, sleep more than they should, or be overwhelmed
Both are normal. Your role is to make them feel comfortable, calm, and at ease.
First week priorities:
- Get into a regimen right away. Give food at the same time every day. Every 60 to 90 minutes, after every nap, and within 5 minutes of every meal, you should take them out for potty breaks. The rhythm is more important than being perfect.
- Train your dog to use a crate from the first day. The crate is not a punishment; it’s your puppy’s home. Give treats inside, bedding that smells like home, and let them take brief naps throughout the day while you watch them. Then, expect success at night.
- Strengthen what they already know. Good breeders give puppies a good start by teaching them to mand, recall, and get used to wearing a lightweight collar. Continue where they left off. Keep training sessions short, about 1 to 2 minutes, and make sure the energy is calm and gratifying.
- Limit introductions that are overwhelming. Add one new thing at a time. A new person. A new surface. A different sound. Puppies this age need a lot of different experiences, but not all at once.
Labradoodle Potty Training Schedule (Month 2)
The best schedule for labradoodle puppies aged 8 to 12 weeks is:
- Morning: Get out right away when you wake up
- After every meal: Out in 5 minutes
- After each sleep, out in 5 minutes
- After playing, go outside every 30 to 45 minutes.
- Before bed: Always the last thing to do at night
Accidents will happen. Don’t discipline them; redirect them instead. They are not being disobedient; their bladder control is still growing at this age. They just can’t hold it yet.
Vaccination Schedule — Month 2
The breeder’s vet should have already given your puppy its first series of immunizations before you receive your puppy. This usually comprises the first round of DHPP, which stands for distemper, hepatitis, parvovirus, and parainfluenza. From here, your vet will set up the follow-up series.
Important: Keep your puppy away from unvaccinated dogs and places where dogs that you don’t know often go until it has had all of its vaccinations (usually by 16 weeks). Socialization is still very important, but you should do it safely by introducing your puppy to new people and places slowly, taking them to puppy classes that require vaccinations, and carrying them in places where they are more likely to get hurt.
Month 3 (Weeks 12–16): Confidence Builds, Boundaries Are Tested
What’s happening developmentally: The window for socialization starts to close at 12 to 14 weeks. Puppies usually think of things that happen before this moment as “normal.” After this stage, new things are more likely to make puppies feel cautious or even scared. Now is not the time to slow down; now is the moment to make your puppy’s world bigger on purpose.
Socialization Checklist for Months 3–4
Your goal is to get as many of the following things as possible in a positive, low-pressure way:
People:
- Men, women, children of different ages
- People wearing hats, glasses, uniforms, hoods
- People using crutches, wheelchairs, umbrellas
Environments:
- Tile, hardwood, carpet, grass, gravel, stairs
- Elevators, escalators (sound exposure), parking lots
- Outdoor cafes, pet-friendly stores, parks
Sounds:
- Vacuum cleaners, blenders, doorbells, thunderstorms (recordings)
- Traffic, construction noise, children playing
Handling:
- Ears, paws, mouth, tail handled regularly
- Brief nail trims and brushing sessions
- Gentle introduction to grooming tools
Positive is the main word in all of this. Don’t give your dog more than they can handle. Look for symptoms of stress, such yawning, whale eye, a tucked tail, or frozen. Give them some time to calm down before you try again.
Training Milestones — Month 3
Most Australian Labradoodle puppies are ready to learn more advanced commands by the time they are 12 to 16 weeks old. Their attention spans are still limited (2–5 minutes per session), but they are very interested in food and want to play.
Commands to introduce:
- Sit, down, stay (short duration)
- Come (recall, always rewarded generously)
- Leave it, drop it
- Touch (nose to palm)
- Place (settling on a designated mat or bed)
At this point, only use positive reinforcement. This breed does best with marker training (“yes!” or a clicker) and little, high-value goodies. Families who want a more organized foundation for their puppy can get expert help during these important first few months from River Days’ puppy training choices.
Months 4–5: The Teething Stage & First Fear Period
What’s happening developmentally: Two things are happening at the same time, and both need your patience.
Teething (Months 3–6)
Your dog will start to lose its baby teeth and grow in its adult teeth about 3 to 4 months. This process is typically painful, and chewing becomes a habit that can’t be stopped. Baseboards, chair legs, shoes, and hands are all fair game.
How you deal with teething affects how they bite for the rest of their life. Don’t let them chew on your hands, even if it’s gentle. Redirect right away and keep doing it to the right chew toys. Kongs, bully sticks, bully horns, and rubber chew toys that are frozen are all great choices. Changing things up keeps them interested.
Leash training is a natural part of this time. Walking your puppy provides them a good way to use up their energy and helps them stop chewing on things they shouldn’t.
The First Fear Period (Weeks 8–10 and again around Months 4–5)
In their first year, Australian Labradoodle puppies usually go through two fear impact periods. The first one happens between 8 and 10 weeks, which is frequently when they come home. The second usually shows up between 4 and 5 months.
A puppy that used to be confident around everything may suddenly be afraid of things, sounds, or people they know during a fear stage. This is typical for the brain; it’s rearranging and strengthening the circuits that help it find threats.
What to do:
- Do not force your puppy to confront what frightens them
- Do not over-coddle or reassure excessively (this can confirm that fear is warranted)
- Remain calm and matter-of-fact. “Oh, that’s just a trash can. Isn’t that interesting?”
- Allow your puppy to approach at their own pace and reward curiosity generously
Fear phases don’t last forever, but how you deal with them can determine whether your dog grows up to be a calm, confident adult or a nervous, reactive one.
Month 5 (Weeks 16–20): Physical Growth & Grooming Introduction
Developmentally, most Australian Labradoodles have grown a lot by the time they are 5 months old, but they will continue to grow until they are 12 to 18 months old. This is also when their adult coat starts to show up.
How Big Do Australian Labradoodles Get?
One of the most common questions from families in the waiting stages is about size. The answer depends on the specific pairing:
- Miniature Australian Labradoodles: typically 15–25 lbs, 14–16 inches at the shoulder
- Medium Australian Labradoodles: typically 25–45 lbs, 17–20 inches at the shoulder
A good, multigenerational breeder will provide size estimates based on the actual parents and pedigree of your litter, not just the average size for the breed.
Labradoodle Grooming: Starting in the First Year
Before the adult coat fully comes in and before grooming resistance becomes a habit, month 5 is a great time to start a regular grooming program.
First-year grooming basics:
- Brushing: 2–3 times per week minimum. Daily during coat transitions (typically 8–14 months when the puppy coat shifts to adult fleece or wool)
- First professional groom: Ideally around 4–5 months, after vaccines are complete. Keep the first appointment short and low-stress
- Bathing: Every 4–6 weeks, or as needed. Use dog-specific shampoo. We recommend Life’s Abundance.
- Ear cleaning: Weekly inspection; cleaning every 2–4 weeks or as recommended by your vet.
- Nail trims: Every 3–4 weeks. Start handling paws daily from day one to prevent handling sensitivity
The idea in the first year isn’t to give your dog a beautiful haircut; it’s to make sure they connect grooming with quiet, happy times. Breeders who start desensitization early (such handling paws, exposing the dog to brushes, and introducing nail tools) give you a big head start that makes grooming much less stressful later on.
Months 6–8: Adolescence Arrives
What’s happening developmentally: You might see a change between 6 and 8 months. The puppy that used to sit up straight when you said “sit” now just stares at you. The dog that used to walk properly on a leash has suddenly realized that squirrels are real. Your puppy, who was always paying attention, has turned into a distracted teenager who tests the limits.
Welcome to the adolescent years!
What Adolescence Looks Like in Australian Labradoodle Puppies
- Selective hearing — especially outdoors or near distractions
- Testing boundaries they previously accepted without question
- Increased energy and difficulty settling
- Potential re-emergence of behaviors you thought were resolved (jumping, mouthing, pulling on leash)
- Possible second fear period around 6–8 months
This doesn’t indicate that your training didn’t work. It signifies that your puppy’s brain is going through the dog version of adolescence, which is a restructuring caused by hormonal changes and the growth of the prefrontal cortex. It’s really hard for them to manage their impulses right now.
When Do Australian Labradoodles Calm Down?
This is one of the most popular queries concerning this breed, and the honest answer is that it depends. Around 12 to 18 months, most Australian Labradoodles start to slow down a lot. By the time they are 2 to 3 years old, they are usually fully grown and quiet.
What accelerates the process:
- Consistent, positive reinforcement training
- Adequate physical exercise (but not excessive joint-loading before growth plates close around 12–18 months)
- Mental stimulation — puzzle toys, sniff work, training games
- A structured daily routine
What slows it down:
- Inconsistent rules or boundaries between family members
- Insufficient mental engagement
- Unmanaged energy that builds into arousal patterns
Months 8–10: Building Reliability & Real-World Skills
What’s happening developmentally: The storm of adolescence is starting to calm down. Your dog can pay attention for longer periods of time, is better at ignoring distractions, and is starting to show signs of being the dependable, stable friend they will become.
This is the time to test commands in real-world situations.
Training in Public During Months 8–10
So far, most training has taken place at home or in controlled settings. It’s time to put those skills to use on the road, but do it slowly and safely.
Proofing sequence (move through these gradually):
- Quiet outdoor space (backyard, empty parking lot)
- Low-distraction park (early morning, minimal foot traffic)
- Moderate distraction environment (busy trail, pet-friendly store)
- High-distraction environment (farmers market, dog-friendly patio)
Practice the same commands you’ve been working on for months: sit, stay, come, leave it, and heel. The idea is not to do perfectly in busy environments. The idea is to have a dog who can get back on track, check in with you regularly, and make excellent choices even when they’re not paying attention.
Health Considerations at Months 8–10
- Your vet may recommend rabies vaccination around 12–16 weeks (if not already completed), with boosters on a schedule based on local regulations
- Heartworm prevention should be ongoing year-round
- Continue annual wellness exams and stay current on screenings and vaccinations
Months 10–12: Approaching One Year
What’s happening developmentally: What is happening developmentally: Your dog’s body and height are about fully grown, but their emotional and behavioral maturity will continue to grow until they are 2 to 3 years old. The first year of fast growth is over, and your dog is now more stable and predictable.
The final quarter of the first year brings some of the most important behavioral transitions.
Behavioral Changes You’ll Notice Near 12 Months
- Improved impulse control — better at waiting, settling, and resisting temptation
- Longer, calmer focus during training sessions
- More consistent response to known commands across environments
- Clearer personality expression — you’re beginning to see the adult your puppy is becoming
- Growing ability to self-regulate
The Coat Change: What to Expect at 8–14 Months
The coat change from puppy to adult coat is one of the most important things that happens in the first year for Australian Labradoodle owners. This usually happens between 8 and 14 months and might be more or less intense.
During the transition, you may notice:
- Increased matting, particularly behind ears, armpits, and collar area
- Texture changes — fleece coats may feel temporarily coarser or wavier
- Heavier shedding than you’ve seen before (temporary, not a sign of coat type change)
Answer: During this time, brush their hair every day. If necessary, hire a professional groomer to shorten the coat. This will make it easier to take care of while the transition is going on. Don’t skip brushing sessions; mats that form during coat transition can get bad very quickly.
Feeding Schedule: Month 10–12
Most Australian Labradoodles switch from puppy diet to adult food between the ages of 10 and 12 months. Talk to your vet on when to perform it based on how big and fast your dog is growing.
General feeding schedule at this stage:
- 2 meals per day (morning and evening) — a schedule most owners maintain for life
- Portion based on target adult weight, not current weight
- Continue with high-quality protein-first ingredients; avoid artificial preservatives and fillers
- Monitor body condition — you should be able to feel but not prominently see ribs
For more guidance on choosing the right nutrition for your Australian Labradoodle throughout their life stages, visit our nutrition and pet care resource page.
First Year Vaccination & Health Milestone Summary
| Age | Health Milestone |
| 6-7 weeks | First DHPP (from breeder), microchipping |
| 9–10 weeks | Second DHPP booster |
| 12–13 weeks | Third DHPP booster + rabies (per vet and local regulations) |
| 6 months | Between 6-8 months |
| 12 months | Annual wellness exam, booster review, heartworm test |
Always follow your specific veterinarian’s guidance — vaccination schedules may vary based on region, lifestyle, and individual health history.
Month-by-Month Quick Reference Summary
| Month | Focus Area | Key Milestone |
| 2 (8–12 wks) | Arrival & adjustment | Establish routine, crate training, reinforce foundation skills |
| 3 (12–16 wks) | Socialization peak | Broad positive exposure, expand commands |
| 4–5 | Teething + fear period | Redirect chewing, navigate fear with calm confidence |
| 5 | Grooming foundation | First professional groom, establish brushing routine |
| 6–7 | Adolescence begins | Maintain consistency through the teenage phase |
| 8–9 | Real-world training | Proof commands in public environments |
| 10–11 | Behavioral consolidation | Reliability builds, adult personality emerges |
| 12 | First year milestone | Annual wellness visit, adult food transition, coat change management |
What the Best Breeders Give You Before Any of This Begins
The guide above gets simpler or harder every month, based on what happened in the eight weeks before you got your puppy. A well-matched, fully socialized, ENS-trained puppy from a recognized multigenerational breeder comes with a solid base that makes every step of the process easier and more enjoyable.
When evaluating breeders, look for those who:
- Conduct formal temperament assessments and ensure the best pairings of puppies to families accordingly
- Use proven early development program/curriculum
- Complete comprehensive health testing on both parents — including OFA CHIC certification — before breeding
- Hold recognized certifications such as the ALAA Platinum Paw, the highest distinctions in the Australian Labradoodle breeding community
- Are transparent about their process, raise puppies exclusively at home, and offer lifetime support
Learn more about River Days’ breeding standards and why our approach matters for your puppy’s lifelong success.
The puppies who thrive most consistently in their first year are not just genetically exceptional. They are the product of a breeder who treated every day from birth to 8 weeks as the beginning of your dog’s story; not a waiting period.
Final Thoughts: The Year Goes Fast
The puppy stage of the Australian Labradoodle doesn’t last long. The long nights, the chewed-up furniture, and the puddles on the kitchen floor all go by faster than they seem.
What you make this year is important. The time you spend crate training your dog in months 2 and 3 is what makes him peaceful for the next 12 years. The trips to socialize the dog in months 3 and 4 are what make it confident in the world. The persistent, patient training during the teen years is what makes the pet you wanted when you initially reserved your puppy!
It is worth every bit of work.
Use this time wisely if you’re still waiting. Read. Get ready. Before your puppy even gets there, sign up for a puppy class. Make sure you have the proper supplies at home. And pick your breeder carefully, because the most crucial part is what happens before your puppy gets to your door.
Understanding the complete adoption process and pricing structure helps you plan financially and practically for the year ahead.
At River Days Australian Labradoodles, we begin preparing your puppy for a lifetime of confidence and connection from the moment they’re born. Learn more about our program or explore our available and upcoming puppies. Ready to start your journey?Submit your application today.
