Can Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs be left alone?
Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs can manage moderate periods alone with the right groundwork — but they're not happy to be left indefinitely. Build it up gradually and they'll be fine.
The largest and oldest of the four Swiss mountain dogs. A tricolour draft dog that is surprisingly gentle at home and devoted to its family.
How long can Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs be left alone?
Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs can manage around 4 hours alone when they're settled adults and have been gradually introduced to alone time. Some individuals will stretch comfortably to 5 hours; others may show restlessness at 3.
Puppies and young dogs need substantially more frequent breaks — a Greater Swiss Mountain Dog puppy shouldn't be left alone for more than 1–2 hours at a time while they're still building bladder control and emotional resilience.
The breed's moderate energy level helps here. A Greater Swiss Mountain Dog that's had a proper morning walk and has a Kong or puzzle feeder to work on won't be sitting there watching the clock. Tired and occupied dogs cope significantly better with being alone.
A naturally settled temperament makes alone time easier. The transition from company to solitude is smoother for a dog that already defaults to calm. The devotion these dogs have is specific. They miss their person, not just company in general. That particularity makes the absence more acute. High alertness makes deep rest difficult without environmental management. Every sound from outside triggers evaluation, which prevents the settled rest that regulates behaviour.
Do Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs suffer from separation anxiety?
Some Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs develop separation anxiety; many don't. The breed sits in a middle ground — more resilient than highly attached breeds, but not naturally independent enough to simply not care when their owner leaves.
Risk factors include: being left alone for long periods before being properly habituated, a change in routine (owner returning to office after working from home), or a single-person household where the dog is deeply bonded to one individual.
Signs your Greater Swiss Mountain Dog is struggling with being left
If you're not sure how your Greater Swiss Mountain Dog copes when you're out, a cheap indoor camera (Wyze, Blink, or similar) pointed at their resting area will tell you far more than any guesswork. Common signs of distress include:
- Destructive behaviour. Chewing furniture, door frames, or possessions, particularly focused near exits
- Excessive vocalisation. Barking, whining, or howling that neighbours report when you're out
- Toileting inside. A housetrained dog having accidents is often a stress response, not a lapse in training
- Pacing or inability to settle. Visible on camera as continuous movement rather than sleeping
- Hyperactive greeting. Frantic, over-the-top excitement when you return can indicate pent-up anxiety rather than simple joy
- Self-directed behaviours. Excessive licking, chewing paws, or other repetitive actions that appear when isolated
Mild restlessness for the first 15–20 minutes after you leave is entirely normal for most dogs. Sustained distress throughout the entire absence is the problem to address.
Building up alone time gradually
The single most effective thing you can do for any Greater Swiss Mountain Dog — and especially for puppies — is to build alone time incrementally from the very start. Dogs don't automatically understand that being alone is safe and temporary. They need to learn it through experience.
The process works in small steps:
- Start by leaving the room for 30 seconds, returning before the dog shows any anxiety
- Gradually increase to 2 minutes, 5 minutes, 15 minutes, 30 minutes. Always returning before distress begins
- Work up to 1 hour, then 2, over a period of several weeks
- Make departures and arrivals calm and unremarkable. No drawn-out goodbyes or excited reunions
- Give a food-stuffed Kong or puzzle feeder just before you leave. It creates a positive association with your departure
This process takes weeks, not days. Rushing it — jumping from 20 minutes to 6 hours because you have to go back to work — is the most common mistake and the most common cause of separation anxiety.
Practical solutions for Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs who struggle alone
If your Greater Swiss Mountain Dog's alone-time limit doesn't match your work schedule, there are practical options that work well for UK owners:
- Dog walker (midday visit) — a 30–45 minute midday walk and interaction resets the clock significantly. Many Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs can manage a morning and afternoon alone if the middle of the day is covered. Expect to pay £12–£20 per walk in most UK areas.
- Doggy daycare — a full-day solution for Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs who need more social contact than a lone walk provides. Group daycare is typically £20–£35/day; home-based daycare with a smaller group is often preferable for anxious dogs. Check for APLBC membership or similar accreditation.
- Crate training — a crate isn't a punishment; used properly, it's a safe space. Many dogs settle more quickly when crated because the enclosed space feels secure. Introduce the crate gradually with positive reinforcement — never push a dog into one and close the door immediately.
- Dog sitter or friend — for occasional long days, asking a trusted person to spend time with your Greater Swiss Mountain Dog is often the simplest solution. Apps like Rover and Tailster make it easy to find vetted local pet sitters.
- Second dog — this works for some Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs and not others. Some dogs are calmer with canine company; others direct their separation anxiety at the second dog, or the second dog develops the same anxiety. It's not a guaranteed fix.
Want the full picture on Greater Swiss Mountain Dogs?
Read the complete Greater Swiss Mountain Dog breed guide →