The Rules Nobody Posts on the Sign
Every dog park has posted rules — pick up after your dog, dogs must be vaccinated, aggressive dogs will be removed. But the rules that actually make or break the dog park experience are the unwritten ones — the social norms that experienced dog park regulars know instinctively and new visitors often violate, sometimes with consequences for their dog, other dogs, or the park community.
Dog parks at their best are wonderful resources for socialization, exercise, and community. At their worst, they’re chaotic environments where undersocialized dogs practice bad behavior while their owners scroll their phones. The difference usually comes down to whether the humans in the park are following these unwritten rules.
Rule 1: Watch Your Dog the Entire Time
This is the most frequently broken rule and the root cause of most dog park incidents. Your phone can wait. Your conversation can happen while watching. Your job at the dog park is to monitor your dog’s body language, intervene before situations escalate, and be ready to leash up and leave if things go sideways. A dog park is not daycare — there’s no staff watching. You are the supervision.

Rule 2: Don’t Bring an Unsocialized Dog
A dog park is not the place to socialize a fearful, reactive, or undersocialized dog. It’s the graduation venue, not the classroom. If your dog hasn’t been positively exposed to a variety of dogs in controlled settings, the overwhelming stimulus of an off-leash park can trigger fear-based aggression, resource guarding, or traumatic experiences that make future socialization harder, not easier.
Rule 3: Leave If Your Dog Is Bullying or Being Bullied
Healthy dog play involves reciprocity — both dogs take turns chasing, pinning, and being chased and pinned. If your dog is consistently chasing, pinning, or mounting another dog who is trying to escape, hiding, or showing submissive signals, your dog is bullying. If your dog is the one consistently hiding, showing whale eyes, tucking their tail, or trying to climb on you for safety, they’re being bullied. Either situation warrants leaving immediately.

