What Pets Actually Want for the Holidays (Hint: It’s Not More Stuff)

December often feels different. Louder. Brighter. Busier. Schedules off-kilter. People coming and going. People often love this difference, but pets aren’t so sure.

Stores are full of extra toys, sweaters and treats are designed to lure you into buying them. But what do you think pets really want? Emotional safety.

The holidays, from a mental and emotional health perspective, can be one long stress test for animals who thrive on predictability, clear communication, and stable routines. So instead of another squeaky toy that will be ignored by January, let’s talk about what dogs and cats actually want right now.

They Want Their World to Make Sense

Animals are masters of pattern recognition. They notice when dinner is late, when walks move around, when voices rise even with happiness. This predictability often evaporates during the holidays.

Uncertainty is one of the fastest ways to elevate stress hormones. When pets can’t anticipate what’s coming next, their nervous systems stay on high alert. You might see it as:

  • Increased pacing
  • Clinginess or withdrawal
  • House soiling in otherwise reliable pets
  • Excessive grooming in cats
  • Barking at things they usually ignore

What pets want is boring but reassuring.

  • Same feeding times
  • Same walk routes
  • Same litter box location
  • Same bedtime ritual

Even if everything else shifts, these anchors tell their brain: some parts of life are still safe and familiar. So, protect your pets’ routines as much as you can this holiday season.

They Want Choice (Not Constant Interaction)

Holiday gatherings are people-heavy. Dogs get hugged more than usual. Cats get cornered by visiting relatives who “just want to say hi.” Kids are home from school.

When pets can’t choose whether to engage or retreat, stress compounds quickly. Pets need to be able to make choices that affect their surroundings.

What does that look like at home?

  • Escape routes
  • Quiet rooms with doors that stay closed
  • Elevated spaces for cats that humans don’t invade
  • Crates or beds that are off-limits to guests

This isn’t about isolation. It’s about consent. A dog who chooses to come greet guests is very different from a dog who feels trapped in the middle of a living room full of noise. A cat who emerges on their own terms is emotionally healthier than one who’s carried out “to socialize.”

Just like people, pets don’t want forced togetherness. They want the freedom to opt in – or opt out.

They Want Their Stress Signals Respected

One of the quiet tragedies of the holidays is how often pet stress signals get ignored because “nothing bad happened.” But behavior doesn’t work like that.

Dogs rarely bite “out of nowhere.” Cats don’t scratch “for no reason.” They communicate discomfort early and often, through subtle body language that’s easy to miss if you’re distracted by a party.

Signs of stress include:

  • Lip licking or yawning in dogs
  • Turning the head away
  • Sudden stillness
  • Ears pinned back
  • Tail flicking or swishing in cats
  • Hiding, freezing, or hyper-vigilance

When pets learn their communication works, stress decreases. When it’s ignored, they may feel forced to escalate.

What pets want for the holidays is simple: When they say, “I’m uncomfortable,” believe them.

They Want Enrichment That Calms, Not Hypes

High-arousal toys (constant squeakers, non-stop stimulation) can worsen stress in an already overstimulating environment, especially for dogs who struggle with impulse control or cats prone to anxiety.

During the holidays, pets benefit most from toys that provide calming enrichment, such as:

  • Food puzzles that encourage slow problem-solving
  • Snuffle mats that tap into natural foraging behaviors
  • Licking activities for dogs, which activate calming neural pathways
  • Quiet, solo play for cats – batting, stalking, pouncing at their own pace

These activities help regulate the nervous system. They give the brain a job. They create predictable, self-soothing behavior loops.

So yes, give gifts, just make them thoughtful, purposeful, and grounding.

They Want Familiar Smells

Scent is a powerful emotional anchor for animals. Holiday cleaning sprees, new decorations, guest luggage, and unfamiliar coats all layer foreign smells into the home. To a pet, these smells can make it feel like their territory is being slowly erased.

Pets want:

  • Their own blankets, unwashed
  • Beds that stay in the same place
  • Toys that smell like them
  • Time in rooms that haven’t been overhauled

A familiar scent is why stressed dogs gravitate toward their person’s worn hoodie, or why cats knead the same blanket over and over.

Before you toss everything into the wash “for guests,” consider leaving a few scent anchors untouched. They’re your pet’s emotional home base.

They Want Quality Time, Not Performance Time

Pets need calm, predictable human interaction: quiet walks, gentle grooming, one-on-one play without distractions.

Pets want:

  • A walk that isn’t rushed
  • A few minutes of uninterrupted eye contact
  • Soft conversation
  • Hands that move slowly

These moments lower stress, reinforce bonds, and remind pets that, despite the chaos, their relationship with you hasn’t changed.

They Want You to Advocate for Them

This “gift” may be the most important one of all. Pets don’t get to set boundaries with guests – you do.

Advocacy is love in action. It’s telling a relative, “Please don’t pet him right now.” It’s putting your cat in a quiet room before the doorbell rings.

Pets want you to choose their comfort over social expectations.

So, What Do Pets Want for the Holidays?

Pets don’t want more stuff.

They want predictability in a noisy season.

They want control in a crowded house.

They want their communication honored.

They want their nervous systems protected.

And maybe, if there’s room, they’d like a new puzzle toy. Or a warm blanket that smells like you. Or a quiet afternoon nap while the rest of the world rushes around outside.

That’s not a flashy wish list. But from a mental and emotional health perspective – it’s everything.

LifeLearn News

Note: This article, written by LifeLearn Animal Health (LifeLearn Inc.) is licensed to this practice for the personal use of our clients. Any copying, printing or further distribution is prohibited without the express written permission of Lifelearn. Please note that the news information presented here is NOT a substitute for a proper consultation and/or clinical examination of your pet by a veterinarian.

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