How Do Dogs Know That You Are Coming Home? · Kinship

Skip to main content

How Do Dogs Know That You Are Coming Home?

Your dog’s keen sense of smell isn’t the only clue.

curly haired dog waiting in a window for their owner
anoushkatoronto / AdobeStock

One of the best things about living with dogs is the unbridled joy with which they greet you when you come home — no matter how long you’ve been away. It has long been thought, and oftentimes documented, that dogs have a sixth sense that allows them to “know” your ETA in advance. Just how do they do it?

In Alexandra Horowitz’s book, Being a Dog, she offers what seems to be a very reasonable explanation. It isn’t just that they can smell us from afar or hear our footsteps or the car motor. Rather, as she writes, “there was a potent combination of two forces leading to these dogs’ abilities. The first is the distinctness of our smell to our dogs. The second is the ease with which dogs learn our habits.”

Related article
Dark brown dog sitting on a gray couch in a living room

Turns Out Dogs Can... Smell Time

There’s no time like the present, according to your pet

Dogs can basically smell time.

She says, “It might be that the odors that we leave around the house when we leave lessen in a consistent amount each day.” Basically, your smarty dog’s amazing nose knows that over the hours you are gone, your home begins to smell less of you.

Horowitz tested this theory by recruiting a colleague to sneak one of her partner’s stinky t-shirts into the house hours after her partner left, once again infusing the house with his odor. And yes, the ruse seemed to work. That day, their dog, who had reliably demonstrated that he knew when his person was nearing home, was found snoring on the couch.

Dogs know based on their experiences.

Dogs are also remarkably quick at associative learning. They’re very good at picking up on subtle cues like reading body language, changes in the environment, and listening to sounds. And not just your own signals, but maybe the sound of a neighbor’s car that starts up a few minutes before you arrive home. Environmental stimuli like light shifts, sounds, smells, and even cues you can’t pick up on can play a role in your dog’s ability to sense when you’re coming home.

Claudia Kawczynska

Claudia Kawczynska was co-founder and editor-in-chief of The Bark for 20 years. She also edited the best-selling anthology Dog Is My Co-Pilot.