Puppy First-Year Guide in Daly City

Welcome to Daly City Pet Hospital. Bringing a new puppy home in Daly City is exciting, and it comes with a long list of questions. This first-year guide walks you through everything we recommend in your puppy’s first twelve months, from the first wellness visit and core vaccinations to socialization, parasite prevention, and the local health risks that matter for dogs in our part of the San Francisco Bay Area. Our doors are open seven days a week to make routine care easy to fit into your schedule.

Bringing Your Puppy Home

Before They Arrive

Set up a safe, quiet space in your home before your puppy arrives. A small room or a puppy-proofed gated area works well, with a comfortable bed, water bowl, age-appropriate food, and a couple of safe chew toys. Remove anything that could be chewed and swallowed, including socks, hair ties, kids’ toys, electrical cords, and houseplants. Confirm that any cleaning products or human foods are well out of reach.

Choose a veterinary clinic before pickup day so you have somewhere to call with questions. We recommend booking your puppy’s first wellness visit within the first week of bringing them home. Schedule your puppy’s first visit at Daly City Pet Hospital. [Link to: /book-appointment/]

The First Week

Keep the first week calm. Limit visitors, stick to a predictable feeding and bathroom schedule, and give your puppy time to settle. Expect some whining, especially overnight, as they adjust to being away from their litter. A soft blanket, a stable routine, and gentle reassurance help most puppies settle within a few nights.

During this first week, watch for signs that warrant a same-day call to our clinic: refusing food for more than 12 hours, vomiting more than once, watery diarrhea, lethargy, or any difficulty breathing. Puppies can become dehydrated very quickly, so we would rather see them sooner than later.

At-a-Glance Vaccine Schedule

Below is the core vaccination schedule we follow for puppies in Daly City. Lifestyle vaccines are reviewed at your wellness visit and added based on your puppy’s specific lifestyle and exposure risk.

AgeVaccineTypeNotes
6 to 8 weeksDA2PP (distemper, adenovirus, parvovirus, parainfluenza)CoreFirst in series. Keep puppy away from common dog spaces until boosters complete.
10 to 12 weeksDA2PP boosterCoreSecond in series. Bordetella may be added if puppy classes or boarding are planned.
14 to 16 weeksDA2PP final boosterCoreFinal puppy DA2PP. Rabies given at the same visit or shortly after.
14 to 16 weeksRabiesCore, legally requiredRequired by California state law and San Mateo County licensing.
1 yearDA2PP booster, Rabies boosterCoreFirst annual booster. Adult vaccination schedule begins.

We talk through every vaccine at your visit and answer questions about why each one matters. Learn more about pet care and vaccinations at {HOSPITAL_NAME}. [Link to: /services/pet-care-services/]

Important Note on Lifestyle Vaccines

Some vaccines are added based on your puppy’s specific lifestyle and the local risks in our region. For dogs in Daly City and the wider San Francisco Bay Area, the lifestyle vaccines we discuss most often are:

  • Leptospirosis: The Bay Area has seen confirmed surges in canine leptospirosis cases in recent years, with documented cases in San Mateo County. The bacteria are spread by wildlife including rats, raccoons, skunks, and opossums, all common in urban Daly City. Lepto is transmitted through contaminated water, including puddles after rain. We recommend the lepto vaccine for most dogs in our area, regardless of breed or size.
  • Bordetella (kennel cough): Recommended for any puppy attending puppy classes, daycare, boarding, or grooming. Many local facilities require it as a condition of entry.
  • Canine Influenza: Discussed for dogs traveling frequently or visiting busy social settings.
  • Lyme disease: The western black-legged tick is present in San Mateo County and Bay Area trails, including San Bruno Mountain. We recommend Lyme vaccination for dogs that hike regularly in wooded areas.

Spay and Neuter

Spaying and neutering your puppy reduces the risk of certain cancers, removes the risk of life-threatening uterine infections in females, and supports better behavior in males. Timing matters, especially for larger breeds where early-life hormones play a role in joint development.

Breed SizeAdult Weight RangeRecommended Timing
Small breedsUnder 25 lbAround 6 months
Medium breeds25 to 50 lb6 to 9 months
Large breeds50 to 90 lb9 to 18 months (later for males)
Giant breedsOver 90 lb12 to 24 months

Daly City Pet Hospital performs spay and neuter surgery on-site with pre-surgical bloodwork, IV fluids, full anesthesia monitoring, and pain care for recovery. Learn more about surgical services at Daly City Pet Hospital. [Link to: /services/surgical-services/]

Nutrition for Your Puppy’s First Year

What you feed your puppy in the first year shapes their growth, body condition, and long-term joint health. The right food is one your veterinarian helps you choose based on your puppy’s breed, size, and individual needs.

  • Look for an AAFCO statement. The food label should say it is formulated to meet the nutritional levels established by the Association of American Feed Control Officials (AAFCO) for puppy growth.
  • Match the food to your puppy’s size. Large and giant breed puppies need a large-breed puppy formula with appropriate calcium and phosphorus levels to support healthy bone and joint development.
  • Feed on a schedule. Puppies under 4 months: four meals per day. 4 to 6 months: three meals per day. 6 to 12 months: two meals per day.
  • Therapeutic diets. Puppies with specific health needs, such as food sensitivities or GI issues, may benefit from a veterinary-formulated therapeutic diet.

If you have questions about feeding your puppy, our team is happy to help. Talk to us about nutrition counseling at Daly City Pet Hospital. [Link to: /services/nutrition-counseling/]

Parasites: What to Know

Puppies in Daly City and the San Francisco Bay Area need a comprehensive parasite prevention plan from their very first wellness visit. The mild Bay Area climate means fleas, ticks, and intestinal parasites are active year-round, not just in summer.

  • Intestinal worms: Roundworms and hookworms are common in puppies and can also infect people. Most puppies need multiple rounds of deworming in their first few months. We start the deworming schedule at the first wellness visit and check fecal samples to confirm a clean result.
  • Fleas: The mild Bay Area climate means fleas are a year-round concern, even on indoor dogs. We recommend monthly flea prevention starting as early as the product label allows.
  • Ticks: The western black-legged tick (vector for Lyme disease) and Pacific Coast tick are both present in San Mateo County, especially on trails. Tick prevention is built into most modern monthly preventives.
  • Heartworm: California heartworm rates are lower than the South or Midwest, but cases occur and prevention is the safer path. We start heartworm prevention at 8 weeks.
  • Giardia: A common parasite from contaminated water sources, including puddles and creeks. We screen for giardia in puppies with persistent loose stool.

Most parasites that affect dogs can also affect people, especially children. Year-round prevention keeps the whole family safer.

House Training

House training is one of the biggest early challenges, and consistency is what makes it work. A predictable routine gets most puppies house-trained within 4 to 6 months, though small breeds sometimes take a little longer.

  • Take your puppy out frequently: after waking, after meals, after play, and every 1 to 2 hours during the day for young puppies.
  • Use a consistent spot in the yard or on a balcony if you live in a Daly City apartment. The same spot signals the right behavior.
  • Reward every successful outdoor potty with a small treat and warm praise within 3 seconds of finishing.
  • Never punish accidents. Clean the area with an enzymatic cleaner and supervise more closely going forward.

Crate training is a useful tool. A correctly sized crate becomes a safe den and helps with house training, since most puppies will not soil where they sleep. Start with very short crate sessions and build duration slowly.

Socialization and Cooperative Care

The puppy socialization window runs from about 3 to 12 weeks of age. Experiences during this period shape your puppy’s confidence and behavior for life. Gentle, positive exposure to a wide range of people, sounds, surfaces, and other animals during this window pays off for years to come.

  • People: men, women, children, people in hats, sunglasses, uniforms, mobility devices.
  • Sounds: traffic, vacuum, doorbell, household appliances. The Pacific Ocean and Highway 1 are part of life for Bay Area dogs, so early exposure helps.
  • Surfaces: grass, sand, gravel, tile, hardwood, metal grates.
  • Other dogs and cats: with controlled, safe introductions to fully vaccinated, friendly animals only.

Cooperative care means teaching your puppy to be a willing participant in handling, grooming, and veterinary visits. Practice short daily sessions of gentle ear handling, paw handling, mouth checks, and being on a raised surface. Reward calm behavior with high-value treats. This investment pays off at every future veterinary and grooming visit.

Puppy classes are also worth considering once your puppy has had at least their first two DA2PP boosters. Many local positive-reinforcement trainers run puppy socials in Daly City and San Francisco.

Children and Other Pets

Children

Children and puppies can be wonderful for each other, with the right structure. Teach children to approach the puppy calmly, never to grab or chase, and never to disturb the puppy while eating or sleeping. Adult supervision is essential for every interaction in the early months, especially with children under 7. Create a quiet, puppy-only space the puppy can retreat to when they need a break.

Other Dogs

If you already have a dog at home, introductions should happen on neutral ground when possible, not on the resident dog’s home turf. Walk both dogs in parallel at first, then allow brief sniff-and-meet interactions. Watch for stiff body posture, raised hackles, or a hard stare. Most adult dogs adjust to a puppy within a week or two, with separate feeding, sleeping, and toy zones during the adjustment period.

Cats

If you have a resident cat, give the cat full control over the timing and pace of introductions. Use baby gates or a closed door for the first week so the cat can see and smell the puppy without direct contact. Make sure your cat always has a high, puppy-free spot to retreat to. Most cats and puppies coexist well over time, but rushing the first meeting often creates lasting tension.

Foreign-Body Ingestion Hazards

Puppies explore the world with their mouths, and foreign body ingestion is one of the most common emergencies we see. Common items pulled from puppy stomachs and intestines include:

  • Socks, underwear, hair ties, and dental floss
  • Children’s toys, especially small parts and squeakers
  • Corn cobs, bones, and rawhide pieces
  • Rocks, pebbles, and mulch
  • Coins and small batteries

Signs of intestinal blockage: repeated vomiting (especially unable to keep water down), loss of appetite, lethargy, painful or bloated belly, no bowel movement for more than 24 hours. If you see these signs, or you know your puppy swallowed something they should not have, call us immediately at (415) 859-5676. Time matters with foreign body cases. Same-day urgent care is available seven days a week. [Link to: /services/pet-emergency-and-urgent-care/]

Holiday and Household Hazards

Several common household items are toxic to dogs. Keep these out of reach:

  • Foods: chocolate, grapes and raisins, onions and garlic, xylitol (a sweetener in sugar-free gum, peanut butter, and some baked goods), macadamia nuts, alcohol, raw bread dough.
  • Plants: sago palm (toxic to liver, very serious), lilies (mostly a cat concern but some are dog-toxic too), oleander, azalea, foxglove, and tulip bulbs. Pacific Bay Area gardens often include several of these.
  • Household items: human pain relievers (acetaminophen, ibuprofen), antifreeze (extremely toxic), rodent bait, slug bait, and cannabis products.

If you suspect your puppy has eaten something toxic, call us at (415) 859-5676 or contact the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center at 888-426-4435. Do not wait to see if symptoms develop.

Puppy Dental and Developmental Notes

Puppies have 28 deciduous (baby) teeth that begin erupting at about 3 weeks of age. Permanent adult teeth start coming in around 12 weeks and most are in place by 6 to 7 months.

  • Teething: usually peaks between 3 and 6 months. Provide safe chew toys to relieve discomfort. Avoid hard items like cow hooves and antlers, which can fracture teeth.
  • Retained deciduous teeth: baby teeth that have not fallen out by 7 months can cause crowding, plaque buildup, and orthodontic issues. We check for retained teeth at every wellness visit and remove them surgically if needed, often during the spay or neuter procedure.
  • Malocclusion (bite issues): we examine your puppy’s bite at each wellness visit and discuss any concerns early. Some bite issues correct themselves as the jaw grows. Others benefit from early intervention.
  • Umbilical and inguinal hernias: small openings in the abdominal wall that should be repaired, often during the spay or neuter surgery.
  • Cryptorchidism: a condition where one or both testicles do not descend by 6 months. Retained testicles should be removed surgically because they carry a higher cancer risk.

Learn more about dental care at Daly City Pet Hospital. [Link to: /services/dental-care/]

Grooming Basics

Start grooming routines early, even if your puppy does not need much actual grooming yet. The goal is to build positive associations so brushing, bathing, nail trims, and ear cleaning are stress-free for life.

  • Daily brushing: short, positive sessions with treats and praise.
  • Nail trims: introduce the clipper as a familiar object before you ever cut a nail. Start by touching paws daily.
  • Ear cleaning: weekly for floppy-eared breeds and dogs that swim. Use a veterinary-approved ear cleaner.
  • Bathing: only when needed, with a dog-specific shampoo. Most puppies do not need a bath more than every 4 to 6 weeks.

Professional grooming timing depends on coat type. Long-coated and double-coated breeds typically benefit from professional grooming every 4 to 8 weeks once their adult coat comes in. Our medical grooming services include medicated baths and sedated grooming options for puppies who need additional care. [Link to: /services/medical-grooming-services/]

Local Health Notes

Daly City and the surrounding San Francisco Bay Area have specific environmental and wildlife risks that every new puppy owner should know.

  • Leptospirosis from urban wildlife: rats, raccoons, skunks, and opossums all carry leptospirosis and are common across Daly City. Standing water after rain is a major exposure route. Avoid letting your puppy drink from puddles, and consider the lepto vaccine.
  • Coyotes at coastal parks: Mussel Rock Park and the Daly City coastal bluffs have a documented resident coyote population. Coyotes are most active at dawn and dusk and have been known to lure or attack small dogs. Always keep your puppy on leash in coastal areas and avoid these parks at low-light hours.
  • Off-leash parks in Daly City: Centennial Way Dog Park, Mission Hills Dog Park, Palisades Park Dog Park, and Gellert Park all offer fenced off-leash spaces. Fort Funston (just across the San Francisco border) is one of the largest off-leash dog beaches in the Bay Area. Wait until your puppy has completed their full DA2PP series at 16 weeks before visiting common dog spaces.
  • Ticks on Bay Area trails: San Bruno Mountain State Park, Sweeney Ridge, and Milagra Ridge all have tick activity. Check your puppy thoroughly after every hike.
  • San Mateo County licensing: all dogs over 3 months of age must be licensed in San Mateo County. New residents have 60 days to license their pet. A current rabies vaccination is required to license.
  • Leash law: San Mateo County requires dogs to be on leash anywhere outside a fenced yard or designated off-leash area. There is no “voice control” exception.

Low-Stress Veterinary Visits

Before the Visit

A calm puppy is easier to examine and learns to associate the clinic with good things. Skip the heavy meal before the visit (a light snack is fine). Bring a small stash of high-value treats. If your puppy is nervous in the car, take short positive car rides that do not end at the vet.

In the Clinic

Our Daly City Pet Hospital team uses low-stress handling techniques, treats, and patience to keep visits positive. Tell us what your puppy likes and dislikes so we can adjust. If your puppy is shy, we can do part of the exam on the floor or in your lap, whichever helps them feel safest.

Happy Visits

Schedule a happy visit between wellness appointments. These are short, no-procedure visits where your puppy comes in just for treats, weighing, and friendly attention. Happy visits build positive associations and make future medical visits dramatically easier. Call us at (415) 859-5676 to set one up.

When to Contact Us

Call Daly City Pet Hospital at (415) 859-5676 any time you have questions about your puppy’s health. We are open seven days a week, 8 AM to 7 PM, and can usually see urgent cases the same day.

Contact Us Same Day For

The following signs warrant a same-day call:

  • Repeated vomiting, especially with lethargy or inability to keep water down
  • Watery or bloody diarrhea
  • Refusing food for more than 12 hours in a puppy under 12 weeks
  • Difficulty breathing, persistent coughing, or wheezing
  • Sudden lameness or unwillingness to bear weight on a leg
  • Suspected toxin ingestion (chocolate, grapes, xylitol, plants, household products)
  • Eye injury, swelling, or persistent squinting
  • Bloated or painful belly
  • Seizures, collapse, or unresponsiveness

Schedule a Routine Appointment For

These are typical wellness or non-urgent reasons to book:

  • Scheduled vaccinations and boosters
  • Mild itching or skin irritation that is not getting worse
  • Annual or semi-annual wellness exams
  • Behavior questions, training discussions, or socialization advice
  • Routine spay or neuter consultation
  • Stool changes that improve within a day or two

For after-hours emergencies outside our open hours, contact Ocean Avenue Veterinary Hospital at (415) 586-5327, located at 1001 Ocean Avenue, San Francisco, CA.

Pet Insurance

We recommend purchasing pet insurance before your puppy’s first appointment, ideally within the first week of bringing them home. Insurance is most valuable when started before any health issues are documented, because pre-existing conditions are typically excluded once a policy begins.

Several pet insurance providers operate in the United States. The following list is provided for educational purposes only and is not an endorsement of any specific provider:

  • Trupanion
  • Healthy Paws
  • Spot
  • Fetch
  • ASPCA Pet Insurance
  • Figo

Compare deductibles, reimbursement rates, annual coverage limits, and exclusions before choosing a plan.

Frequently Asked Questions

When does my puppy in Daly City need their first round of vaccinations?

Puppies in Daly City should start their core vaccination series (DA2PP) at 6 to 8 weeks of age, with boosters every 3 to 4 weeks until 16 weeks. Rabies is given around 14 to 16 weeks and is required for San Mateo County licensing. Call Daly City Pet Hospital at (415) 859-5676 to schedule your puppy's first wellness visit and start them on a complete vaccination plan.

Timing depends on your puppy's breed size. Small breeds are typically spayed or neutered around 6 months. Medium breeds at 6 to 9 months. Large and giant breeds often wait until 9 to 24 months to support healthy joint development, especially for males. Our veterinarians will recommend a specific window for your puppy at one of your wellness visits.

Yes, in most cases. The Bay Area has documented surges in canine leptospirosis cases, including in San Mateo County. Rats, raccoons, skunks, and opossums all carry the bacteria, and they are common in urban Daly City. Lepto is transmitted through contaminated water, including puddles after rain. We recommend the lepto vaccine for most dogs in our area.

Puppies need multiple rounds of deworming in their first few months, typically at 2, 4, 6, 8, and 12 weeks. We adjust the schedule based on fecal test results. After the initial puppy series, monthly heartworm and parasite prevention covers most intestinal worms throughout the year.

Choose a food labeled for puppy growth that meets AAFCO nutritional standards, and match the formula to your puppy's adult size. Large and giant breed puppies need a large-breed formula to support healthy bone development. Avoid frequent diet changes in the first year, and ask us at your wellness visit if you have specific questions.

No. Wait until your puppy has completed their full DA2PP series, typically by 16 weeks. Until then, avoid common dog spaces including Mission Hills Dog Park, Palisades Park, and Centennial Way Dog Park. You can still socialize your puppy safely by inviting fully vaccinated friend dogs to your home and carrying your puppy in public for early exposure.

Small and toy breed puppies (under 15 lb adult weight) are more vulnerable to injury from rough play, falls from couches and beds, and being stepped on. We recommend supervised low-impact play, soft landings near furniture, and structured handling rules for any children in the household. Mention any concerns during your puppy's wellness visit and we will walk through age-appropriate exercise.