New Puppy Checklist Printable

New Puppy Checklist

Bringing a puppy home is exciting, but it’s also a moment where small details matter.

You’ll need in place:

  • Vet records.
  • Feeding schedules.
  • Supplies.
  • Registration paperwork.
  • Emergency contacts.

When everything has a place from the start, those first few weeks feel calmer and more manageable.

A simple, structured checklist makes sure nothing important gets missed.

This new puppy checklist printable is designed to help you prepare before your puppy walks through the door — so you can focus on settling them in, not scrambling for missing information.

What This Checklist Is For

When to use it:
Before your puppy comes home and during the first week.

Why it matters:
It helps you gather supplies, collect documentation, and set up a simple record-keeping system from day one.

How it fits into organized dog ownership:
This checklist becomes the foundation of your puppy’s documentation binder — making future vet visits, boarding, travel, and routine care much easier to manage.

Section 1: Puppy Paperwork to Collect

Before pickup day, confirm what documentation you’ll receive.

Your printable checklist should include space to track:

  • Vaccination record from breeder or shelter
  • Microchip information and registration details
  • Breeder or adoption contract
  • Date of birth confirmation
  • Feeding schedule and current food brand
  • Deworming record (if provided)
  • Any health certificates supplied
  • Parent information (for breeder puppies)

Once received, place these in a dedicated section of your binder. If you haven’t yet created one, you may want to read:

  • Puppy Vaccination Record Template
  • How to Organize Your Dog’s Paperwork Binder

Keeping original copies in sheet protectors prevents damage and makes everything easy to locate later.


Section 2: Supplies to Prepare Before Arrival

A structured puppy supplies checklist printable prevents overbuying — and under-preparing.

Basic Daily Care Supplies

  • Food and water bowls
  • Puppy food (confirmed with breeder/shelter)
  • Collar and ID tag
  • Leash
  • Crate or sleeping area
  • Bedding
  • Puppy-safe toys
  • Waste bags

Hygiene & Cleaning

  • Puppy shampoo
  • Towels
  • Grooming brush appropriate for coat type
  • Enzymatic cleaner for accidents
  • Puppy pads (if using temporarily)

Feeding Setup

  • Measuring scoop
  • Storage container for food
  • Feeding mat
  • Treat pouch (optional but helpful)

Your checklist should allow you to mark:

  • Purchased
  • Picked up
  • Set up
  • Stored in designated place

This simple tracking system prevents “I thought I bought that” moments.


Section 3: First Vet Appointment Planning

Even if your puppy arrives with records, you’ll likely schedule a new patient visit within the first few days.

Your printable checklist can include:

  • Vet clinic selected
  • Appointment scheduled
  • Records transferred
  • Questions to bring
  • Payment method prepared

Important: This checklist is not medical advice. It simply helps you stay organized with documentation and scheduling.

If you’d like a structured page for tracking visits, you can also see:

  • Puppy Vet Visit Log Printable
  • Dog Vaccination Record Template

Starting a clean record system now saves significant time later.


Section 4: Identification & Registration

Proper identification should be handled immediately.

Your new puppy checklist printable should include:

  • ID tag ordered
  • Microchip registered
  • Address verified
  • Emergency contact added
  • License requirements checked (if applicable in your area)

Keep copies of:

  • Microchip registration confirmation
  • License receipt
  • ID tag receipt (optional but useful)

Store these behind your puppy’s core documentation tab.


Section 5: Home Setup Checklist

Before pickup day, walk through your home and confirm:

  • Cords secured
  • Cleaning supplies stored safely
  • Designated feeding area chosen
  • Designated sleeping area prepared
  • Crate assembled
  • Toys placed in a basket
  • Cleaning station ready (paper towels, spray, waste bags)

A simple printed checklist makes it easier to see what still needs attention.


Section 6: First Week Organization

The first week is about establishing simple routines.

Your checklist can include tracking boxes for:

  • Feeding times confirmed
  • Water refreshed daily
  • Vet visit completed
  • Documentation filed
  • Microchip confirmed active
  • Supplies restocked if needed
  • Contact list updated

You don’t need a complex system. You just need consistency.

If you’re managing more than one dog, you may later want to read:

  • How to Organize Records for Multiple Dogs
  • Dog Care Log Printable for Ongoing Tracking

Starting organized from the beginning makes multi-dog life far easier down the road.


How to Use This Printable Effectively

Print it before pickup day.

Keep it in a visible location for the first week — clipped to your binder or placed on a clipboard in the kitchen.

Mark items as completed in real time.

Once everything is finished, store it at the front of your puppy’s section as a reference page.

Over time, this checklist becomes a record of how you started — and proof that you handled those early details responsibly.


Where to Store Your Puppy Checklist

This page works best inside a structured binder system divided into sections such as:

  1. Identification
  2. Vaccination & Vet Records
  3. Feeding Information
  4. Registration & Contracts
  5. Expense Tracking

The new puppy checklist printable acts as your “setup page” — confirming everything is in place before ongoing care begins.

If you haven’t created your binder yet, starting with:

  • How to Set Up a Dog Documentation Binder
  • Puppy Paperwork Organization Guide

can help you build it correctly from the start.


When to Update It

You typically won’t reuse this page repeatedly.

However, it’s helpful to:

  • Review it at the end of the first month
  • Confirm all paperwork is properly filed
  • Verify registrations are complete
  • Ensure your system feels manageable

After that, your focus shifts to maintenance — logs, schedules, expense tracking, and annual reviews.


A Simple Way to Keep Everything Together

This page is included inside the Organized Dog Life Planner, a complete printable system designed to keep all your dog’s important records and routines in one place.

Instead of piecing documents together over time, the planner creates a single, structured home for:

  • Puppy paperwork
  • Vaccination logs
  • Expense tracking
  • Boarding and travel sheets
  • Ongoing care records

It’s built for long-term organization — starting from day one.


Closing Thoughts

The early days with a new puppy move quickly.

Having a calm, simple checklist keeps the practical side of dog ownership under control — so nothing important slips through the cracks.

Preparation doesn’t need to feel overwhelming.

A printed page. A binder. A place for everything.

That’s how organized dog ownership begins.