When the Body is Speaking: Pain as a Hidden Driver of Behaviour

By Sally Gutteridge | 12 Jun 2026
The dog who was once easy has started to react to things they never used to mind.

The dog who loved greeting strangers now stiffens when approached.

The dog who played willingly has become hesitant, flat, or short-tempered.

And the explanations offered rarely quite fit. Nothing changed, they say. We did not do anything differently. We do not know why they are like this now.

The answer, in a remarkable number of these cases, is pain.

Not obvious pain. Not limping, yelping, or crying. The kind of pain that sits quietly underneath behaviour, reshaping it from the inside, changing how a dog moves through the world without ever announcing itself clearly enough to be caught.

What the Research Is Telling Us

The dog who was once easy has started to react to things they never used to mind.

The dog who loved greeting strangers now stiffens when approached.

The dog who played willingly has become hesitant, flat, or short-tempered.

And the explanations offered rarely quite fit. Nothing changed, they say. We did not do anything differently. We do not know why they are like this now.

The answer, in a remarkable number of these cases, is pain.

Not obvious pain. Not limping, yelping, or crying. The kind of pain that sits quietly underneath behaviour, reshaping it from the inside, changing how a dog moves through the world without ever announcing itself clearly enough to be caught.

What Pain Actually Looks Like in Behaviour

Pain does not always announce itself. That is what makes it so easy to miss.

A dog who has learned to manage their discomfort will adapt.

They will shift how they carry their body, avoid the movements that hurt, become more careful about what they allow. Over time, what began as a physical response becomes woven into the fabric of how they behave.

Dogs in pain have been found to become more noise reactive, with a later average age of onset, typically around six years compared to two years in dogs without pain.

They become more likely to hide rather than seek comfort, because the contact they associate with reassurance may also be contact that hurts. They startle more easily.

They generalise their fear more broadly. They can become aggressive in situations where they were previously tolerant, not because something has gone wrong in their temperament, but because their threshold for discomfort is already at its limit before anything external has happened.

There is something important here about agency. A dog in pain is a dog whose ability to manage their own experience has been compromised. They cannot move away from discomfort. They cannot find relief.

Every interaction carries a potential cost that the dog cannot predict or control. What we read as reactivity, aggression, or shutdown is often a dog doing exactly what the nervous system is designed to do under those circumstances: protect the body by any means available.

When we work with behaviour without first asking whether pain is present, we are trying to change the conversation without addressing what started it.

Research from Mills et al., 2020 notes that these animals are often described as having a poor and changeable temperament, with terms such as Jekyll and Hyde personality frequently being used.

The bites were often of variable severity and typically directed towards the limb extremities of the target, strongly suggestive of the bites being a low level violent threat aimed at saving the animal from further interaction.

Even in the absence of overt pain-specific signs, pain has the potential to impact the learning and the performance of dogs.

Apparently poor learning in obedience classes, for example not learning to sit properly, may arise as a result of the pain associated with placing dysplastic hips into that posture, and this can occur even in puppy classes.

Listening Before You Interpret

One of the most consistent findings in research on pain recognition is the gap between how confident guardians feel about reading their dogs and how well they actually identify pain.

In a 2024 study, most participants rated their ability to read their dog's behaviour as good or great, but only felt moderately confident about detecting pain specifically. That gap matters enormously, because the signs are subtle and the context for noticing them is usually the home, not the clinic.

Watch for subtle shifts in how your dog positions themselves. A reluctance to do things they once offered easily.

A change in how readily they engage. A new hesitation at the stairs, at getting into the car, at lying down on one side. A dog who used to lean into touch and now moves slightly away. A laziness in the sit that was not there before.

The question worth sitting with honestly is this: if you removed the structure, the lead, the familiar cues, would your dog move freely and with ease? Not just stay beside you, but carry themselves with the lightness of a body that feels well?

Because the dog who has no option but to comply and the dog who is genuinely comfortable can look identical from the outside. The internal experience of those two dogs is entirely different, and pain is one of the things most likely to be behind that difference.

Every genuine choice you offer your dog gives you information. When a dog hesitates before a greeting, when they choose not to approach, when they move away from something that once interested them, those communications deserve to be honoured rather than overridden. And they also deserve to be investigated.

A dog who is consistently choosing withdrawal, who is taking longer to recover from ordinary encounters, who has lost the spark of engagement they once had, is a dog whose body may be trying to tell you something that their behaviour alone cannot fully express.

You do not need to become an expert in diagnosis. You need only to hold the possibility open: that what looks like a behaviour problem might be a pain problem wearing behaviour as its only available language.

Listen to the body. Question the interpretation.

And if something has shifted in your dog without obvious reason, let that be enough to ask the question before you try to change the answer.
References
Camps, T., Amat, M., Mariotti, V.M., Le Brech, S. and Manteca, X. (2012) Pain-related aggression in dogs: 12 clinical cases. Journal of Veterinary Behavior: Clinical Applications and Research, 7(2), pp.99–104. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jveb.2011.08.002


Lopes Fagundes, A.L., Hewison, L., McPeake, K.J., Zulch, H. and Mills, D.S. (2018) Noise sensitivities in dogs: an exploration of signs in dogs with and without musculoskeletal pain using qualitative content analysis. Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 5, article 17. https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2018.00017


Mills, D.S., Demontigny-Bédard, I., Gruen, M., Klinck, M.P., McPeake, K.J., Barcelos, A.M., Hewison, L., Van Haevermaet, H., Denenberg, S., Hauser, H., Koch, C., Ballantyne, K., Wilson, C., Mathkari, C.V., Pounder, J., Garcia, E., Darder, P., Fatjó, J. and Levine, E. (2020) Pain and problem behavior in cats and dogs. Animals, 10(2), article 318. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10020318


Gardeweg, S.M.A., Picard, D.E. and van Herwijnen, I.R. (2026) The abilities in dog pain sign recognition as assessed by presenting seventeen listed dog behavioural signs and three case descriptions to dog owners and non-dog owners. PLOS ONE, 21(4), e0344512. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0344512

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