Why Does My Horse Get Anxious at Shows?

Why Does My Horse Get Anxious at Shows?

Show Nerves in Horses: Causes, Symptoms and How to Help

 

Show nerves in horses occur when competition environments trigger a stress response that overrides the horse's ability to think, focus, and respond to their rider. Unfamiliar surroundings, strange horses, travel, and disrupted routine activate the horse's survival instincts, leading to tension, spooking, and behavioural changes that can be difficult to manage. Understanding what is happening physiologically is the first step to addressing it effectively.

 

It is one of the most common frustrations in horse ownership. You have done the training, the preparation, and the groundwork at home, and your horse goes beautifully. Then you arrive at a show and it is as if none of it happened. This is not a training failure. There is a clear physiological explanation, and it is worth understanding.

 

WHAT CAUSES SHOW NERVES IN HORSES

Horses are prey animals. Their nervous systems are built around vigilance, rapid threat assessment, and the safety of the herd. A show environment activates almost every one of those instincts at once.

Unfamiliar surroundings, horses calling from every direction, strange smells, a disrupted routine, loading, travel, and a completely different landscape to the one they feel safe in all contribute. When the brain perceives a threat, it triggers the release of cortisol and adrenaline. Heart rate rises, muscles tense, digestion slows, and the horse shifts from a thinking, learning state into a reactive, survival-focused one.

This is why a horse that schools quietly at home can become tense and unresponsive in a collecting ring. It is not disobedience. It is biology.

THE ROLE OF THE GUT IN SHOW ANXIETY

One of the least understood aspects of equine anxiety is how closely the gut and brain are connected. The gut-brain axis is a network of nerves, hormones, and signalling pathways that runs in both directions. When a horse is anxious, the gut is affected. When the gut is under stress or out of balance, it directly impacts behaviour and the ability to regulate stress.

A horse who is consistently anxious, spooky, or reactive may have a gut component to their behaviour that is not being addressed through training alone. In many horses, the nervous system and the gut need to be supported together.

 

IDENTIFYING SYMPTOMS OF SHOW NERVES

Show nerves can present differently depending on the horse. Common signs include:

        Tension through the back and neck, making the horse stiff or difficult to ride

        Spooking at things they would ignore at home

        Excessive calling or whinnying when separated from companions

        Sweating without physical exertion

        Refusal to eat or drink at the venue

        Difficulty focusing during warm-up or in the arena

        Heightened reactions to flags, umbrellas, spectators, or other normal stimuli

        Restlessness when stabled or tied up away from home

 

For some horses, the stress response begins before the show itself. Difficult loading, unsettled travelling, or behavioural changes the evening before an event are all signs that anxiety is already active.

 

MANAGING SHOW NERVES IN HORSES

Preparation and Exposure

Familiarity reduces anxiety. Attending venues without competing, practising loading and travelling regularly, and schooling in different locations all help horses build confidence over time. Maintaining a consistent routine at home gives horses a stable baseline from which to handle change more effectively.

 

Management at the Show

Arriving with time to allow the horse to settle, keeping arrivals and departures calm, and giving the horse the chance to look around quietly before competing can all make a meaningful difference. Travelling with a familiar companion reduces herd-separation stress where possible.

 

Nutritional Support

Certain herbs have a well-established history of supporting calm behaviour in horses. Vervain, lemon balm, chamomile, passionflower, raspberry leaf, and marshmallow root are among those most associated with supporting nervous system regulation and reducing anxiety, without sedating the horse or affecting their way of going.

For horses where gut health may be a factor, supporting the gut alongside the nervous system tends to produce more consistent results than addressing one in isolation.

 

  Tip: If your horse is consistently anxious at shows despite good preparation, it is worth considering whether gut health may be contributing. The two are more closely connected than most owners realise.

 

HOW EQUINUTRITIVE CAN HELP

No More Nerves is a 100% natural calming supplement combining seven herbs: vervain, lemon balm, chamomile, raspberry leaf, passionflower, marshmallow root, and peppermint. It is non-sedating and magnesium free, formulated to settle anxious and stressy horses by supporting the nervous system and minimising the stress response. It helps horses stay focused and calm without dulling their natural way of going. Results are typically seen within 3 weeks of consistent daily feeding.

The Gut-Brain Reset is a one month programme for horses where the gut and nervous system need to be supported together. It combines No More Nerves with B-Complete, a gut supplement made from 100% natural, dried, green, Australian bananas, to address both sides of the gut-brain axis. It is particularly well suited to horses that are consistently reactive, spooky, or difficult to manage. Improvements are typically seen within 2 to 3 weeks.

Both products are 100% natural, non-sedating, and suitable for horses with or prone to laminitis, EMS, Cushings, or other metabolic disturbances. Both come with our money-back guarantee and free UK shipping.

-> Shop No More Nerves 

-> Shop The Gut-Brain Reset 

WHEN TO SEEK PROFESSIONAL HELP

If your horse's show nerves are severe, worsening, or accompanied by dangerous behaviour, seek support from an equine behaviourist or veterinarian. Significant weight loss, self-destructive behaviour, or distress that begins at home rather than at the venue are all indicators that professional assessment is needed alongside any management or nutritional changes.

Show nerves are not just a training problem, and they are not something your horse is choosing. Understanding the physiology behind what happens at a show, and addressing it with the right preparation, management, and nutritional support, gives your horse the best chance of being at a competition the horse they are at home.

Your horse cannot tell you they are struggling. But if they lose their head every time you arrive at a venue, they are telling you something. It is worth listening.

 

 


 

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