Animal urine and urine patch characteristics are import drivers of nitrogen leaching in pasture-based dairy systems and their manipulation offers opportunities to mitigate these losses. We developed a model, based on previous work, to investigate the effect of applying tactical management strategies to reduce nitrogen leaching from urination events during different times of the year. Our model predicted that reducing pasture height or increasing the volume per urination event to increase the spread of individual urine patches may not reduce nitrogen leaching at paddock scale, most likely due to the opposing effect of increasing the proportion of overlapping urine patches. In contrast, decreasing dietary nitrogen intake by 30% or increasing total daily urination volume by 40% reduced nitrogen leaching by 16% and 4%, respectively. Furthermore, decreasing nitrogen intake by 30% during targeted times of the year (January to May) still reduced the nitrogen leaching loss by a considerable amount relative to applying this strategy for the whole year (10% versus 16%, respectively). Our modelling indicates that management strategies can be applied tactically during key times of the year to reduce the nitrogen leaching risk. This is important for dairy producers who can add substantial reductions to N leaching from their farm systems, while reducing the management effort and costs by focussing on two key urine characteristics and only during a limited time of the farm season.