Dog Obedience Training at Home
What You Need Before You Start
Home training does not require much, and that is part of why it works so well. A handful of supplies and the right mindset cover almost everything.
- High-value treats. Pea-sized soft treats your dog rarely gets otherwise. Tiny pieces mean more reps before your dog fills up.
- A marker. A clicker or a short word like "yes" that tells your dog the exact instant they did the right thing. If you want the full method, see our guide to clicker training for dogs.
- A quiet space. A bathroom, hallway, or corner of the living room with nothing going on.
- A few minutes, a few times a day. Short and frequent always beats one long, frustrating session.
The mindset matters as much as the gear. We train with positive reinforcement only, which means we pay for the behavior we want and quietly prevent or ignore the rest. There is no place for choke, prong, or shock collars here. They suppress behavior through fear or discomfort and can make problems like reactivity worse, and they damage the trust you are trying to build.
How to Run a Good Training Session
Before we get to individual cues, the structure of your practice is what makes or breaks your results. Get these four habits right and the cues almost teach themselves.
- Keep sessions short. Three to five minutes is plenty. Two or three sessions a day adds up to far more than one twenty-minute marathon, and your dog stays eager instead of checked out.
- End on a win. Always stop while your dog is still succeeding and wanting more. Quitting after a great rep keeps them excited for next time.
- Reward generously at first. Pay for every correct response in the early days. Once a cue is solid, you can shift to rewarding the best reps and mixing in praise and play.
- One cue at a time. Get sit reliable before you add down. Stacking new cues on top of shaky ones just creates confusion.
A simple daily rhythm: one short session in the morning, one before dinner, and a few casual reps sprinkled into normal life, like asking for a sit before the leash goes on. Five to ten total minutes a day, done consistently, beats any weekend cram session.
The Six Core Cues, Step by Step
Teach these roughly in order. Each builds a little on the one before it. Mark ("yes" or click) the instant your dog does the right thing, then deliver the treat.
1. Sit
- Hold a treat at your dog's nose.
- Slowly lift it up and slightly back over their head. As their nose follows up, their rear naturally drops.
- The moment their bottom touches the floor, mark and reward.
- After five or six reps, add the word "sit" right as they begin to sit. Fade the lure so your empty hand becomes the signal.
2. Down
- Start with your dog in a sit.
- Hold a treat at their nose and lower it straight to the floor between their front paws, then slide it slightly toward you.
- As they follow it down into a lying position, mark and reward.
- Once they are following smoothly, add the word "down," then fade the lure.
3. Stay
- Ask for a sit or down. Say "stay" with a flat open palm.
- Wait one second, mark, and reward while your dog is still in place. Always pay in position, not after they get up.
- Build duration one or two seconds at a time, then add small steps of distance, then both together. Slow and boring is the goal here.
- Add a release word like "okay" or "free" so your dog knows exactly when the stay ends.
4. Come (Recall)
- In a quiet room, crouch down, sound happy, and say your dog's name plus "come."
- The instant they head toward you, praise them the whole way in.
- When they arrive, mark and pay with something extra good. Recall should always be the best deal of your dog's day.
- Never call "come" for anything unpleasant like nail trims or ending playtime. You never want the word to predict bad news.
5. Leave It
- Put a treat in your closed fist and let your dog sniff and paw at it.
- The second they stop trying and back off, mark and reward from your other hand, never from the fist they were after.
- Progress to an open hand, then a treat on the floor that you can cover if needed. Add the words "leave it."
- Reward heavily, because turning away from something tempting is a hard skill that pays off in real life on walks.
6. Heel (Loose-Leash Walking)
- Start indoors with no leash. Reward your dog for being at your side as you take a step or two.
- Add the word "heel" and pay frequently while they stay in position.
- Move to a hallway, then the yard, then the quiet sidewalk, rewarding often at first.
- If the leash goes tight, simply stop walking. Start again only when there is slack. A loose leash earns forward progress; pulling does not.
Heel is the trickiest of the six because the outdoor world is full of competing smells and sights. Be patient and keep rewards high until the behavior holds up outside.
A Simple Daily Practice Plan
Consistency beats intensity every single time. You do not need an hour a day. You need a few honest minutes you actually do. Here is a sample week you can copy.
| Day | Morning (3-5 min) | Evening (3-5 min) | Real-life reps |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mon | Sit and down | Sit and down | Sit before meals |
| Tue | Down and stay | Stay (build duration) | Stay while you open the door |
| Wed | Come (quiet room) | Come (between rooms) | Recall to the food bowl |
| Thu | Leave it (closed fist) | Leave it (open hand) | Leave it for a dropped crumb |
| Fri | Heel indoors | Heel in the hallway | Two-step heel to the yard |
| Sat | Mix all cues | Mix all cues | One cue on your walk |
| Sun | Rest or light play | Easy review of favorites | Sit for the leash |
Adjust freely. Puppies and high-energy dogs often do better with more, shorter sessions. Older or easily tired dogs may prefer fewer. The structure matters more than the exact schedule, so make it fit your life.
Proofing: Making It Work in the Real World
Here is the part most owners skip, and it is the reason a dog who is perfect in the kitchen ignores you at the park. Dogs do not generalize well. A cue learned in one quiet spot does not automatically transfer everywhere. You have to teach it again under gradually harder conditions. Trainers call this proofing.
Work through what we call the three D's, and add only one at a time:
- Distance. Ask for the cue from farther away.
- Duration. Ask your dog to hold it longer.
- Distraction. Practice with mild distractions, then bigger ones.
The order to follow: master a cue in a quiet room, then a different room, then the yard, then the quiet street, and finally busier places. When you raise the difficulty, drop your expectations and your rewards back to easy mode for a bit. If your dog suddenly cannot do a cue they knew yesterday, you almost certainly added too much too fast. Take a step back, make it easier, and rebuild. That is not failure. That is exactly how proofing is supposed to feel.
When a Structured Program Helps
Honestly, you can teach every cue above with free resources. The AKC website has solid written guides, trainers like Kikopup on YouTube show excellent force-free technique, and your vet can flag anything health-related. We genuinely recommend leaning on those first. They cost nothing and they are good.
So what does a paid program actually buy you? Structure. A clear curriculum so you always know what to practice next, lessons in a sensible order, troubleshooting for when you get stuck, and in some cases direct support from a trainer. If you are the kind of person who does better with a step-by-step system than with a pile of scattered videos, a course can be worth it. It does not teach your dog anything you could not teach yourself; it just organizes the path and keeps you accountable.
If that sounds like you, we compare the programs we trust in our roundup of the best online dog training. Disclosure: we may earn a commission from programs we link, at no extra cost to you, and it never changes our recommendations. A program for the curriculum, the free resources for inspiration, and your own consistency for results. That last one is the part no purchase can replace.
Want a full step-by-step system instead of piecing it together? Doggy Dan is our top force-free pick and has a low-cost trial.
Affiliate link. We may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. It never changes our recommendations (see how we review). Free resources work for most single issues.
Frequently asked questions
How long does it take to train a dog at home?
Most dogs grasp the basic mechanics of a cue within a few short sessions, but reliable obedience in real-world distractions takes weeks to months of consistent practice. There is no honest shortcut. A dog that responds in the kitchen on day three may still need a month of proofing before they respond at the park. Steady daily reps matter far more than how fast you start.
What is the best age to start obedience training?
You can start the moment your puppy comes home, usually around eight weeks, using gentle, fun, treat-based sessions. Early training builds great habits. That said, dogs of any age can learn these cues, so there is no such thing as too late. Older dogs often focus better than puppies. If you have a young pup, our puppy guides walk you through the first weeks step by step.
Do I need a clicker to train my dog?
No. A clicker is a helpful tool because it marks the exact instant your dog did the right thing, but a clear, consistent word like "yes" works too. What matters is timing and consistency, not the device. If you are curious how marker training works and whether it suits you, our clicker training guide covers the basics in plain language.
How many cues should I teach at once?
Teach one cue at a time until it is reliable, then add the next. Stacking several new cues in the same session tends to confuse dogs and slow everyone down. Once a few cues are solid, you can absolutely mix them within a session for variety, but introduce each new skill on its own first.
My dog ignores me outside but listens at home. Why?
This is the single most common home-training frustration, and it is completely normal. Dogs do not automatically transfer a skill from one place to another, and the outdoors is packed with competing smells and sights. The fix is proofing: re-teach each cue in slightly harder settings, one step at a time, keeping rewards high until the behavior holds up. It is a training gap, not stubbornness.
Is it ever too late to fix bad habits?
It is rarely too late. Adult and senior dogs learn new behaviors well, though long-standing habits take patience and consistency to replace. The approach is the same: reward the behavior you want, manage the environment so the old habit gets fewer chances to happen, and stay consistent. For deeper issues like reactivity or separation anxiety, a structured plan or a certified trainer can speed things up.
