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How Long Does it Take to Train a Dog?

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How Long Does it Take to Train a Dog?

Training Your Dog
By Shoshi Parks

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“How long will it take to train my dog?” It’s a question I get frequently from first-time dog owners—and it’s never easy to answer.

There are several factors at play when determining how long it might take to train a dog. Are you teaching basic skills or attempting to overcome a behavioural challenge? What is the dog’s history of learning? Have they previously been trained using punishment or other aversive techniques? Are they adults that have never had any training?

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Most importantly, how committed to training are the humans involved? In all cases, how quickly we can train a dog depends as much on the humans doing the training as it does on the dog’s ability to learn. As a trainer, I may be able to teach your dog to sit, lie down, stay and basic recall within a couple of weeks but if you aren’t consistently reinforcing those skills, they’ll remain spotty and underdeveloped.

While we can’t help you figure out how long it will take to train your dog, we can offer 8 insights to give you some idea of what may speed up or slow down the process.

Dog Training Timeline: Tips for Success

1. Get everyone in the house on board

Getting all members of the household on the same page is crucial for overcoming behaviour challenges, in particular, as well as for teaching new skills. If, for example, we are trying to teach a dog that jumping on humans does not reward a dog with the attention they seek, the human members of the family must agree to turn around, exit through a doorway or walk away if the dog jumps on them.

If everyone is on board, over time dog will learn that they can jump ‘til the cows come home; they’ll never get the attention they seek unless they change their attention-seeking strategy. Eventually, jumping will extinguish (disappear) and be replaced by more polite requests, as long as those polite requests are being rewarded. If one family member chooses to lavish the dog with attention when they jump up, the dog learns that the strategy works sometimes and has no reason not abandon it for something more polite.

2. Consistency over time is key

Along with getting everyone in the household on board with the training methods, those training methods must be enforced consistently over time. Think of self-serving behaviours like jumping up for attention like your dog playing a slot-machine-of-love. Four out of five times Fido jumps up, you withhold attention until he offers a more polite alternative to jumping (i.e., standing calmly with four paws on the floor or sitting at your feet). But that fifth time, that fifth time you forget or are distracted and you give your dog your attention when they jump. If the odds of winning at a slot machine were one out of five, you might be willing to play a few games and try your luck.

Your dog makes the same calculation. If the fun, natural behaviour is rewarded one out of every five times, may as well try it first before seeking attention more politely.

A woman bends down, smiling, towards her large dog, training to not jump up.

3. It’s harder to build a good habit from scratch than change a bad habit

Have you ever tried to break yourself of a bad habit? Say biting your nails or smoking? If you have, you know that breaking a habit that has been repeated dozens or hundreds or thousands of times is much more challenging than introducing something completely novel into your routine.

The same principle works for our dogs. Teaching a new skill will always go faster than trying to change your dog’s existing relationship with an object, activity or person.

4. Behaviours rooted in emotions take time to change

Depending on the individual dog, we can teach a simple beginning skill like sit or down with very little effort. Improving fear- or anxiety-based behaviours through training, on the other hand, is a long-term commitment. When we are using classical conditioning techniques like desensitisation and counterconditioning, we are trying to get at the root of a problem that is deeply anchored in your dog’s brain.

Imagine trying to overcome your own fear of spiders or heights or confined spaces or anything that frightens you. Would a single therapy session change your response to these triggers? What about ten sessions? Twenty sessions? There is no way to know. How quickly the fear improves, if it ever improves, depends entirely on teaching your dog to trust you and giving them the space they need to work through their anxiety.

5. You can only train your dog as quickly as they can learn

Every dog learns at a different pace. Breed type and age can sometimes be a factor—young, malleable dogs frequently learn quickly, as do working breeds—but really it comes down to the individual, not maturity or genetics. Your dog is likely to be more successful at picking up new skills if you can introduce them in quiet, familiar environments without distractions, such as inside the home. Even in the best conditions, your dog may struggle with particular cues or with learning in general. (See below).

Since the quality of the teacher is also often a factor on how easily a student learns, assure that you are communicating clearly and moving at a pace your dog can handle.

A woman laughs on the beach, as she trains her dog how to shake.

6. Dogs with a history of aversive training may have trouble learning

Aversive training techniques that intimidate or cause a dog pain such as alpha rolling or the use of prong collars can leave them with a lifetime fear of learning. Dogs with a history of this kind of training are often easy to identify. They may be unwilling to follow lures because they fear what will happen if they get it wrong. They may be startled by marker words or clickers because sharp noises once predicted punishment. They may be unable to concentrate or become too wound up during training sessions out of anxiety.

These dogs deserve extra patience and care during training in order to help them to overcome a fear of learning.

7. High-quality rewards = high-quality learning

The better the rewards you offer your dog during training, the more motivated they will be to learn. Kibble and packaged treats are okay (although in some contexts, they may not pack enough punch to work at all) but for faster responses, try high-value treats like tiny pieces of sausage, chicken, or cheese.

8. You’re never really done training a dog

Just like humans, dogs never really stop learning. So even after you’ve taught them a bullet proof lie down command and a killer recall, their training isn’t complete. Throughout your life together, your dog will be carefully watching you for clues about how to navigate their world!

It’s up to you to attempt to communicate in ways that lead to behaviours you like versus those you don’t. Continuing to reinforce over time the behaviours you’ve taught with rewards regularly or even intermittently will ensure that your dog doesn’t abandon those teachings because there’s nothing in it for them.

Further reading

  • Don’t Call it ‘Treat Training’: Why and How to Use Rewards in Dog Training
  • 50 Puppy Training Tips to Help You Stay Sane
  • Bell Training for Dogs: It Really Works. Here’s How.
  • Dog Training Leads – What’s Best For Your Dog?
  • 3 Training Exercises to Perfect Your Dog’s Manners for Life
  • The Secret to Clicker Training: How to Make it Work for You and Your Dog
  • The 7 Most Important Dog Training Skills
  • 8 Tips to Socialise Your Dog with Other Dogs and Humans

And if you can’t be around as much as you’d like for whatever reason, don’t worry, we’ve got your back! You can find a local sitter on Rover.com who offers dog boarding and can give your dog all the attention they deserve while you’re gone—so you can rest assured that your dog’s in good hands!

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Shoshi Parks

Shoshi Parks, Ph.D. is a Certified Professional Dog Trainer (CPDT-ka) and Certified Separation Anxiety Trainer (CSAT). She owns Modern Hound Dog Training in San Francisco and teaches dog training classes at the San Francisco SPCA.

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By Shoshi Parks

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