HABLAMOS ESPAÑOL

🐾 Puppy Training in Dallas & DFW

Science-Backed Puppy Training from PhD Experts | Socialization, Potty Training, Crate Training & More

⭐ 4.9-Star Google Rating | 1,500+ Puppies Trained | Christmas Puppy Specialists

Quick Answer: Puppy Training in Dallas

Professional puppy training in Dallas-Fort Worth costs $100-$850 depending on the program. Our science-backed methods teach socialization, potty training, crate training, bite inhibition, and basic obedience. Programs include $100 consultations, $450 AKC S.T.A.R. Puppy packages (6 weeks), and $850 board & train (1 week intensive). We serve all of DFW with methods based on PhD research in animal learning psychology. Start training as early as 8 weeks old during your puppy's critical socialization window.

1,500+
Puppies Trained
4.9★
Google Rating
8-16
Week Critical Window
100%
Lifetime Support

Why Puppy Training Psychology Matters More Than You Think

Most Dallas puppy owners think training is just about teaching "sit" and "stay." But here's what the science tells us: the first 16 weeks of your puppy's life shape their entire behavioral future.

During this critical period—what animal behaviorists call the "socialization window"—your puppy's brain is a sponge. They're learning what's safe, what's scary, what's normal, and how the world works. Miss this window, and you're playing catch-up for years.

That's why our puppy training in Dallas isn't just about obedience commands. It's about understanding the psychology of how puppies learn, what motivates them, and how to set them up for a lifetime of confidence and good behavior.

We don't just train your puppy. We teach you the science behind puppy behavior so you understand why your puppy does what they do—and how to guide them effectively.

🎓 The Science Behind Our Puppy Training Methods

Our Dallas puppy training program is built on research from the world's leading animal behavior scientists. Here are the four PhD-authored books that form the foundation of our training philosophy:

Excel-erated Learning

Pamela J. Reid, PhD

PhD in Psychology (Animal Learning & Behavior) | Certified Behaviorist & Trainer

Why This Book Matters for Puppy Training:

  • Deep dive into how puppies actually learn through classical conditioning (associations) and operant conditioning (consequences)
  • Explains the "why" behind training techniques—not just "do this, then that"
  • Teaches you how to design effective training plans based on learning theory rather than guesswork
  • Critical for understanding reinforcement timing, stimulus control, and why some training methods work while others fail

Key Takeaway: Puppies learn through precise associations. Your timing matters more than your words. When you understand how learning happens in a puppy's brain, training becomes predictable and effective.

The Other End of the Leash

Patricia B. McConnell, PhD

PhD in Zoology | Certified Applied Animal Behaviorist | Decades of Behavior Case Experience

Why This Book Matters for Puppy Training:

  • Focuses on human-puppy communication—how your primate body language and voice affect your puppy's behavior
  • Explains why puppies sometimes "ignore" you (hint: it's usually because our signals are confusing to them)
  • Not a step-by-step manual, but crucial psychology for making your training clearer
  • Helps you refine handling skills and reduce mixed signals that confuse puppies

Key Takeaway: We're primates. Puppies are canines. We communicate differently. When you learn to "speak dog," your puppy training becomes exponentially more effective because you're finally clear in your communication.

Dog Sense

John Bradshaw, PhD

PhD Anthrozoologist | Decades Studying Human-Animal Interactions

Why This Book Matters for Puppy Training:

  • Synthesizes modern puppy behavior research and debunks harmful dominance/pack-leader myths
  • Connects science directly to training choices—why reward-based methods align with a puppy's cognitive and emotional world
  • Big-picture psychology book that shifts how you think about puppies
  • Essential for understanding puppy development stages and what they need at each phase

Key Takeaway: Your puppy isn't trying to "dominate" you when they pull on the leash or jump on guests. They're just being a puppy. Understanding their developmental psychology helps you train with empathy and effectiveness.

Wag: The Science of Making Your Dog Happy

Zazie Todd, PhD

PhD in Psychology | Dog Welfare Researcher | Science-Based Training Advocate

Why This Book Matters for Puppy Training:

  • Combines psychology, training, and welfare science into practical puppy-raising strategies
  • Explains what makes puppies happy, confident, and resilient
  • Evidence-based approach to socialization, fear periods, and building a well-adjusted adult dog
  • Perfect balance of scientific rigor and real-world application

Key Takeaway: Happy puppies learn better. When training focuses on building confidence and positive associations (not just obedience), you get a puppy who wants to work with you—and that's when real progress happens.

What Makes Puppy Training Different from Adult Dog Training?

Here's what most Dallas puppy owners don't realize: puppy brains are fundamentally different from adult dog brains.

Puppies are in constant learning mode. Everything is new. Every experience creates a neural pathway. Every interaction teaches them something about the world. This is why the science tells us that:

  • 8-16 weeks is the critical socialization window. During this period, puppies are biologically primed to accept new experiences as normal. After 16 weeks, the window starts closing. New things become scarier.
  • Fear periods exist. Around 8-11 weeks and again around 6-14 months, puppies go through developmental fear periods where they're more sensitive to scary experiences. One bad experience during a fear period can create lasting phobias.
  • Bite inhibition must be taught early. Puppies learn jaw pressure control from their littermates and from you. If you don't teach them "ouch, that hurts" before 4-5 months, they may never learn proper bite inhibition.
  • Impulse control is a skill, not a trait. Puppies aren't born knowing how to wait, settle, or control themselves. These are learned skills that develop over time with the right training.

At Off Leash K9 Training DFW, we design our puppy training programs around these scientific realities. We're not just teaching your puppy to sit and stay. We're building a psychological foundation that will last their entire life.

Core Puppy Training Skills We Teach (And Why Each Matters)

🏠 Potty Training & Crate Training

The Psychology: Puppies naturally avoid soiling their sleeping area (a den instinct). Crate training leverages this instinct while teaching your puppy bladder control and calm settling behavior.

What We Teach:

  • Crate as a safe space, not punishment
  • Potty schedule based on your puppy's age (8 weeks = every 2 hours, etc.)
  • Reading early warning signs (sniffing, circling, whining)
  • Positive reinforcement for outdoor potty success
  • Preventing accidents through management and routine

Dallas-Specific Tip: Hot Texas summers mean your puppy may drink more water. Adjust potty breaks accordingly, especially during July-September when DFW temps hit 100°+.

🦷 Bite Inhibition & Puppy Biting

The Psychology: Puppies explore the world with their mouths. They're not being aggressive—they're being puppies. But they need to learn that human skin is delicate.

What We Teach:

  • How to teach "gentle" mouth pressure through feedback
  • Redirecting biting to appropriate toys
  • Managing overstimulation that triggers biting
  • Using timeouts effectively (not as punishment, but as information)
  • Understanding the difference between play biting and fear/aggression

Critical Window: Bite inhibition is best taught before 18 weeks. After that, the window for easy learning closes.

🐕 Socialization (The Most Important Skill)

The Psychology: During the 8-16 week socialization window, puppies are hardwired to accept new experiences as "normal." This is your chance to shape their entire worldview.

What We Teach:

  • Safe exposure to 100+ new things (people, dogs, surfaces, sounds, objects)
  • How to read your puppy's body language (stress vs. curiosity)
  • Counter-conditioning to prevent fear
  • Proper dog-dog greetings (not all dogs should meet every dog!)
  • Building confidence in new environments

Dallas Socialization Spots We Use:

  • Klyde Warren Park – Urban environment with people, skateboards, food trucks
  • Katy Trail – Joggers, bikes, strollers, other dogs
  • Trinity Groves – Restaurant patios, outdoor dining, crowds
  • NorthPark Center outdoor areas – Varied surfaces, noise, people
  • Pet-friendly Starbucks patios – Settling in public

Important: Socialization doesn't mean "let your puppy meet every dog." It means controlled exposure to build positive associations. We teach you how to socialize safely.

🎓 Basic Obedience (Sit, Down, Recall)

The Psychology: Puppies thrive on structure and clear communication. Teaching basic commands gives them a "language" to communicate with you and builds impulse control.

What We Teach:

  • Sit – for self-control before meals, greetings, doorways
  • Down – for calm settling behavior
  • Recall (Come) – emergency recall could save your puppy's life
  • Leave It – critical for Texas wildlife (snakes, toads, fire ants)
  • Wait/Stay – impulse control at doorways and thresholds

The Science: We use marker training (clicker or verbal marker) to create precise associations between behavior and reward. This is based on Pamela Reid's work in operant conditioning—when you mark the exact moment your puppy does the right thing, learning happens faster.

🚶‍♂️ Leash Walking (Yes, Even for Tiny Puppies)

The Psychology: Puppies who learn to pull get stronger as they grow. A 10-pound puppy who pulls becomes a 70-pound adult who pulls. Start early.

What We Teach:

  • Positive leash pressure concept (leash tension predicts direction change)
  • Rewarding attention and check-ins
  • Managing distraction zones (other dogs, squirrels, etc.)
  • Building duration slowly (5 minutes at 8 weeks, 10 minutes at 10 weeks, etc.)

Dallas Walking Spots for Puppy Practice: White Rock Lake trail, Arbor Hills Nature Preserve, Bishop Arts District sidewalks.

Age-by-Age Puppy Training Timeline: What to Expect

8-10 Weeks Old

First Fear Period | Peak Socialization Window Opening

Focus: Gentle socialization, potty training foundation, crate introduction, name recognition, handling (paws, ears, mouth for vet visits).

Psychology: This is a sensitive period. Puppies are curious but also cautious. Avoid overwhelming experiences. Every positive exposure builds confidence; every scary experience can create lasting fear.

Training Goals: Introduce 10+ new people, 5+ new surfaces, 3+ new environments. Start potty schedule. Crate naps after playtime. Hand-feed meals to build food motivation.

10-12 Weeks Old

Confidence Building | Critical Socialization Peak

Focus: Aggressive socialization (100+ new things), basic obedience introduction (sit, down), bite inhibition training, crate training at night.

Psychology: This is your golden window. Puppies are most receptive to new experiences. Use it wisely. Expose them to everything they'll encounter as adults: kids, bikes, cars, vacuums, doorbells, strangers, other dogs (vaccinated, friendly dogs only).

Training Goals: 2-3 socialization outings per week. Puppy kindergarten classes. Start "sit" for meals. Begin leave-it training. Work on crate duration (30+ minutes).

12-16 Weeks Old

Adolescence Beginning | Socialization Window Closing

Focus: Solidify obedience basics, continue socialization (it's not over yet!), leash walking skills, recall practice in safe areas.

Psychology: The socialization window is closing but hasn't shut yet. New experiences may take more time to acclimate to. Puppies start testing boundaries—this is normal adolescent behavior.

Training Goals: Reliable sit and down. 10-second stays. Recall from 10 feet. Leash walking without constant pulling. Settling on place bed for 10+ minutes. Reduced puppy biting (should be almost gone by 16 weeks).

4-6 Months Old

Adolescent Energy Surge | Teething Phase | Second Fear Period

Focus: Maintain training consistency, manage teething, proof commands with distractions, prevent regression, continue socialization maintenance.

Psychology: Around 6 months, many puppies hit a second fear period. Things they were fine with before may suddenly scare them. This is developmental and normal. Also, teething pain can make puppies nippy again—provide appropriate chew outlets.

Training Goals: Commands around moderate distractions. 30-second stays. Recall with mild distractions. Leash walking past other dogs without lunging. Polite greetings (sit instead of jump).

6+ Months Old

Adolescent Independence | Ongoing Training

Focus: Proofing all commands, off-leash training (if desired), advanced obedience, addressing any behavior issues that emerged.

Psychology: Adolescent puppies test boundaries constantly. This is when many Dallas owners give up and call us. Don't quit now—consistency through adolescence creates a well-behaved adult dog.

Training Goals: Reliable obedience around high distractions. Off-leash recall in safe areas. Duration stays (5+ minutes). Calm public behavior. Advanced skills like place, heel, and off-leash conditioning.

Real Puppy Training Success Stories from Dallas Families

Luna – Goldendoodle Puppy

McKinney, TX | 12 weeks old | AKC S.T.A.R. Puppy Program

"Luna was a typical Goldendoodle puppy—jumping, biting, no impulse control. We did the 6-week AKC S.T.A.R. Puppy program and it completely changed her. She learned sit, down, recall, and leash walking. But more importantly, we learned how to communicate with her. The science behind the training made so much sense. Now she's the calmest puppy at Katy Trail."

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Bear – German Shepherd Puppy

Frisco, TX | 10 weeks old | 1-Week Board & Train

"We got Bear right before Christmas and were totally overwhelmed. The puppy board & train was a lifesaver. In one week, they potty trained him, crate trained him, taught basic obedience, and socialized him to tons of new things. When we picked him up, we got three full transfer sessions where they taught US how to handle him. Best $850 we've ever spent. Bear is now 9 months old and the best dog in our neighborhood."

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Bella – Rescue Puppy Mix

Dallas, TX | 14 weeks old | Private Consultation + Classes

"We rescued Bella at 14 weeks and she was fearful of everything—people, noises, other dogs. The trainer explained we were still in the socialization window but needed to go slow. Over 6 weeks, we built her confidence through controlled exposure and positive associations. Now she loves Trinity Groves patios and doesn't hide from strangers. Understanding the psychology behind her fear made us better puppy parents."

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

7 Common Puppy Training Mistakes Dallas Owners Make (And How to Avoid Them)

Mistake #1: Waiting Until 6 Months to Start Training

Wrong: "We'll wait until she's older and can focus better."

Right: Start training at 8 weeks. The critical socialization window is 8-16 weeks. Waiting until 6 months means you've already missed it. You're not training too early—you're using the exact time when puppies' brains are primed for learning.

Mistake #2: Over-Socializing (Yes, That's a Thing)

Wrong: "Let's take our 9-week-old puppy to the dog park so they can 'socialize.'"

Right: Dog parks are overwhelming and often dangerous for puppies. One bad experience with an aggressive adult dog can create lifelong fear. Socialize through controlled exposure: friendly, vaccinated dogs only, short interactions, watch body language carefully.

Mistake #3: Inconsistent Crate Training

Wrong: "We crate him during the day but let him sleep in our bed at night because he cries."

Right: Inconsistency creates confusion. If you're crate training, commit fully. Puppies cry because crying worked before. Hold the boundary. They'll learn that crying doesn't open the crate door.

Mistake #4: Treating Puppy Biting as Aggression

Wrong: "My puppy bit me! Is he aggressive?"

Right: Puppy biting is normal. It's not aggression—it's exploration and play. The key is teaching bite inhibition through feedback: "ouch" + brief timeout. Aggression looks different: stiff body, hard stare, growling, snapping with intent. Don't confuse normal puppy behavior with behavior problems.

Mistake #5: No Management Strategy

Wrong: "We give him full house freedom and then get mad when he chews furniture."

Right: Puppies can't be trusted with full freedom yet. Use crates, pens, and leashes indoors. Management prevents bad habits from forming. As they prove reliable, they earn more freedom gradually.

Mistake #6: Inconsistent Commands

Wrong: Mom says "sit," Dad says "sit down," kids say "sit boy sit."

Right: Pick ONE word per command. Puppies don't speak English—they learn associations between specific sounds and behaviors. "Sit," "sit down," and "sit boy" are three different sounds to a puppy.

Mistake #7: Stopping Too Soon

Wrong: "She was doing great at 4 months, so we stopped training."

Right: Adolescence hits around 6 months and many puppies regress. Behaviors you thought were "fixed" suddenly reappear. This is normal. Keep training through adolescence (6-18 months) to prevent regression and solidify good habits.

Dallas Puppy Training Programs & Pricing

We offer three puppy training options to fit different goals, schedules, and budgets. All programs include lifetime phone support.

Puppy Training Consultation

$100

1-hour session

  • Personalized puppy assessment
  • Customized training roadmap
  • Potty & crate training guidance
  • Socialization schedule
  • Bite inhibition strategies
  • Q&A with expert trainer
  • Written action plan

Best For: New puppy owners who want expert guidance but plan to do training themselves.

Book Consultation

Puppy Board & Train

$850

1-week intensive

  • 1 week residential training
  • Potty training (crate & schedule)
  • Crate training (day & night)
  • Basic obedience (sit, down, recall)
  • Leash walking foundation
  • Socialization to 50+ stimuli
  • Bite inhibition work
  • Owner transfer sessions
  • Take-home equipment
  • Video demonstrations
  • Written instructions
  • Lifetime phone support

Best For: Busy families who need fast results or Christmas puppies who need intensive training quickly.

Learn More

🎄 Christmas Puppy Special: Gift Certificates Available!

Planning to surprise someone with a puppy for Christmas? We offer training gift certificates for any program. Give the gift of a well-trained puppy from day one!

Get Gift Certificate

The Dallas Puppy Socialization Checklist

Use this checklist to ensure your puppy is exposed to 100+ new experiences during the critical 8-16 week window. The goal isn't to overwhelm—it's to build positive associations through controlled exposure.

✓ People (30+ different types)

  • Men, women, children (various ages)
  • People wearing hats, sunglasses, uniforms
  • People with beards, different hairstyles
  • People using wheelchairs, canes, walkers
  • Joggers, cyclists, skateboarders
  • Delivery drivers, mail carriers

✓ Other Animals (10+)

  • Friendly, vaccinated dogs (various sizes)
  • Cats (if possible)
  • Livestock (horses, cows) if applicable
  • Small animals (rabbits, guinea pigs) from a safe distance

✓ Surfaces & Environments (20+)

  • Grass, concrete, gravel, wood, metal grates
  • Stairs, ramps, bridges
  • Wet surfaces, slippery floors
  • Indoor/outdoor transitions
  • Vet clinic (for fun visits, not just shots)
  • Pet store aisles
  • Restaurant patios (once fully vaccinated)

✓ Sounds (20+)

  • Vacuum cleaner, blender, hair dryer
  • Doorbell, knocking
  • Car horns, sirens
  • Thunder recordings (start quiet, increase volume gradually)
  • Fireworks recordings (critical for July 4th)
  • Kids playing, babies crying

✓ Handling & Grooming

  • Paw handling (nail trims)
  • Ear checks
  • Mouth/teeth inspection
  • Body brushing
  • Belly touches
  • Restraint for vet exams

✓ Dallas-Specific Experiences

  • Hot pavement (teach them to recognize and avoid)
  • Texas wildlife sounds (frogs, cicadas, crickets)
  • Sprinkler systems and lawn equipment
  • Pool areas (if you have one—safety first!)
  • BBQ smoke and outdoor cooking

Puppy Training FAQ

When should I start training my puppy?

Start at 8 weeks old—the moment you bring your puppy home. The critical socialization window is 8-16 weeks, so every week matters. "Wait until 6 months" is outdated advice that causes you to miss the most important developmental period. Early training builds confidence and prevents behavior problems from forming.

How much does puppy training cost in Dallas?

Our Dallas puppy training ranges from $100 (consultation) to $850 (1-week board & train). The most popular option is our AKC S.T.A.R. Puppy package at $450 for 6 weekly classes. All programs include lifetime phone support. Payment plans available through Affirm.

Is my puppy too young for training?

No. If your puppy is 8 weeks or older, they're ready to start. In fact, 8-16 weeks is the most important time to train. Puppies' brains are like sponges during this period. They're biologically primed to learn and accept new experiences. Waiting wastes this critical window.

Should I get a puppy for Christmas?

Only if you're prepared for the commitment. Puppies are a 10-15+ year responsibility. They require time, money, and consistency—especially in the first few months. If you're considering a Christmas puppy, book training in advance so you're ready from day one. We offer gift certificates for training programs if you want to surprise someone with a well-trained puppy package.

Do you offer gift certificates for puppy training?

Yes! We offer gift certificates for all puppy training programs—perfect for Christmas, birthdays, or new puppy celebrations. Gift certificates never expire and can be applied to any service. Contact us to purchase one.

How do I prepare my home for a Christmas puppy?

Before bringing your puppy home: (1) Get a crate, food/water bowls, age-appropriate food, toys, and a leash/collar. (2) Puppy-proof your home (remove toxic plants, secure electrical cords, pick up small objects). (3) Establish a potty schedule. (4) Choose your training methods and commands. (5) Find a local puppy kindergarten class or trainer. We offer a pre-puppy consultation ($100) where we walk you through everything you need.

When should I start training my Christmas puppy?

Immediately—day one. Don't wait for the holidays to be over. The 8-16 week socialization window doesn't pause for Christmas. Start crate training, potty training, and socialization right away. If you get a puppy on December 25th and they're 8 weeks old, you only have 8 weeks until the socialization window starts closing. Use every day wisely.

Can puppies be around other dogs before full vaccination?

Yes, with caution. The American Veterinary Society of Animal Behavior states that the behavioral risks of inadequate socialization outweigh the health risks of disease exposure when done properly. Expose your puppy to healthy, vaccinated dogs in controlled environments. Avoid dog parks until fully vaccinated (16 weeks). Puppy kindergarten classes with vaccination requirements are safe and crucial for development.

What's the difference between puppy training and adult dog training?

Puppy training focuses on prevention, socialization, and foundation building during critical developmental windows. Adult dog training often addresses existing behavior problems and builds reliability. Puppies are sponges—they learn fast but have short attention spans. Adults are slower to learn new behaviors but have better focus. Both require different approaches based on developmental psychology.

Do you offer in-home puppy training?

Yes! We provide in-home puppy training throughout Dallas-Fort Worth. In-home training is ideal for families who want personalized attention in their own environment or have multiple dogs. We'll teach potty training, crate training, basic obedience, and socialization strategies customized to your home setup. Contact us for custom in-home pricing.

Where in DFW do you provide puppy training?

We serve all of Dallas-Fort Worth including Dallas, Fort Worth, Arlington, Plano, Frisco, McKinney, Allen, Richardson, Irving, Carrollton, Garland, Denton, Grapevine, Southlake, Colleyville, Flower Mound, Lewisville, The Colony, Little Elm, Prosper, Celina, Coppell, Highland Park, University Park, and surrounding areas. We come to you or you come to our Lewisville facility—your choice.

What breeds do you work with?

All breeds! From tiny Chihuahuas to giant Great Danes. We adjust training methods based on breed temperament, energy level, and learning style. High-energy breeds (Huskies, Border Collies, Cattle Dogs) need more mental stimulation. Bully breeds need more socialization. Herding breeds need impulse control work. We customize training to your puppy's breed-specific needs.

What if I adopted an older puppy (4-6 months)?

You've missed part of the socialization window but not all of it. Focus aggressively on positive exposure to anything they seem fearful of. Work on basic obedience and structure. Many 4-6 month old puppies hit adolescence early and test boundaries—consistent training now prevents bigger problems later. It's never too late to start, but earlier is always better.

How do I maintain puppy training after your program ends?

Use commands in daily life: sit before meals, down during TV time, recall in the backyard, leash walking on every outing. Practice 5-10 minutes per day in different locations with different distractions. Socialization is ongoing—keep exposing your puppy to new things throughout their first year. Continue training through adolescence (6-18 months). We provide lifetime phone support if you hit any bumps.

What Dallas Puppy Owners Are Saying

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Megan R.

Plano, TX

"We brought our Goldendoodle puppy to the AKC S.T.A.R. Puppy program at 10 weeks. The science-based approach made so much sense—they explained why training works, not just what to do. Six weeks later, our puppy is crate trained, potty trained, knows basic obedience, and is social with other dogs. The trainers are patient, knowledgeable, and truly care about puppy development. Best $450 we've spent."

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

James T.

Dallas, TX

"We did the puppy board & train for our German Shepherd at 12 weeks. In one week, they potty trained him, taught basic commands, and socialized him to tons of new things. When we picked him up, we got three transfer sessions where they showed us EXACTLY how to handle him. Six months later, he's the best-behaved dog in our neighborhood. Worth every penny."

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Sarah K.

Frisco, TX

"I thought puppy training was just teaching 'sit' and 'stay.' This program taught us the psychology behind puppy behavior—understanding fear periods, socialization windows, bite inhibition development. It completely changed how we approach training. Our puppy is now 8 months old and the most confident, well-adjusted dog. Can't recommend them enough."

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Carlos M.

Fort Worth, TX

"We got a Christmas puppy last year and were completely overwhelmed. Found Off Leash K9 Training and did the consultation + private lessons. They walked us through everything: potty training schedule, crate training without guilt, socialization safely during COVID, bite inhibition. Our puppy is now a therapy dog visiting hospitals. Incredible transformation."

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Emily R.

McKinney, TX

"The PhD-backed training methods gave me so much confidence. I understood WHY things worked instead of just following commands. When our puppy regressed at 6 months (adolescence), I knew it was normal and how to handle it. The lifetime support has been a lifesaver—I still text them questions a year later and they always respond."

Serving Puppy Owners Across Dallas-Fort Worth

Dallas County

  • Dallas
  • Richardson
  • Irving
  • Garland
  • Mesquite
  • Carrollton
  • Highland Park
  • University Park

Collin County

  • Plano
  • Frisco
  • McKinney
  • Allen
  • Prosper
  • Celina
  • The Colony
  • Little Elm

Tarrant County

  • Fort Worth
  • Arlington
  • Grapevine
  • Southlake
  • Colleyville
  • Bedford
  • Euless

Denton County

  • Denton
  • Lewisville
  • Flower Mound
  • Coppell
  • Corinth
  • Highland Village

🐾 Ready to Start Your Puppy Training Journey?

Your puppy's critical socialization window is 8-16 weeks. Don't waste it. Contact us today to schedule a consultation, enroll in puppy classes, or book a board & train program. Every day you wait is a day you can't get back in your puppy's development.

Schedule Free Phone Consultation Call Now: (972) 372-9225

Off Leash K9 Training DFW

📍 Address: 101 S Railroad St #7, Lewisville, TX 75057

📞 Phone: (972) 372-9225

✉️ Email: [email protected]

🕒 Hours: Mon-Fri 8AM-7PM | Sat 8AM-6PM | Sun 9AM-5PM

⭐ 4.9-Star Google Rating | 534 Reviews | 1,500+ Puppies Trained