🐕 Reactive Dog Training in Dallas & DFW

Professional Behavior Modification for Lunging, Barking & Leash Reactivity | Science-Backed Results in 2–4 Weeks

⭐ 4.9-Star Google Rating | 5000+ Dogs Trained | Best Dog Trainers for Reactive Dogs in Dallas-Fort Worth

Quick Answer: Reactive Dog Training in Dallas

Professional reactive dog training in Dallas-Fort Worth costs $1,100–$5,800 depending on program type and severity. A reactive dog lunges, barks, or pulls toward triggers like other dogs, strangers, bikes, or cars. This isn't "bad behavior" — it's an emotional response rooted in fear, frustration, or overstimulation. Professional behavior modification uses counter-conditioning and desensitization to change how your dog feels about triggers — which changes how they act. Most reactive dogs show major improvement within 2–4 weeks of intensive training. Off Leash K9 Training DFW has a 99% success rate with reactive dogs across Dallas, Fort Worth, Plano, Frisco, and all of DFW.

5000+
Dogs Trained
99%
Success Rate
4.9★
Google Rating

What Is a "Reactive" Dog? (And Why It's Not the Same as Aggression)

Let's clear something up right away: a reactive dog is not an aggressive dog. They might look scary — the lunging, the barking, the pulling so hard they nearly yank your arm off — but what's happening inside their brain is completely different.

Here's the simplest way to think about it. Imagine you're terrified of spiders. Now imagine someone drops a spider on your desk. You'd probably scream, jump back, maybe knock your coffee over. Are you "aggressive"? No. You're reacting to something that scares you.

That's your reactive dog. When they see another dog across the street and go full volcano — barking, lunging, spinning — they're not thinking "I want to fight that dog." They're thinking "THAT THING IS TOO CLOSE AND I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO ABOUT IT."

Reactivity usually comes from one (or more) of these places:

  • Fear: Your dog is scared of the trigger and uses big, loud behavior to make it go away. It works — other dogs DO cross the street when your dog loses it. So the behavior gets stronger every time.
  • Frustration: Your dog WANTS to get to the trigger (usually other dogs) but can't because of the leash. The frustration builds until it explodes into barking and lunging. These dogs are often fine off-leash at dog parks but terrible on walks.
  • Overstimulation: Too much going on. Too many dogs, people, bikes, sounds. Your dog's brain hits overload and they can't think straight. Common in busy Dallas neighborhoods and along trails like Katy Trail.
  • Lack of socialization: Your dog never learned how to handle the world during their critical puppy development window (8–16 weeks). Everything unfamiliar is automatically scary.
  • Past trauma: A bad experience — dog attack, getting hit by a car, rough handling — created a negative association. Now anything that reminds them of that experience triggers a reaction.

The good news? Reactivity is fixable. Not with dominance. Not by yanking the leash harder. Not by avoiding triggers forever. It's fixable through science-based behavior modification that changes how your dog feels about their triggers — which changes how they act around them.

That's exactly what we do at Off Leash K9 Training DFW.

The 3-3-3 Rule & the 7-7-7 Rule: Why Reactive Dogs Need More Time

If you've recently adopted or rescued a reactive dog, you've probably heard about the 3-3-3 rule. Here's how it works and why it's especially important for reactive dogs:

  • First 3 days: Your dog is overwhelmed. Everything is new — the smells, the sounds, the people, the routine. A reactive dog will likely be on high alert, possibly shutting down OR being extra reactive. This is NOT the time to assess their true personality.
  • First 3 weeks: Your dog is starting to settle in. You'll begin to see their real personality, including triggers you didn't notice at first. Some dogs seem calm for 3 days then "suddenly" become reactive — they were just too stressed to react before.
  • First 3 months: Your dog is finally home. They've established routines, bonded with you, and feel safe enough to be themselves. This is when you see who they really are — and often when reactive behaviors emerge in full force.

The 7-7-7 rule takes it further and is a great socialization guideline for any dog, especially reactive ones working through behavior modification:

  • 7 new surfaces walked on each week (grass, gravel, wood, metal, tile, carpet, wet pavement)
  • 7 new people met each week (different ages, genders, appearances)
  • 7 new environments explored each week (parks, parking lots, pet stores, patios)

For reactive dogs, the 7-7-7 rule needs to be modified — all exposures should happen below threshold (far enough from triggers to stay calm) and paired with positive reinforcement. This is where professional help from a trained behavior modification specialist makes all the difference.

Signs Your Dog Is Reactive (Not Just "Excited")

A lot of Dallas dog owners tell us "oh, he's just excited!" when their dog is actually reactive. Here's how to tell the difference:

🚨 Reactive Dog Signs:

  • Lunges toward dogs, people, bikes, skateboards, or cars
  • Barks non-stop at triggers — can't be redirected with treats or commands
  • Hair stands up on back (piloerection) when they see a trigger
  • Hard, fixed stare at the trigger — won't break eye contact
  • Pulls so hard on the leash they choke themselves
  • Whines, paces, or can't settle when triggers are nearby
  • Redirects onto you — bites the leash, nips your hand, jumps on you
  • Takes 5+ minutes to calm down after seeing a trigger
  • Gets worse over time, not better

✅ Excited Dog Signs:

  • Wiggly body — whole body moves, not just the front end
  • Loose, open mouth — "smile" face
  • Can be redirected with treats, toys, or their name
  • Calms down within 30–60 seconds
  • Play bow (front end down, butt up) toward the trigger
  • Relaxes once they get to greet the trigger

If your dog matches the reactive list, you're in the right place. If they're just excited but out of control, our obedience training program or board and train will solve that fast.

Why Reactive Dogs Get Worse Without Professional Help

Here's the thing about reactivity that most dog owners don't realize: every single reaction makes the next one worse.

It works like this. Your dog sees another dog. They bark and lunge. The other dog walks away (because the other owner crosses the street). Your dog's brain goes: "Barking and lunging made the scary thing go away. I should do that again next time."

That's called negative reinforcement — the scary thing disappeared, so the behavior that "caused" it to disappear gets stronger. Your dog isn't being stubborn or dominant. They genuinely believe that lunging is the SOLUTION to their fear.

Every walk reinforces this belief. Every reaction makes the next one bigger, faster, and harder to interrupt. After six months of daily reactions, your dog is basically an expert at losing their mind — they've practiced it hundreds of times.

This is why YouTube videos and Instagram tips don't work for reactive dogs. You can't "treat your way out" of a deeply conditioned emotional response by yourself. You need someone who understands the science of behavior modification — counter-conditioning, desensitization, threshold management, and systematic exposure.

That's what our training methodology is built on.

🎓 The Science Behind Reactive Dog Training

Our behavior modification programs are built on decades of research in animal learning psychology. Here are the four PhD-authored books that explain WHY our approach works when others fail:

Excel-erated Learning

Pamela J. Reid, PhD

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

Why This Matters for Reactive Dogs:

  • Explains how emotional responses are learned — and how they can be unlearned through counter-conditioning
  • Details stimulus control — why dogs react in some environments but not others
  • Covers the neuroscience of fear conditioning and how to reverse it systematically

Key Takeaway: Reactivity is a learned emotional response. If it was learned, it can be changed. The science of counter-conditioning gives us the roadmap to rewire your dog's emotional reaction to triggers.

The Other End of the Leash

Patricia B. McConnell, PhD

PhD in Zoology | Certified Applied Animal Behaviorist

Why This Matters for Reactive Dogs:

  • Your body language is making reactivity worse — tightening the leash, tensing up, holding your breath when you see a trigger
  • Your dog reads your stress as confirmation that the trigger IS dangerous
  • Handler coaching is just as critical as dog training for reactive dogs

Key Takeaway: A trained dog with an untrained handler won't succeed. Owner transfer sessions aren't optional — they're the most important part of reactive dog training. We train YOU as much as we train your dog.

Dog Sense

John Bradshaw, PhD

PhD Anthrozoologist | Decades Studying Human-Animal Interactions

Why This Matters for Reactive Dogs:

  • Debunks the dominance myth — your reactive dog isn't "trying to be alpha." They're scared or frustrated
  • Environmental context drives behavior — changing the environment changes the behavior
  • Explains why board and train works: removing contextual triggers allows fresh learning

Key Takeaway: Removing a reactive dog from their home environment eliminates the contextual cues that trigger bad behaviors. At our facility, we build new emotional responses in a controlled setting, then proof them across Dallas.

Wag: The Science of Making Your Dog Happy

Zazie Todd, PhD

PhD in Psychology | Dog Welfare Researcher

Why This Matters for Reactive Dogs:

  • Happy dogs learn faster — ethical behavior modification creates confident, happy dogs
  • Explains why punishment-based reactive dog training backfires (adds fear to an already fearful dog)
  • Evidence that enrichment, play, and positive associations during training reduce stress and accelerate progress

Key Takeaway: Reactive dog training doesn't mean constant pressure. Our programs include play, socialization, enrichment, and rest. Building confidence while teaching impulse control is the fastest path to a calm, happy dog.

How We Fix Reactive Dogs in Dallas: Our 4-Phase Approach

We don't just "manage" reactivity. We fix it. Here's the step-by-step process, broken into four phases:

Phase 1: Assessment & Baseline

Days 1–2 | Finding Your Dog's Threshold

What Happens: We figure out exactly what kind of reactivity your dog has. Is it fear-based? Frustration-based? Prey drive? Pain-related? This matters because the solution depends on the cause. We test your dog's triggers at different distances and intensities to find their "threshold" — the exact point where they notice a trigger but haven't reacted yet. That's where the real work begins.

Assessment includes: Trigger identification, threshold distance measurement, body language analysis, medical history review (pain can cause reactivity), and temperament evaluation.

Phase 2: Foundation Obedience

Days 3–7 | Building the Toolkit

What Happens: Before we work on reactivity directly, we build a toolkit of reliable commands. Sit, down, place, heel, focus, and an emergency recall. These aren't optional — they're the tools your dog will use instead of reacting. We teach these in a calm, distraction-free environment first. Your dog learns that listening to commands = good things happen.

Why This Phase Matters: You can't redirect a reactive dog if they don't know any alternative behaviors. This phase builds the obedience foundation that makes behavior modification possible.

Phase 3: Counter-Conditioning & Desensitization

Weeks 2–3 | Rewiring the Emotional Response

What Happens: This is the core work. We systematically expose your dog to triggers at sub-threshold levels — close enough to notice, far enough to stay calm. While they're calm, we pair the trigger with rewards. Over hundreds of repetitions, your dog's brain rewires: "Other dog = good things happen." The trigger goes from "scary/frustrating" to "neutral" or even "positive."

Real DFW Training Locations: Katy Trail (joggers, bikes, dogs), White Rock Lake (wildlife, off-leash dogs), Klyde Warren Park (crowds, food trucks), Legacy West in Plano (heavy foot traffic), Trinity Groves (restaurant patios), plus neighborhoods across Frisco, Fort Worth, and Allen.

Phase 4: Proofing & Owner Transfer

Weeks 3–4 | Real-World Testing + Teaching YOU

What Happens: We test your dog in progressively harder situations. Closer to triggers. More intense triggers. Multiple triggers at once. Unexpected encounters. We build reliability so deep that your dog can handle surprises — because in real life, you can't control when another dog rounds the corner on Katy Trail.

Owner Transfer (The Most Important Part!): 3–8 hands-on sessions where we teach YOU everything your dog learned. We demonstrate, then you practice while we coach. We fix your timing, body language, and technique. A trained dog with an untrained handler won't succeed long-term. This is what separates our program from everyone else.

Reactive Dog Training Programs & Pricing

Every reactive dog is different, so we offer multiple program options. During your free consultation, we'll recommend the best fit based on your dog's triggers, severity, and goals.

Private Reactive Dog Lessons

$1,100+

8-Session Package

  • 8 private 1-on-1 sessions
  • Customized behavior mod plan
  • Counter-conditioning protocols
  • Real-world proofing in DFW
  • Handler coaching every session
  • E-collar conditioning (if appropriate)
  • Video demos & written plan
  • Phone/text support between sessions

Best For: Mild–moderate reactivity where owner can attend weekly sessions.

Call to Book

Elite 4-Week Board & Train

$5,800

4-Week Intensive Program

  • Everything in Behavior Mod PLUS
  • Advanced off-leash work
  • AKC CGC Certification Test
  • 12+ high-distraction outings
  • Distance commands & send-aways
  • Premium Rader Leash & Place Stand
  • Private group community access
  • 100% Off-Leash Guarantee*
  • 2–3 hr transfer at YOUR home

Best For: Severe reactivity + desire for complete off-leash freedom.

Call to Book

*For qualified dogs. Assessment required. Payment plans available through Affirm. View all pricing details →

Dog Breeds Most Prone to Reactivity in Dallas-Fort Worth

Any breed can be reactive, but some breeds are genetically wired with stronger fight-or-flight responses. Here are the breeds we see most often — and why:

German Shepherds

Fear-Based & Territorial Reactivity

Bred for protection work. Strong territorial instincts. They bond deeply with their handler and can become reactive toward anything they perceive as a threat. The #1 breed we train for reactivity in DFW.

Belgian Malinois

High-Drive & Overstimulation Reactivity

High-drive working dogs with intense environmental awareness. Without proper outlets, that drive turns into reactivity. They "explode" faster and harder than most breeds. Professional training is mandatory.

Cane Corsos

Guardian & Stranger-Directed Reactivity

Naturally suspicious of strangers and unfamiliar dogs. At 100+ pounds, a reactive Cane Corso is a serious safety concern. Early intervention is critical.

Pit Bulls & Bully Breeds

Socialization-Deficit Reactivity

Often reactive from poor socialization, not genetics. Pit bulls who miss their puppy socialization window frequently develop dog reactivity. Most reactive pit bulls are actually fearful, not aggressive.

Goldendoodles & Golden Retrievers

Frustration-Based Reactivity

Surprised? So are their owners. These "friendly" breeds often develop frustration-based reactivity. They WANT to greet every dog and person, and when they can't (because leash), the frustration explodes into barking and lunging.

Border Collies & Herding Breeds

Movement-Triggered & Herding Reactivity

Genetically hardwired to notice and respond to movement. Bikes, skateboards, joggers, and other dogs trigger their herding instinct. Without training, they chase, nip, and react to anything that moves.

Don't see your breed? We train them all. See every breed we work with →

Real Reactive Dog Transformations from Dallas Families

Diesel — German Shepherd

Plano, TX | 3-year-old | Dog-reactive | 4-Week Board & Train ($5,000)

"Diesel couldn't walk past another dog without erupting. We crossed streets, changed routes, walked at 5 AM — anything to avoid triggers. After 4 weeks with OLK9, Diesel walks past dogs without even looking at them. We walked Katy Trail last weekend — KATY TRAIL! — and he was calm the entire time. The trainers didn't just fix Diesel — they taught US what we were doing wrong."

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Rosie — Pit Bull Mix

Fort Worth, TX | 2-year-old rescue | Fear-reactive to men & dogs | Private Lessons ($1,100)

"Rosie was a rescue with a rough past. She lunged and barked at every man and every dog she saw. Two different trainers gave up on her. OLK9 didn't. Eight sessions of structured behavior modification, and Rosie now sits calmly when strangers walk by. She's not 'cured' of her fear — she's learned to COPE with it. Huge difference."

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Cooper — Goldendoodle

Highland Park, TX | 18 months old | Frustration-reactive to dogs | 2-Week Board & Train ($3,000)

"Everyone said Goldendoodles are easy dogs. Cooper was NOT. He screamed, lunged, and spun every time he saw another dog. Not aggressive — just OBSESSED with getting to them. Two weeks of board and train and the difference is unreal. He's calm on walks. He actually looks at US instead of scanning for triggers."

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Zeus — Cane Corso

Allen, TX | 4-year-old | Human-reactive (strangers) | Elite 4-Week ($5,800)

"Zeus is 130 pounds of Cane Corso who barked and lunged at every stranger who came near us. Walking him was genuinely dangerous. The elite program was intense — 4 weeks of daily training, desensitization, and real-world proofing. Zeus is now neutral around strangers. He passed his AKC CGC test. A 130-pound Cane Corso with a CGC certification."

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Read more client stories → | Watch before & after videos →

5 Mistakes Dallas Dog Owners Make with Reactive Dogs

Mistake #1: Avoiding All Triggers

❌ "We cross every street and walk at 5 AM to avoid other dogs."

✓ This feels like management, but it's making things worse. Your dog never learns to HANDLE triggers. The second they DO encounter one, the reaction is even bigger. Controlled exposure — not avoidance — is the answer.

Mistake #2: Punishing the Reaction

❌ "We jerk the leash and yell NO when he lunges."

✓ If your dog is reacting out of FEAR, punishing them adds pain to an already scary situation. Now the trigger = scary thing + pain from owner. The fear gets worse. The reactivity gets worse. It's like slapping someone who's afraid of heights while they're on a balcony.

Mistake #3: Flooding (Too Much, Too Fast)

❌ "We took him to the dog park to 'get used to it.'"

✓ This is called flooding, and it backfires hard. Your dog goes over threshold immediately and spends the entire time in panic mode. They don't learn anything except "this is even scarier than I thought." Proper desensitization is gradual and controlled.

Mistake #4: Treating It Like an Obedience Problem

❌ "She knows 'sit' — why won't she sit when she sees another dog?"

✓ Your dog might know sit perfectly at home, but when they see a trigger and their brain floods with cortisol and adrenaline, obedience goes out the window. You need behavior modification FIRST (change the emotion), then layer obedience on top.

Mistake #5: Waiting Too Long

❌ "Maybe she'll grow out of it."

✓ Reactivity NEVER resolves on its own. Every day without professional help is another day of practice. A 6-month-old reactive puppy is dramatically easier to fix than a 3-year-old reactive adult. Call us today — early intervention saves time, money, and stress.

💡 What's the Hardest Command to Teach a Reactive Dog?

For reactive dogs, the hardest skill isn't "sit" or "stay" — it's disengagement. Teaching a reactive dog to notice a trigger and voluntarily look away instead of reacting takes hundreds of controlled repetitions. That's why our board and train programs include 20–40+ threshold exposures per DAY. We compress months of weekly-lesson progress into weeks of intensive training. The result? A dog who sees their trigger and thinks "meh" instead of "ATTACK!"

Reactive Dog Training FAQ

How much does reactive dog training cost in Dallas?

Reactive dog training in Dallas costs $1,100–$5,800. Private behavior modification lessons start at $1,100 for 8 sessions. Board and train behavior modification is $3,000–$5,000 for 2–4 weeks. The elite 4-week program is $5,800 including AKC CGC certification. Payment plans available through Affirm. See full pricing →

Can a reactive dog be cured?

Yes, in most cases. Reactivity is a learned emotional response that can be changed through counter-conditioning and desensitization. Most reactive dogs achieve "functional neutrality" — they notice triggers but choose not to react. Off Leash K9 Training DFW has a 99% success rate with reactive dogs. The key is consistent professional training followed by owner maintenance.

What is the difference between a reactive dog and an aggressive dog?

A reactive dog overreacts to triggers (barking, lunging) but doesn't intend to cause harm. Reactivity is rooted in fear, frustration, or overstimulation. An aggressive dog actively seeks to cause harm with hard stares, stiff body, and biting intent. Some reactive dogs escalate to aggression without intervention — which is why early professional help matters.

Is board and train good for reactive dogs?

Board and train is often the BEST option for reactive dogs. In weekly lessons, dogs get 5–10 controlled trigger exposures per session. In board and train, dogs get 20–40+ exposures per DAY with professional handlers who manage thresholds perfectly. The compressed timeline accelerates behavior change dramatically. Most reactive dogs show major improvement within 2–4 weeks.

How long does it take to train a reactive dog?

Most reactive dogs show significant improvement within 2–4 weeks of intensive training. Mild reactivity (leash frustration) often resolves in 2 weeks. Moderate reactivity (fear-based, dog-reactive) typically needs 3–4 weeks. Severe reactivity (multi-trigger, aggression history) may need 4+ weeks plus ongoing maintenance.

What is the 3-3-3 rule for dogs?

The 3-3-3 rule describes a dog's adjustment to a new home: 3 days of overwhelm and shutdown, 3 weeks of learning routines and showing personality, and 3 months of feeling fully settled and bonded. For reactive dogs, this rule is critical — many dogs don't show their true reactive behavior until weeks 2–3 when they feel comfortable enough to express it. Don't be surprised if a calm rescue suddenly becomes reactive.

What is the 7-7-7 rule for dogs?

The 7-7-7 rule is a socialization guideline: expose your dog to 7 new surfaces, 7 new people, and 7 new environments each week. For reactive dogs, all exposures should happen below threshold (far enough from triggers to stay calm) and paired with positive reinforcement. This controlled approach builds confidence without triggering reactive episodes.

My dog is reactive on leash but fine off leash. Why?

This is frustration-based reactivity — the most common type in Dallas. Your dog WANTS to greet other dogs but can't because of the leash and harness. Frustration builds until it explodes into barking and lunging. Off-leash, there's no barrier. The solution is teaching impulse control and calm leash behavior through structured obedience training.

Do you use e-collars on reactive dogs?

E-collars are used selectively and only after the behavior modification foundation is in place. We never use e-collars as the PRIMARY tool for reactive dogs. First, we change the emotional response through counter-conditioning. Then, once the dog is calm and confident, we may introduce e-collar communication for off-leash reliability and distance work. It's a layered approach.

Can I train my reactive dog myself?

Mild reactivity can sometimes be managed with consistent owner training, but moderate to severe reactivity requires professional help. Reactive dog training demands precise timing, threshold management, and the ability to read subtle body language cues — skills that take years to develop. Most DIY attempts accidentally make the problem worse. A professional behavior assessment is the best starting point.

How much does 2 weeks of dog training cost?

A 2-week board and train program in Dallas costs $2,200–$3,000 depending on the program level. The basic 2-week program is $2,200 with 4 guaranteed commands. The advanced 2-week program is $3,000 with 6 commands and lifetime refresher. For reactive dogs needing behavior modification, 2-week programs start at $3,000. See our full cost guide →

What areas in DFW do you serve for reactive dog training?

We serve all of Dallas-Fort Worth: Dallas, Fort Worth, Plano, Frisco, Allen, Carrollton, Garland, Highland Park, University Park, Preston Hollow, Richardson, Southlake, Irving, Mesquite, Prosper, Sunnyvale, Flower Mound, Denton, and surrounding areas. Board and train is at our Lewisville facility. Private lessons available at your home or our facility.

What Dallas Dog Owners Are Saying

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Amanda K.

Dallas, TX

"Our Australian Shepherd was reactive to everything — dogs, bikes, joggers, skateboards. We tried two other trainers with zero results. OLK9's behavior modification program was completely different. They explained the psychology behind WHY our dog was reacting and built a customized plan. Four weeks later, we walk White Rock Lake without a single episode. Life-changing."

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Marcus T.

Fort Worth, TX

"$3,000 felt expensive until we saw the results. Our German Shepherd was reactive, pulling, jumping, out of control. Two weeks later: calm, obedient, reliable. The science behind their methods makes sense. Understanding WHY training works made us better dog owners. Plus lifetime support — they still answer my texts a year later."

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Elena S.

Frisco, TX

"We rescued a 3-year-old pit bull with severe dog reactivity. Everyone said euthanize. We tried the behavior modification program as a last chance. FOUR WEEKS LATER: Our dog is calm, neutral around other dogs, obedient, confident. The trainers saved our dog's life. If your dog has serious reactivity, this is your answer."

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Rachel M.

McKinney, TX

"The owner transfer coaching is what makes this program work. They don't just train your dog and hand them back. They teach YOU how to be the handler your reactive dog needs. The hands-on coaching, video demos, and lifetime support created lasting results. 18 months post-training and still no reactions on walks."

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

David K.

Plano, TX

"We were about to rehome our Husky because we couldn't walk him anywhere. Lunging, barking, dragging us across the street toward every dog. The 3-week board and train transformed him. He heels past dogs without reacting, holds place when dogs walk by our yard, and comes when called even with distractions. We got to keep our dog. That's priceless."

🐕 Ready to Help Your Reactive Dog?

Stop avoiding other dogs. Stop crossing the street. Stop stressing about every walk. Let's fix this — together. Your reactive dog isn't broken. They just need the right training from people who understand the science of behavior modification.

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-Sat 9AM-6PM | Sun 10AM-5PM

⭐ 4.9-Star Google Rating | 558+ Reviews | 5000+ Dogs Trained | 99% Success Rate

Board & Train · Aggression Training · Puppy Training · Obedience Training · Therapy Dog Training · Pricing