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How to teach a dog to sit and stay

How to teach a dog to sit and stay

If you've ever tried to teach a dog 'sit' and ended up frustrated, I want you to know: it's not you. Most people try to teach sit by pushing the dog's butt down while saying 'sit' repeatedly. That's not how dogs learn. Dogs learn by association. They do something, something good happens, they do it more. The whole game is figuring out how to get them to do the behavior you want so you can reward it. For 'sit' and 'stay,' there's a specific technique that works for almost every dog in about 5-10 minutes of training. It's not magic. It's just understanding how dog learning actually works. The other thing to know: teaching sit takes a few minutes. Generalizing it so your dog does it everywhere, every time, in every situation — that takes weeks. Be patient with the process.

1

Start with the right setup

Step 1: Start with the right setup

Where you teach matters for the first few sessions. Choose:

- A quiet room (no distractions)

- Familiar to the dog (your living room works)

- Comfortable flooring (not slippery)

- No other pets around

- 10-15 minutes of focused time

What you'll need:

- Small, soft treats (training treats, soft dog treats, cheese, hot dog pieces)

- A clicker (optional but helpful — can use 'yes!' instead)

- Your dog on a leash or just their collar

- A calm, patient energy

The principle: make the environment so easy to learn in that your dog can't fail. Once they're confident, you'll gradually add distractions and distance.

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Pro tip: Training right before a meal is ideal. A slightly hungry dog is more motivated by treats. Don't train right after a big meal — they don't care about the food.
2

Lure the sit — don't push

Step 2: Lure the sit — don't push

The fastest way to teach sit: lure with a treat. No force. No pushing.

Step by step:

1. Hold a treat right at your dog's nose

2. Slowly move the treat up and back over their head, toward their tail

3. As their nose goes up to follow the treat, their butt naturally lowers

4. The instant their butt touches the floor, mark with 'yes!' (or click) and give them the treat

5. Repeat 5-10 times

Most dogs sit within 2-3 repetitions of this. It's a natural movement that the lure causes.

Once they're doing it reliably with the lure, start adding the verbal cue:

- 'Sit' just BEFORE you start the lure motion

- Eventually 'sit' alone causes them to sit

This takes maybe 5-10 minutes of training across 1-2 sessions.

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Pro tip: If your dog jumps up to grab the treat instead of sitting, the treat is too high or too far forward. Keep it close to their nose and move it slowly back over their head.
3

Add the verbal cue and phase out the lure

Step 3: Add the verbal cue and phase out the lure

Once your dog is sitting reliably with the lure, add the word 'sit':

- 'Sit' (in a clear, calm voice)

- Lure motion with treat

- They sit

- Mark, treat, praise

After 5-10 reps with the verbal cue, start testing:

- 'Sit' (no lure motion)

- Wait

- If they sit: mark, treat, jackpot!

- If they don't: lure motion, then try again

Most dogs start responding to just the verbal cue within a session or two. Keep using treats for several weeks — switching to praise-only too early is a common mistake.

The rule: reward the behavior every time for the first 2-3 weeks, then start intermittent rewards. Don't cut treats off too soon.

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Pro tip: If your dog responds to 'sit' sometimes but not others, they're not being stubborn. They haven't generalized the cue yet. Practice in different rooms, with different distractions, until it's reliable.
Watch: How to Teach your Puppy to Sit and Stay — Zak George’s Dog Training Revolution Open on YouTube ↗
4

Teach stay — the harder skill

Step 4: Teach stay — the harder skill

Stay is harder than sit because you're asking the dog to NOT do something (which is harder than doing something). Build it slowly.

Start with a strong sit:

- Dog in front of you in a sit

- Hold your hand up, palm toward them (the visual 'stay' signal)

- Say 'stay' in a calm voice

- Wait ONE second

- Mark ('yes!'), treat, praise

Repeat this 5-10 times. Then extend:

- 2 seconds

- 5 seconds

- 10 seconds

- 30 seconds

- 1 minute

At each new duration, do 5+ successful reps before extending. If they break the stay at any point, you went too long. Go back to the previous successful duration.

Then add distance:

- Take one step back, return, treat

- Two steps back, return, treat

- Across the room, return, treat

- Eventually leaving the room

Distance is harder than duration. Build both slowly.

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Pro tip: If your dog breaks the stay to come get the treat, you went too far too fast. Return to a shorter duration or closer distance and build back up. Stay is a marathon skill, not a sprint.
5

Practice in real situations

Step 5: Practice in real situations

Once your dog is solid in your living room (say, 90% reliability for 30-second stays), start generalizing:

- Different rooms

- Different times of day

- With you standing, sitting, walking

- With other people nearby

- Outside

- At the dog park

- During real-life distractions (doorbell rings, another dog walks by)

Each new context is a learning opportunity. Your dog knows 'sit' in the living room. Now they need to learn 'sit' in the kitchen, the yard, the vet's office, on walks.

This is the long part of training. The teaching is quick. The generalizing is what takes months.

Don't expect perfect reliability until 6-12 months of consistent practice. Even then, some dogs are more reliable than others in high-distraction environments.

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Pro tip: Use 'sit' and 'stay' in real life as often as possible. Before opening the door. Before putting food down. Before crossing the street. Before meeting another dog. Every real-life use is a practice rep.
6

What to do when training isn't working

Step 6: What to do when training isn't working

If your dog isn't learning sit or stay after several sessions, troubleshoot:

Treats aren't motivating enough:

- Try higher-value treats (cheese, hot dog, freeze-dried liver)

- Train when they're hungrier (before meals)

- Cut treats smaller so they can eat more

Too many distractions:

- Move to a quieter location

- Remove other pets, kids, TV, etc.

- Practice at a different time of day

You're training too long:

- 5 minutes is plenty for most dogs

- End on a success, before they get tired or bored

- Multiple short sessions beat one long one

You're accidentally punishing the behavior:

- If you call them and they're slow to come, don't get frustrated

- If you praise the stay then immediately do something they don't like (bath, nail trim), they'll start avoiding the stay

If nothing's working after weeks of trying, consider:

- A group training class (helps with distractions)

- A certified private trainer (1-3 sessions can solve issues)

- Health issues (pain, hearing/vision problems can interfere with learning)

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Pro tip: If you have a particularly stubborn or independent dog, clicker training often works much better than verbal praise alone. The click is a precise marker that helps them understand exactly which behavior earned the reward.

Citations & External Resources

This guide was researched using authoritative sources. For further reading, explore the references below:

Frequently Asked Questions

How to teach a dog to sit and stay?

Sit and stay are the foundation behaviors every dog needs. Here's the patient way to teach them that lasts a lifetime. For more practical tips, check out our guide on How to Dose Fertilizer for Plants.

What is the best way to teach a dog to sit and stay?

The best way to teach a dog to sit and stay is to follow a systematic step-by-step approach. If you've ever tried to teach a dog 'sit' and ended up frustrated, I want you to know: it's not you. Most people try to teach sit by pushing the dog's butt down while saying 'sit' repeatedly. That's... You might also find our guide on How to Dose Fertilizer for Plants helpful.

How long does it take to teach a dog to sit and stay?

Most people can teach a dog to sit and stay within 6 minutes of consistent practice. The exact timeline depends on your starting point and how diligently you follow the steps in this guide. For more help, read our related guide: How to Dose Fertilizer for Plants.

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