How to Stop Your Dog Pulling on the Leash
Leash pulling is the number-one complaint dog owners bring to trainers. If you've tried jerking back, saying "no," or just giving up and letting them pull — you're not alone, and you're not doing it wrong. You're just missing the one rule that makes everything else work.
Why dogs pull in the first place
Dogs pull because it works. Every time they lunge forward and you follow, they learn that pulling gets them where they want to go. It's not stubbornness or dominance — it's simple cause and effect. Your job is to break that equation.
High-energy breeds like Labradors, Huskies, and Belgian Malinois have stronger instincts to cover ground fast. But the same principles apply to every dog at every age — it just takes longer with a dog who's been rewarded for pulling for years.
The one rule: forward motion is the reward
The moment the leash goes taut, stop moving. Don't yank back, don't scold — just freeze. Your forward motion is the most powerful reward on a walk. Withhold it the instant they pull.
- Leash goes tight → you plant your feet and wait.
- Dog turns back to you or the leash relaxes → say "yes" and take one step forward.
- Repeat — hundreds of times, every walk, for two weeks.
It feels slow at first. You may make it half a block in 20 minutes. That's fine. You're rewriting the behaviour from scratch.
Before leaving the house, do 10 reps of "sit and wait" in the hallway or at the door. Dogs that are mentally engaged before the walk start with less momentum and pull less from step one.
Add equipment that helps
A front-clip harness attaches at the chest. When a dog pulls, the clip redirects their momentum sideways — the pulling motion becomes self-defeating. It's not a cure, but it makes the teaching phase much easier while you build the trained behaviour.
Avoid retractable leashes entirely while training. They teach dogs the opposite lesson: pulling always gets more slack.
Teach the "with me" cue
Once your dog is reliably checking in and the leash stays loose most of the time, add the verbal cue. Say "with me" as they're walking in the right position, then reward. Within a week or two, "with me" becomes a reset you can use mid-walk when their attention drifts.
FetchCoach knows your dog's breed, age, and energy level. When you tell it Max pulled today, it doesn't give generic advice — it asks about your route, what triggered the pulling, and adjusts the plan. You can ask mid-walk via voice and get real-time cues without stopping to type.
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