Agility is the fastest-growing dog sport in the world — a team sport where handler and dog navigate an obstacle course together against the clock. It builds an extraordinary partnership, gives high-energy dogs a job, and is genuinely exhilarating to watch and do. Here's how to start from scratch.
What Agility Is
In agility competition, a dog runs a course of 14–20 obstacles in a specific order, directed only by the handler's body language and verbal cues. The handler runs alongside (or ahead or behind) and uses motion, position, and arm signals to guide the dog. Leashes, food, and toys are not permitted on course.
Courses are not known in advance — handlers walk the course alone (without dogs) for 8–10 minutes before competing, memorizing the sequence and planning their handling path. Then they run it with their dog, relying on trained cues and real-time communication.
The Obstacles — What Your Dog Needs to Learn
| Obstacle | Description | Height? | Training Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jump | Bar jump at measured height based on dog's height at withers | 8–26" depending on class | Easy — most dogs jump naturally |
| Tire Jump | Dog jumps through a suspended tire | Breed-height based | Moderate — precision needed to aim through |
| Tunnel | Fabric tunnel, 10–20 feet, usually curved | N/A | Easy — most dogs love tunnels |
| Weave Poles | 12 upright poles; dog weaves through in a specific pattern | N/A | Hard — the most technically difficult obstacle; takes 3–12 months to master |
| A-Frame | Two ramps forming an inverted V; dog climbs up and down, hitting the yellow contact zone | 5'6" at apex | Moderate — the contact zone is the challenge |
| Dog Walk | Narrow elevated plank 4" wide; dog walks up, across, down; hits contact zones at each end | 4' elevated | Moderate — balance and contact zone training |
| Teeter-Totter | Seesaw; dog walks to the end, teeter tips, dog hits contact zone | Pivots at 2' | Moderate-Hard — the tip is unpredictable; requires confidence training |
| Table/Pause Box | Dog jumps on table, performs a 5-second sit or down | 8–24" | Moderate — impulse control under excitement is hard |
Foundation Skills — Train These Before Touching Equipment
Most beginner mistakes involve rushing to the obstacles before the dog has the foundational communication skills. A dog who can't do these things is not ready for equipment:
- Target training (hand target): Dog touches nose to your hand palm on cue. This becomes your primary directional signal on course.
- Wrap (left and right): Dog can wrap around a cone or object to either side on a single verbal cue. This is the foundation of all jump handling.
- Body awareness: Dog knows where its hind feet are — essential for contact obstacles and weave poles. Train on balance boards, cavaletti poles, and foot target boxes.
- Restrained recalls: High-speed recall toward you while you move away. Builds the drive and speed needed for competition.
- Start line stay: Dog stays at the start line while you lead out 10–20 feet. This is your biggest tactical advantage on course.
- Tunnel introduction: 90% of dogs will run a tunnel on day one. Introduce early; it builds drive and confidence.
Building from Obstacles to Full Courses
Progression in agility: single obstacle → two obstacles in sequence → three → short sequences → half courses → full courses. This typically takes 12–18 months of regular training (2–3 sessions per week).
Foundation skills + tunnel + low jumps. Focus entirely on communication and drive-building. No contact obstacles or weaves yet.
Introduce A-frame, dog walk, teeter at low/modified heights. Begin 2-pole weave introduction. Short 2–4 obstacle sequences.
Full-height contacts with solid contact zone behavior. Continue weave pole progression toward 12 poles. 6–10 obstacle sequences. First handling maneuvers (front cross, blind cross).
Full 12-pole weaves at speed. Full courses. Practice with different course maps. Mock trials. Ready for first competition.
Getting to Your First Trial
The three major agility organizations in the US — AKC, USDAA, and CPE — all have beginner-friendly entry levels:
- AKC Agility Novice: Full course, 15 obstacles, faults allowed. Must be AKC registered (or use ILP/PAL for mixed breeds). Find events at akc.org
- USDAA Starters: Simpler courses, more forgiving rules. Open to all breeds including mixed breeds
- CPE (Canine Performance Events): Most beginner-friendly organization; level 1 courses are short and simple; all breeds welcome
At your first trial: your goal is to complete the course without leaving the ring. Qualifying is a bonus. Most experienced handlers will tell you their first trial was a blur — you'll be nervous, your dog will sense it, and nothing will go as practiced. This is completely normal. The second trial is always better.