Jumping and door-rushing are among the most common complaints from dog owners — and the most commonly reinforced. Every time you push a jumping dog away with your hands, you're giving them attention. Every time you open the door to a dog in a frenzy, you're rewarding door-rushing. The fix isn't complicated, but it requires consistency from every person who interacts with your dog.
Why Dogs Jump — and Why "No" Doesn't Work
Dogs jump for attention. The moment you look at them, touch them (even to push away), or say anything — you've rewarded the jump with attention. Telling a jumping dog "no," "down," or "off" while looking at them is still giving them what they wanted. The only thing that ends jumping is the complete removal of attention.
How to Stop Jumping
- Turn your back completely
The moment your dog jumps: turn your back, cross your arms, look at the ceiling, say nothing. No eye contact, no touch, no words. Wait for four paws on the floor. - Reward four paws immediately
The instant all four paws are on the floor, calmly praise and give a treat. Don't get excited — excitement triggers jumping again. Keep the reward calm and low. - Ask for an incompatible behavior
Once they're reliably keeping four paws down, ask for "sit" as you approach. A dog that's sitting cannot simultaneously be jumping. Reward the sit generously. - Consistency across all people
This only works if everyone in your household does the same thing. One person who "lets it slide" with puppies or when they're excited undoes weeks of training.
Door Manners
A dog that bolts for the door when it opens is both annoying and dangerous. The goal is a dog that sits automatically when anyone approaches the door.
- Practice door approach without opening
Walk toward the door — if your dog rushes ahead or gets excited, stop moving. Wait for them to settle, then proceed. Repeat until they walk calmly alongside you. - Ask for sit before the door opens
Before touching the door handle, ask for sit and stay. Begin to open the door — if they break, close the door and wait. The door opening only continues when they hold their sit. - Release with a word
Use "okay" or "free" to release them through the door. This teaches that the door open doesn't automatically mean they can go through — only your release word does.
Training With Guests
Guests are the hardest part because they haven't read the training guide. Before visitors arrive, brief them: "Please ignore him completely until he's sitting. Don't pet him, don't look at him, don't say anything until he has four paws on the floor." Most guests are happy to cooperate when they understand why.