Leash & Walking

How to Stop Leash Pulling

The most effective, frustration-free method to get a dog that walks calmly on a loose leash — at any age.

📖 8 min read🏷️ Beginner

Leash pulling is the #1 training complaint from dog owners — and the most commonly approached incorrectly. Yanking back on the leash, using choke chains, or shouting "heel" creates opposition reflex (dogs naturally pull harder against pressure). The most effective method takes longer but builds reliable behavior that lasts: simply stop providing forward movement when there's tension on the leash.

Why Dogs Pull

Dogs pull for one reason: it works. Every time a pulling dog moves forward, they're reinforced for pulling. The leash has inadvertently become the world's most effective pulling-reward mechanism. To stop pulling, you must break this equation: pulling must never move the dog forward again.

The Stop-and-Wait Method

  1. The moment the leash gets tight — stop completely
    Plant your feet. Don't yank back, don't say anything, don't make it dramatic. Just stop. The walk stops the instant there's leash tension.
  2. Wait for the leash to go slack
    Eventually, the dog will look back, turn toward you, or take a step back — creating slack in the leash. The instant there's slack — move forward as the reward. Forward movement is the most powerful reward available on a walk.
  3. Mark and reward check-ins
    When your dog glances back at you voluntarily while walking — click/yes and give a treat. These "check-ins" are what you want. A dog checking in with their owner naturally walks near them instead of straining ahead.
  4. Change direction frequently
    Instead of following wherever your dog goes, randomly change direction. When they follow you or come to your side — reward. This teaches them to pay attention to where you're going instead of just forging ahead.
💡 Early sessions: You may not make it more than 20 feet in your first 10-minute session. That's fine — you're rewriting a deeply ingrained habit. Progress happens faster than it feels.

Equipment That Helps

EquipmentBest ForNotes
Front-clip harnessMost dogsRedirects forward momentum; doesn't punish
Head halter (Gentle Leader, Halti)Strong pullersControls direction of head; requires gradual introduction
Standard flat collarDogs that rarely pullFine for trained dogs; minimal control for pullers
Retractable leashNever for trainingActively teaches pulling; provides no control

Building Consistency

The stop-and-wait method only works if it's 100% consistent. Every person who walks the dog must follow the same rule. One person who "just lets them pull sometimes" resets progress significantly. It's also harder work initially — short training walks (10–15 minutes) beat long-suffering 45-minute struggles.

Realistic Timeline

Most dogs show significant improvement in 2–3 weeks of consistent daily practice. A dog that has pulled for years may take 4–6 weeks. The timeline depends entirely on how consistently the rule is applied. Even one walk a day where pulling works buys another week of retraining.

Key Takeaway: Stop the walk the instant there's leash tension. Resume the instant there's slack. Reward check-ins. Do this every single walk for 2–3 weeks. It's not complicated — but it requires patience and consistency that most owners underestimate. The payoff (a dog you actually enjoy walking) is absolutely worth it.