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Vet Guide to 2025: How to Teach Your Dog to Come When Called 🐶🩺

  • 69 days ago
  • 6 min read
Vet Guide to 2025: How to Teach Your Dog to Come When Called 🐶🩺

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Vet Guide to 2025: How to Teach Your Dog to Come When Called 🐶🩺

By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc

Reliable recall—getting your dog to respond when you say “come”—is critical for their safety and your peace of mind. I’m Dr Duncan Houston BVSc, and in this comprehensive guide, you'll learn step-by-step methods to teach reliable recall—from your living room to the dog park—using positive reinforcement, systematic progression, and support from Ask A Vet.✨

1. Why Recall Training Matters

  • 🛡️ Safety-first: Calls dogs away from dangers like traffic, wildlife, or hazards.
  • 🎯 Freedom to explore—trustworthy recall allows safe off-leash adventures.
  • 💖 Strengthens bond through positive play and rewards.

2. The Principles of Reliable Recall

Recall training is built on positive reinforcement—rewarding desired behavior quickly and consistently. Avoid punishment or calling only to end fun—your dog must see “come” as awesome!

3. Training Progression: Four Key Stages

🏠 A: Home & Indoor Start

  • Choose your cue—“Come!”, “Here!” or a whistle always follows their name.
  • Use easy wins—call from a few steps away in a quiet room or backyard.
  • Reward immediately: high-value treats, toys, praise—they need to love it.

🔁 B: Leash & Distance Building

  • Use a 20–30 ft training leash in the garden or yard.
  • Say name + recall cue while stepping back, then run away to encourage chasing.
  • Reward when they return—even if delayed—so they trust the process.

🌳 C: Increasing Distractions & Environments

  • Slowly add distractions—toss a ball, invite another person, introduce smells.
  • Always let them succeed at each stage before raising difficulty.
  • If they don’t come, stop calling—walk away or turn around to teach that attention is essential.

🌟 D: Off-Leash Proofing in Safe Zones

  • Only go off-leash in fenced or low-risk areas when reliably returning 9/10 times.
  • Occasionally, reward them with jackpot rewards when they do return from distractions.

4. Expert Trainer Tips

  • 🎤 Use an enthusiastic tone, wave arms—be the most exciting part of their day.
  • 🏃♂️ Turn and run away, don’t chase—it turns recall into a chase game.
  • 🧠 Include clear focus-building steps—name recognition precedes recall cue.
  • 🧃 Use treat tiers—low-value for simple, high-value for distractions.
  • 💥 Avoid cue burnout—never call just to end fun or punish.

5. Real-World & Emergency Recall

  • Train an emergency recall word with a whistle or distinct cue.
  • Call attention first, then cue—your recall word must be clear and distinctive.
  • Ensure 100% enthusiasm & unpredictability in emergencies.

6. Troubleshooting Common Recall Issues

  • 🐢 Slow return? Increase motivation with higher-value rewards or toys.
  • 📵 Ignoring you? Use a leash and less distraction, then retry.
  • 😤 Angry when they finally come? Always reward—punishing damages recall trust.
  • 🐕 Too distracted outdoors? Go back to low distraction and rebuild reliability.

7. Support from Ask A Vet,

  • Ask A Vet – Get personalized training help, video analysis of your dog's recall in real time, and behaviorist support.

8. Training Checklist

Stage Goal Reward Level
Indoors Come when called 100% Low-value treats + praise
On long leash Respond at 20 ft High-value treats
With distractions Return despite temptations Toys or jackpot treats
Off-leash safe Reliable recalls 90%+ Variable jackpot rewards

9. FAQs

My dog only comes if I chase them—why? 
Chasing turns recall into a game—try turning and running away instead, so they chase you back. 
Can adult dogs learn recall? 
Absolutely—adult dogs learn similarly. Use fun rewards and short, regular sessions. 
What if my dog freezes or seems scared? 
Use calm encouragement, break it into smaller steps, and consult Ask A Vet if needed.

10. A Final Word 💡

Recall training isn't just obedience—it's lifesaving, trust-building, and fun when done positively and progressively. By following this vet-proven method, using high-value rewards, adding distractions carefully, and integrating support from Ask A Vet,🐕💙

🩺 Written by Dr Duncan Houston BVSc for Ask A Vet Blog

Download the Ask A Vet app today for personalized recall training support, behavior tracking, and video guidance. 📱

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Adventure-ready
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