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Obedience

Is My Dog Too Old to Train? (We Hear This Every Week)

July 6, 2026

Is My Dog Too Old to Train? (We Hear This Every Week)

A pattern jumped out of last month's calls: eight Las Vegas families with dogs aged 6 to 10+, most recently adopted or inherited. "He thinks he's the Alpha. I don't think he's had any training. I just got him" — that was a 10-year-old Portuguese Water Dog. A 9-year-old office dog that barks at every visitor. A 10-year-old Lab that's pulled on leash for a decade.

Every one of those owners asked the same question, almost apologetically: is it too late?

No. And honestly, adult dogs have advantages.

An adult dog has a longer attention span than any puppy, no teething chaos, and settled motivations. What's actually harder about older dogs isn't learning — it's un-rehearsing habits that have paid off for years. That's not an age problem; it's a consistency problem, and consistency is exactly what a structured program provides.

What we adjust (and what we don't)

We adjust for the body: joints, hearing, and Vegas heat matter for a senior dog's training schedule. We don't adjust the standard. Any age, any breed, any behavioral challenge — that's not a slogan, it's just what the last thousand dogs looked like.

The "new old dog" situation

If you just adopted a senior or inherited a family member's dog, you're not starting from zero — you're starting from unknown. Our free evaluation is built for exactly this: we meet your dog, see what's actually there, and tell you honestly what four weeks can do. Because your dog comes home every night and we coach you in your own home, an older dog never has to cope with being shipped off somewhere strange — which matters more at 10 than it does at 1.

And when your senior graduates? Group classes are free for the rest of their life. However long we get, the dog you live with can be the dog you hoped for.

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