Stay is the command that can save your dog’s life — keeping them back from an open door, a busy road, or a dangerous situation. Yet it’s also one of the most commonly rushed and poorly trained behaviors. Here’s how to build it properly, using the 3 D’s: Duration, Distance, and Distraction.
The Foundation: Duration First
Ask for a sit, then wait 2 seconds before rewarding. Gradually extend: 5 seconds, 10, 30, 60. Only reward calm, maintained sitting. If your dog breaks, calmly reset — no scolding. Build to 3 minutes of stay in a distraction-free environment before adding anything else.
Adding Distance
Once duration is solid, take one step back. Return and reward. Gradually increase to 5 feet, 10 feet, across the room. Always return to your dog to reward — don’t call them out of stay initially.
Adding Distraction
Only add distraction once duration and distance are both solid. Start small: another person walking by, a ball rolling past, you doing jumping jacks. Build systematically.
The Most Common Mistake
Training all three D’s simultaneously. Pick one at a time. If you add distance, reduce duration. If you add distraction, reduce both distance and duration. See our sit guide for the foundation this builds on. includes a full stay progression as part of its obedience curriculum.
📚 Build Reliable Obedience
Want a structured approach? Read Brain Training for Dogs review — a 21-game force-free curriculum designed for everyday dog owners.
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