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Dog Training near you in Australia

Known locally as dog training. Compare researched prices and get free quotes from pros wherever you are in Australia.

Typical price: A$90–A$2,500

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What dog training costs in Australia

Researched national ranges in AUD. City prices vary by cost tier.
Job size Low Typical High
Private session (1 hour) One-to-one in-home or facility lesson A$90 A$120 A$150
Puppy school course Multi-week block-booked puppy or obedience course A$150 A$200 A$300
Board-and-train (per week) Intensive residential training A$1,200 A$1,700 A$2,500

Full dog training price guide for Australia

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How to hire a dog training pro in Australia

  1. Confirm accreditation (Delta Institute, NDTF, or PPGA)
  2. Ask about methods — favour reward-based/LIMA
  3. Observe a class first
  4. For board-and-train, visit the facility and require handover
  5. Check insurance
  6. Ask for references

Frequently asked questions

Group classes or private training — which is better?

Group classes are cost-effective and add real-world distraction and socialisation, ideal for basic obedience and sociable dogs. Private sessions suit specific issues (reactivity, resource guarding), nervous dogs, or busy schedules. Many owners combine a puppy course with a couple of private sessions.

At what age should I start puppy training?

Socialisation and basic manners can start as soon as a puppy is home (8-12 weeks), with formal puppy classes typically from around 10-16 weeks after initial vaccinations. Early, gentle training prevents most common adult behaviour problems.

How much does a dog trainer cost?

Pricing follows the format: group classes are cheapest per session, private one-to-one lessons cost more per hour but move faster, and board-and-train (the dog stays with the trainer) is the priciest, charged per week. Multi-session packages usually discount 10-20% versus booking singles.

How do I check a dog trainer's credentials?

Dog training is largely unregulated, so certification is the trust signal: look for recognised accreditation, ask which methods they use, request to observe a class, and get references. Reward-based, force-free trainers who explain their approach in writing are the safer choice.

How many sessions does it take to train a dog?

Basic obedience usually takes a 4-6 week course plus daily home practice; specific behaviour problems can need several private sessions over weeks. Training is ongoing maintenance rather than a one-off fix — the homework between sessions does most of the work.

Is board-and-train worth it?

Board-and-train delivers fast, consistent results because the dog trains full-time with a pro, but it costs the most and the handover matters — a good programme includes owner transfer sessions so the dog obeys you at home, not just the trainer. Avoid any provider who won't show you their methods and facilities.

Are reward-based methods better than shock or prong collars?

Modern professional bodies favour reward-based, force-free training as more effective and lower-risk; aversive tools like shock and prong collars can worsen fear and aggression and are restricted or banned in several places. A trainer relying on them as a primary method is a red flag.

What does dog training cost in Australia?

Group puppy school runs $25-40 per class or $150-250 for a course; private lessons $90-150/hour; board-and-train $1,200-2,500 per week.

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See the full dog training cost guide or browse all Australia price guides.

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