Doggoly

Breed how-to · French Bulldog · 3–7 days

How to Teach a French Bulldog to Down

Reviewed by Sarah Mitchell, CPDT-KA · Updated

The short answer

From a sit, lower a treat from your dog's nose straight down to the floor, then slowly drag it forward along the ground — the elbows follow. Mark and treat the moment they land. Name it 'down' once the lure works reliably, then fade the lure to a small downward hand signal.

Difficulty
Time
3–7 days
Method
Positive reinforcement (lure and shape)

Why this works for French Bulldogs

French Bulldogs are moderately biddable, which doesn't mean down is out of reach — it means your pay rate and consistency matter more than repetition count. Budget the full 3–7 days and celebrate small wins. With low energy, French Bulldogs hold focus well in short sessions — two or three 3-minute sessions a day beat one long drill.

French Bulldog trait profile

Energy2/5
Trainability3/5
Barkiness2/5

Down is the anchor for calm — the position dogs settle in at cafés, during dinner, and on their mat. It also builds impulse control better than almost any other cue.

Step-by-step: teaching your French Bulldog to down

  1. 1. Lure to the floor

    With the dog sitting, hold a treat to their nose and lower it straight to the floor between the front paws, then draw it slowly away along the ground. Mark the instant the elbows touch.

    Tip On slippery floors put down a mat — many dogs avoid lying on cold or slick surfaces.

  2. 2. Shape partial progress

    If your dog only crouches, reward that a few times, then hold out for lower. Some dogs need the 'under the leg' trick: lure them under your bent knee so they must drop to follow.

  3. 3. Name the behavior

    Once the lure works 9 out of 10 times, say 'down' just before luring. After 10–15 pairings, test the word alone.

  4. 4. Fade the lure and add duration

    Switch to an empty-hand signal, reward from the other hand. Then start counting seconds before the treat, building a relaxed down.

    Tip Feed the treat between the front paws — it keeps the dog anchored in position.

  5. 5. Take it on the road

    Practice downs on walks, at the park, and at the vet. A down that only works at home is half a down.

Common mistakes French Bulldog owners make

  • Pushing the dog's shoulders down — it creates resistance and can scare soft dogs.
  • Moving the lure too fast so the dog stands and follows instead of folding down.
  • Using 'down' to also mean 'get off the couch' — pick one meaning per word.
  • Rewarding after the dog pops back up, which pays the pop-up.

French Bulldog breed notes

French Bulldog note

Frenchies famously rank among the harder breeds to potty train — expect the long end of every house-training timeline and stick to the system without shortcuts. Being brachycephalic, they overheat fast: train in short sessions, in cool hours, and never treat heavy panting as mere excitement. Their what's-in-it-for-me streak means pay rates matter more than repetition.

Want the full picture of what makes this breed tick? See the complete French Bulldog training guide or the all-breeds down guide.

French Bulldog down FAQs

Your personal AI dog trainer, in your pocket

Day-by-day training plans built for your dog's breed, age, and problem — with progress tracking that keeps you consistent.

Get the appiOS · Android