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Breed how-to · French Bulldog · 2–5 days

How to Teach a French Bulldog to Sit

Reviewed by Sarah Mitchell, CPDT-KA · Updated

The short answer

Hold a treat just above your dog's nose and move it slowly back over their head — as the nose follows, the rear drops. The moment they sit, mark ('yes!') and treat. After a few reps, add the word 'sit' right before the lure, then fade the lure to a hand signal.

Difficulty
Time
2–5 days
Method
Positive reinforcement (lure and capture)

Why this works for French Bulldogs

French Bulldogs are moderately biddable, which doesn't mean sit is out of reach — it means your pay rate and consistency matter more than repetition count. Budget the full 2–5 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

Sit is your dog's default 'please' — the polite behavior that replaces jumping, door-dashing, and grabbing. It's also the entry point for stay, greetings, and vet handling.

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

  1. 1. Lure the sit

    Treat at nose height, move it slowly up and back over the head. The rear folds down naturally. Mark and treat the instant the bottom touches the floor.

    Tip If the dog backs up instead, practice against a wall or in a corner so backing isn't an option.

  2. 2. Repeat until fluent

    Do 5–8 reps per session, 2–3 sessions a day. Most dogs offer the sit faster each rep.

  3. 3. Name it

    Once the lure reliably produces a sit, say 'sit' just BEFORE you lure. After a dozen reps, the word predicts the movement.

    Tip Say the cue once, in a normal voice. Repeating it teaches the dog the real cue is "sit-sit-SIT."

  4. 4. Fade the lure

    Make the same hand motion without a treat in it; reward from your other hand or a pouch. Then shrink the gesture to a small hand signal.

  5. 5. Proof it

    Ask for sits in new rooms, on walks, before meals and doors. Reward generously in harder settings.

Common mistakes French Bulldog owners make

  • Pushing the rear down — dogs push back and it slows learning.
  • Holding the lure too high, which makes the dog jump instead.
  • Saying the cue before the dog knows the behavior.
  • Only practicing in the kitchen — sits must be generalized.

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 sit guide.

French Bulldog sit FAQs

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