Why this works for Labrador Retrievers
Teaching recall (come) to a Labrador Retriever plays to the breed's strengths — exceptionally trainable and friendly, they typically pick up new cues near the fast end of the 3–6 weeks range. Being a high-energy breed, a Labrador Retriever learns best after light exercise has taken the edge off — a fizzing dog can't think.
Labrador Retriever trait profile
Recall is the single most important safety cue a dog can have — it's what stands between your dog and a road, another dog, or getting lost.
Step-by-step: teaching your Labrador Retriever to recall (come)
1. Choose a clean cue
If "come" has been ignored or associated with bad outcomes, pick a new word ("here", "touch", a whistle). It starts with no baggage.
Tip Everyone in the household must use the same word and payment plan.
2. Charge the cue indoors
Say the word once, and when your dog arrives, deliver 3–5 tiny high-value treats one at a time plus praise. Repeat across rooms, at random times.
Tip Pay with chicken, cheese, or hot dogs — kibble doesn't compete with squirrels.
3. Add a long line outdoors
On a 10–15 m long line in a quiet field, call once when the dog is mildly distracted. Reel in gently only if needed. Party when they arrive.
4. Build distraction gradually
Move from empty field → park edge → busier areas over weeks. If the dog fails twice in a row, the environment is too hard — step back.
5. Protect the cue for life
Never call the dog to something they hate (bath, nail trim, leaving the park). Go get them instead. Keep paying real recalls forever, at least intermittently.
Common mistakes Labrador Retriever owners make
- Calling the dog and then ending the fun — recall becomes the "fun is over" signal.
- Repeating the cue while the dog ignores it, which teaches that the word is optional.
- Punishing a slow recall — the dog learns coming to you is risky.
- Going off-leash too soon, letting the dog rehearse ignoring you.
Labrador Retriever breed notes
Labrador Retriever note
Labs are the easiest breed in the world to pay — almost any food works — but their greeting enthusiasm means impulse-control work (sit for everything, four-on-the-floor) should start on day one. A 30 kg adolescent Lab jumping on grandma is the same behavior you giggled at in the 4 kg puppy. Their mouthiness is bred-in retriever behavior: give it legal outlets.
Want the full picture of what makes this breed tick? See the complete Labrador Retriever training guide or the all-breeds recall (come) guide.