At Exceptional Canines, we do not teach wait as a separate verbal obedience command.
We teach stay, we teach a clear release word — Break! — and we teach dogs to read permission,
thresholds, and household rules through structure, body language, and clean handling.
Can you teach both wait and stay? Of course. A lot of trainers do.
We simply choose not to — because in our system, one rock-solid stationary cue is cleaner, more useful,
less chatty, and far easier for most families to apply correctly in real life.
We are not anti-manners. We are anti-unnecessary clutter. Dogs absolutely should learn to pause, defer, and wait politely for permission. We just do not believe that every polite delay needs its own extra word.
Here is the shortest version:
A lot of mainstream dog-training programs separate these two ideas:
This is the deeper-dive part.
What does wait mean to the dog? Wait how long? Wait in what position? Wait until what? For a lot of pet dogs, that cue gets taught sloppily and turns into “do some kind of half-polite hesitation.”
Dogs are reading your movement, tension, orientation, invitation, and intent long before they are admiring your vocabulary. We would rather build a dog that reads permission than a dog waiting for constant narration.
If a dog truly understands stay and truly understands the release word, the handling becomes cleaner. That is a much more useful foundation than stacking extra near-duplicate cues.
Polite dogs learn not to blast through doors, crates, cars, gates, and food setups just because something opened. That should become normal household behavior — not a parlor trick that only appears when you remember the right word.
We are not removing manners. We are upgrading the system.
If we say stay, we mean stay. Not wiggle. Not creep. Not bargain. Stay means hold the position until released.
We use Break! as the standard release so the dog knows exactly when the hold is over. In food-related setups, we may also use Take It as a contextual release to the reward. That keeps the picture clean without turning the marker word into accidental permission to move.
Doors, gates, crates, cars, and food bowls are not free-for-alls. The dog learns that movement happens with permission.
On leash with me moving and inviting you? You are coming. Off leash, me facing you, blocking space, or pausing at the threshold? You are not invited.
Here is where people usually reach for wait. Here is how we handle it.
We do not want the dog self-releasing through open thresholds. We teach threshold respect, body blocking, invitation, and when appropriate, stay + Break!
We do not need a second word here. The dog can hold position with stay, then get released with Break! or Take It, depending on the context.
Same thing. The opening of the door does not equal permission. Permission comes from the handler.
A well-trained dog should be reading the situation, not trying to launch into every space because a hinge moved.
Here is what we see a lot:
Wait… wait… wait… waaaait… and now the dog has learned the cue means nothing the first four times.
Sometimes it means pause. Sometimes it means sit. Sometimes it means do not cross. Sometimes it means I forgot what I wanted.
Door opens, bowl drops, leash clips, person moves, dog self-releases. That is not clarity. That is accidental training.
Too much chatter. Not enough body language, invitation, blocking, timing, and follow-through.
This is where our system gets cleaner than a lot of the “wait” systems out there. We are not just saying stay and then standing there like a statue with hurt feelings. We are actively communicating with the dog through position, marker timing, release, and context.
Stay means hold the position until released. That could be on a bed, in a crate, at a threshold, before the food bowl goes down, or in the early stages of stay work with distractions.
Yes does not automatically mean the dog is free. It marks the correct behavior. So the dog can hear Yes, get paid, and still remain in the stay.
Break! means the exercise is over and the dog is now free to move. That is the clean release out of the hold.
In some situations — especially with the food bowl or food-related setups — we may use Take It instead of Break. That does not change the system. It just means the dog is being released specifically to the food.
A very normal sequence might look like this:
This is one reason our dogs get clearer. They learn that being right does not always mean they are done.
Because every piece has a job:
If you want the shortest version possible, use this:
| Situation | What We Use | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Doorway / threshold | Body language + permission | The dog learns that open space does not equal automatic access. |
| Food bowl | Stay + Take It (or Break!) | Clear hold, clear release, and the marker word can still be used without ending the exercise. |
| Crate / car | Stay + invitation | The dog waits for the human to say movement is allowed. |
| Stationary obedience | Stay | One strong stationary cue beats two fuzzy ones. |
| Ending the behavior | Break! | The release becomes crystal clear. |
If you love using wait and your dog truly understands it, great. That is not the point of this page.
The point is this:
At Exceptional Canines, we intentionally do not build a separate wait cue into our obedience system.
We would rather build: