The jumping, the leash-pulling, the 6 a.m. zoomies — Fetch breaks each one into lessons short enough to finish before your coffee cools. Pick a goal, film a 20-second rep, and follow a plan built by certified trainers and tuned to your dog's breed, age, and stubborn streak.
Built with working trainers, clinic vets, and the rescues who send us their hardest cases
No homework binders, no waiting for next Tuesday's class. You set up once, train in the gaps in your day, and the plan keeps pace with the dog in front of you.
Six questions — breed, age, energy, and the one habit pushing you toward the comments section of dog-training forums at midnight. Ninety seconds, then your plan exists.
Fetch assembles a sequence from 400+ certified-trainer lessons, ordered for your specific dog instead of a generic checklist. Day one is ready before you finish reading this.
Run one short session between work calls and walks. Dogs learn in bursts and so do tired humans, so every lesson ends before either of you loses focus.
Record 20 seconds and Form Check flags what a crowded class never would: treat timing, a drifting marker word, a 'sit' your dog is faking. The plan adjusts overnight.
Group classes move at the speed of the whole room. Private trainers cost a mortgage payment. Fetch gives you a structured plan that adapts to the dog actually in front of you, for the price of a bag of good treats.
Answer six questions and Fetch builds a 14-day plan from 400+ certified-trainer lessons — then reshuffles it the moment your dog races ahead or hits a wall, instead of marching everyone through the same week.
Film a 20-second rep and our coaching model catches the small stuff a class misses: a treat delivered half a second late, a marker word that's drifting, a release cue you didn't know you were skipping.
Every session is short on purpose. Slot one in while the kettle boils and you've trained your dog before the tea finishes steeping — no hour-long block you'll keep rescheduling.
No prong collars, no choke chains, no dominance theory. Just reward-based training — the same method behind modern behaviour clinics, gentler on your dog and proven to outlast the quick fixes.
Share the plan with your partner, the kids, and the dog-walker so everyone uses the same cue word and the same hand signal. Mixed signals are the quiet reason training stalls — Fetch keeps the whole house on script.
What changes when training finally fits your life
The habits that actually send dogs to shelters are the hard ones. Each track below is sequenced with veterinary behaviourists — pick the one keeping you up at night and start tonight.
Crate training, potty schedules, name recognition, and bite inhibition — sequenced so you hit the socialisation window before it quietly closes on you.
A graduated absence protocol that adds seconds at a time, so you can leave for groceries without coming home to a shredded door frame and an apologetic email from the neighbours.
Distance-based desensitisation for the dog who lunges at bikes, skateboards, and every other dog on the block — until the daily walk stops being a fight you brace for.
We build a 'come' reliable enough to hold across a squirrel, a dog park, and an open gate. It's the cue that buys your dog real freedom and buys you the deep breath.
Four paws on the floor when guests arrive, the mail comes, or grandma walks in — without you grabbing the collar every single time.
A gentle trade-up protocol for the dog who stiffens over a bowl or a stolen sock, replacing the growl with a wag — no confrontation, no risk.
“Our rescue greyhound used to scream the apartment down the second the door clicked shut. The separation track was the only thing that worked — eleven weeks in, he sleeps through a full workday and the neighbours have stopped texting.”
“I'd basically stopped walking my lab — she'd drag me into traffic. Form Check showed I was marking the behaviour two full seconds too late. Fixed that one thing and the pulling just... evaporated.”
“Four people in our house, four different ideas about the dog. The shared plan got us all using the same cue. Our puppy stopped looking confused — and, weirdly, so did my husband.”
Start with a free week — no card, no catch. Every plan includes unlimited lessons, Form Check, and whole-household sharing. Upgrade only when you want a human in the loop.
Enough to lock in one brand-new cue.
The whole app, for one very lucky dog.
When you want a real trainer on call.
Completely. Fetch runs entirely on positive reinforcement — rewards, timing, and patience. No shock, prong, or choke tools and no dominance theory, ever. Every program is reviewed by certified professional trainers and a veterinary behaviourist before it reaches you.
Not even close. Adult and senior dogs often learn faster than puppies because they focus better and already know the routine. Our plans simply adjust the pace and the physical demands to your dog's age and joints.
A free video gives you one tip, in no order, with no idea whether you did it right. Fetch sequences hundreds of lessons into a plan for your specific dog, watches your actual reps through Form Check, and changes course when something isn't landing — the way a trainer standing in your kitchen would.
Fetch Plus and Pro support a separate profile for each dog, with its own plan and progress. Most cues are best taught one dog at a time, so the app walks you through training them solo first, then bringing them together.
Just treats your dog actually likes and a phone. A treat pouch and a long line help once you reach recall work, and we'll point you to a few affordable basics inside the app — nothing aversive, nothing you don't need.
Try the full free week before you pay a cent. If a paid plan isn't moving the needle, cancel in two taps — and message us, because we'd far rather rebuild your plan than lose the dog.
Download Fetch, pick the habit driving you up the wall, and run your first lesson before bed. Seven days free — your dog will notice the change long before your card ever does.