Dog Training Hand Signals: Easy Visual Commands for Dogs

Teach your dog visual commands that work at a distance, in noisy environments, and even with hearing-impaired dogs.

Dogs are primarily visual communicators. They respond to body language more readily than verbal cues. Hand signals work across a park, in a noisy environment, and are essential for deaf dogs. Teach alongside verbal commands for maximum reliability.

Standard Hand Signals

  • Sit: Palm up, raise hand upward toward shoulder
  • Down: Palm down, lower hand toward floor
  • Stay: Flat palm facing dog (stop gesture)
  • Come: Arms spread wide, sweep inward to chest
  • Leave It: Closed fist down, then open palm upward
  • Heel: Pat your left thigh repeatedly

Adding Signals to Existing Commands

Give hand signal → pause 1 second → give verbal cue. Dog learns to watch for visual first. After many repetitions, try signal alone. Most dogs transfer quickly.

Custom Signals

You can use any signal you choose — consistency matters more than following a standard. Ensure each signal is clearly distinct from every other signal and from your natural movements.