The quick answer
Group classes are right if your dog needs basic obedience, socialization practice, and you want a structured weekly commitment at a lower cost.
Private training is right if your dog has specific behavioural issues (aggression, reactivity, separation anxiety), needs focused individual attention, or if your schedule doesn’t fit a group format.
Most dogs benefit from one or the other. Some benefit from both — private sessions to address a specific issue, then group classes to proof the skills around distractions.
The full comparison
Cost
| Format | K9 Academy Pricing | Per-Session Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Group Classes (Level 1) | $595 for 6 weeks | ~$99/session |
| Private Training (Advanced Obedience) | $1,350 for 6 sessions | $225/session |
| Private Training (Behaviour Mod) | $1,685 for 8 sessions | ~$211/session |
Group classes are roughly half the cost per session. But it’s not an apples-to-apples comparison — a private session is 100% focused on your dog. A group session divides attention across multiple dogs.
What you learn in group classes
Our group classes run 6 weeks, once per week. Here’s what Level 1 covers:
- Loose leash walking
- Sit, down, stay with duration
- Recall foundations
- Place command
- Impulse control (leave it, wait)
- Focus and engagement around distractions
The group setting is the real advantage here. Your dog learns to perform these skills while other dogs are nearby — exactly the conditions they’ll face in the real world. You can’t replicate that in a private session in your living room.
Level 2 builds on Level 1 with increased distance, duration, and distraction. Level 3 introduces advanced off-leash work.
What you learn in private training
Private sessions are tailored entirely to your dog. There’s no curriculum — the trainer assesses your dog and builds a plan specific to their issues.
Common reasons clients choose private training:
- Aggression — your dog has bitten, growled at, or lunged at people or other dogs
- Reactivity — your dog explodes at triggers on walks and group class isn’t safe yet
- Separation anxiety — your dog destroys things or howls when left alone
- Resource guarding — your dog guards food, toys, or spaces
- Specific goals — off-leash reliability, advanced obedience, behaviour modification for a specific trigger
- Schedule conflicts — you can’t commit to a fixed weekly group time
Attention and pace
Group classes: The trainer divides attention across 6-10 dogs. You get demonstrations, guided practice, and corrections — but you’re also waiting while the trainer works with other dogs. The pace is set by the curriculum, not your dog’s progress.
Private training: 100% of the trainer’s focus is on your dog for the entire session. The pace matches your dog exactly. If they nail leash walking in session 2, you move on. If recall takes three sessions, you spend three sessions on it.
Socialization
Group classes win here. Your dog is working around other dogs in a controlled environment. This is invaluable for dogs who need to learn to focus despite distractions. It’s also great for puppies and adolescent dogs building social skills.
Private training doesn’t provide this — unless the trainer specifically arranges controlled introductions with helper dogs, which not all do.
Accountability
Group classes provide built-in accountability. You show up every week because it’s scheduled. Other owners are making progress. Your trainer sees your dog’s development week over week.
Private training is more flexible — which can be a strength or a weakness. If you’re disciplined, the flexibility is great. If you’re prone to cancelling or skipping homework, the lack of structure can slow progress.
When to start with private, then transition to group
This is the path we recommend for many dogs:
- Private sessions first — address the specific behavioural issue (reactivity, aggression, anxiety) in a controlled, 1-on-1 setting
- Group classes after — once the behaviour is manageable, join a group class to proof the skills around real-world distractions
This combination gives you the best of both worlds: targeted behaviour modification plus real-world socialization and proofing.
Example: A dog with moderate leash reactivity does 6 private sessions to learn threshold management, e-collar introduction, and structured walking. Then they join Level 1 group classes where they practice those skills around other dogs — with the safety net of the foundation already built.
When group classes are NOT right
Don’t start with group classes if:
- Your dog is aggressive toward other dogs or people
- Your dog is so reactive they can’t function with other dogs nearby
- Your dog has a bite history
- You or other participants would be unsafe
These dogs need private training or board and train first. Group classes are for dogs who can function in a group setting — even if imperfectly.
When private training is NOT right
Private training isn’t the best use of money if:
- Your dog just needs basic obedience with no behavioural issues
- Your main goal is socialization and working around distractions
- Your dog is a well-adjusted puppy who needs structure, not modification
For these dogs, group classes provide everything they need at a fraction of the cost.
The bottom line
| Factor | Group Classes | Private Training |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | $595 / 6 weeks | $1,350-$1,685 / 6-8 sessions |
| Best for | Obedience, socialization, maintenance | Behaviour issues, individual attention, specific goals |
| Pace | Fixed curriculum | Customized to your dog |
| Socialization | Built-in | Limited |
| Flexibility | Fixed weekly schedule | Scheduled around you |
Neither is universally better. The right choice depends on your dog’s needs, your goals, and your budget. If you’re unsure, call us — we’ll honestly recommend whichever option makes more sense for your situation, even if it’s the less expensive one.