By Ron Durant, Apexx Akitas. Breeder, owner, and handler of AKC champion American Akitas since 2003.
Ron Durant with young Apexx Akitas adults during structured socialization training in Sussex County, New Jersey.
Training an American Akita is not the same as training a Labrador, a German Shepherd, or any other breed that measures success by how quickly it obeys a command. The Akita thinks independently. It evaluates whether your request is reasonable, whether you have earned the right to make it, and whether following through benefits the relationship. That is not stubbornness. That is the breed working exactly as it was designed.
Successful Akita training is built on respect, consistency, and early socialization. Not force. Not repetition for the sake of repetition. Not dominance theory. I have bred, raised, shown, and placed American Akitas for over 20 years at Apexx Akitas, and every dog I have produced, from Grand Champion Asa to Champion Torro to Champion Bengal, was trained using the same core principles I am sharing in this post.
Most popular training advice online is written for breeds that were developed to work in direct partnership with a handler. Retrievers fetch on command. Herding dogs follow directional cues at distance. These breeds were selectively bred over centuries to look at a human and ask, "What do you need me to do next?"
The American Akita was bred to do the opposite. This is a breed that was developed to make decisions on its own, to assess threats independently, and to act without waiting for instructions. That history does not disappear because a dog lives in a house instead of guarding an estate. It is built into the breed at a genetic level.
What this means for training is straightforward. An Akita does not repeat a behavior because you asked it 40 times. It repeats a behavior because it understands the behavior and respects the person asking. If your training method depends on repetition alone, you will fail with this breed. If your training method depends on building a genuine relationship where the dog understands that following your lead is in its best interest, you will succeed.
I have watched people bring home an Akita puppy and try to train it like their previous Golden Retriever. Within two weeks they are frustrated. Within two months they are calling the breeder asking what is wrong with the dog. Nothing is wrong with the dog. The approach is wrong.
Once you understand that distinction, training an Akita becomes one of the most rewarding experiences you can have with a dog. The bond you build with an Akita that respects you is deeper and more reliable than the eager-to-please compliance you get from breeds that will follow anyone holding a treat.
Training starts the day your puppy comes home. Not next week. Not when the puppy is older. Not after it finishes its vaccination series. The day it walks through your door.
At Apexx Akitas, our training process begins well before placement. By the time a puppy leaves us at 8 to 10 weeks old, it has already been handled daily, introduced to household sounds, exposed to different surfaces and textures, and started on basic boundaries. That foundation gives our families a head start that most other breeders do not provide.
The critical socialization window for any dog falls between 8 and 16 weeks of age. For an American Akita, this window determines the adult dog's temperament more than any other single factor. What a puppy experiences during these weeks, the people it meets, the environments it encounters, the sounds and situations it learns to navigate calmly, shapes the dog it becomes for the next 10 to 13 years.
Waiting until a puppy is 4 or 5 months old to begin training is not being patient. It is wasting the most important developmental period the dog will ever have.
Ron Durant explains why early exercise structure matters for American Akita puppies.
Here is what your first two weeks should look like. Days 1 through 3, let the puppy adjust to your home. Keep things calm. Establish where it sleeps, where it eats, and where it goes outside. Days 4 through 7, begin introducing the puppy to different rooms, surfaces, and sounds at a pace the puppy is comfortable with. Do not flood it. Let it explore. Days 8 through 14, start short training sessions. Two minutes. Three minutes. Name recognition, sitting for food, following you from room to room. These are not formal obedience drills. They are the foundation of every behavior you will build for the rest of the dog's life.
I cannot say this clearly enough. A well-socialized American Akita is stable, confident, and predictable. An unsocialized Akita is reactive, fearful, and dangerous. Socialization is not a suggestion for this breed. It is a requirement.
The American Akita is naturally reserved with strangers. That is part of the breed's character and it is one of the qualities that makes the breed exceptional. But there is a critical difference between a dog that is calmly reserved and a dog that is anxious, reactive, or aggressive toward anything unfamiliar. The difference is socialization.
Apexx Akitas puppies experiencing controlled socialization with new people. This is one of the most important exercises in early development.
Socialization does not mean taking your puppy to a crowded pet store and letting strangers grab it. That is flooding, and it produces the opposite result of what you want. Real socialization is controlled, positive exposure to new people, new places, new sounds, and new experiences at a pace the puppy can handle without becoming overwhelmed.
At Apexx Akitas, every puppy is exposed to the following before placement: men and women of different ages, children who have been taught to interact with dogs correctly, household appliances and sounds, different floor surfaces including tile, grass, gravel, and concrete, car rides, and gentle handling by multiple people. None of this is random. All of it is intentional and supervised.
After placement, your job is to continue that work. Between 8 and 16 weeks, your puppy should meet at least two to three new people every week in calm, controlled settings. It should experience at least one new environment per week. Every experience should end on a positive note. If the puppy becomes stressed, you have pushed too far. Back up, let it recover, and try again more gradually.
This investment pays dividends for the entire life of the dog. I have placed over 150 American Akitas across the country. The families who follow this protocol produce stable, confident adults. The ones who skip it are the ones who contact me later with behavioral concerns. Every time. Without exception.
For more on what happens when socialization is neglected and how it connects to the breed's reputation, read my post on Are Akitas Aggressive?
The most effective training approach for an American Akita is positive reinforcement paired with firm, consistent boundaries. Akitas respect handlers who are fair. They shut down under handlers who are forceful.
Let me explain what that looks like in practice.
Positive reinforcement means the dog receives something it values, a treat, calm praise, a moment of play, immediately after performing the desired behavior. The timing matters. You have about one second to mark the behavior before the dog moves on mentally. This is why many trainers use a marker word or a clicker. The marker bridges the gap between the behavior and the reward.
Firm, consistent boundaries means the rules do not change based on your mood, the day of the week, or who is handling the dog. If the dog is not allowed on the couch, it is never allowed on the couch. If the dog is expected to sit before meals, it sits before every meal. Akitas are incredibly perceptive. They notice inconsistency immediately and they will test every gap you leave open.
Resource guarding prevention starts at 8 weeks. Here we teach an Apexx Akitas puppy to accept hands near his food bowl calmly and without stress.
Keep training sessions short. Ten to fifteen minutes maximum. Akitas are intelligent dogs that get bored with repetition quickly. Five focused minutes with a clear outcome are worth more than thirty minutes of drilling the same command until the dog checks out. End every session on a success, even if it means going back to something simple the dog already knows.
Now, the approach that will ruin everything. Dominance-based training. Alpha rolls. Leash popping. Shock collars. Physical corrections designed to intimidate the dog into compliance. These methods may produce short-term results with some breeds. With an Akita, they produce a dog that does not trust you. An Akita that does not trust its handler is either shut down and withdrawn or reactive and unpredictable. Neither outcome is acceptable.
I have taken calls from owners who went to a trainer that used prong collars and physical corrections on their Akita. In every case, the dog's behavior got worse, not better. The relationship between handler and dog was damaged. In several cases, it took months of patient, trust-based work to rebuild what a few weeks of harsh training destroyed.
This breed has a long memory. Earn its trust and you have a partner for life. Break that trust and you may never fully get it back.
After 20 years of breeding and placing American Akitas, I hear the same training problems repeated by new owners across the country. Almost every issue traces back to one of these mistakes.
If you expect your Akita to respond with the same eager, immediate compliance as a Golden Retriever, you will interpret normal Akita behavior as defiance. It is not defiance. It is a different breed with a different temperament. Adjust your expectations to match the dog you actually own.
Saying "sit" five times teaches the dog that the first four do not count. Give the command once. If the dog does not respond, guide it into position calmly. Then reward. The dog learns that the command means something the first time, every time.
One person allows the dog on the bed while another pushes it off. One person enforces the sit before meals while another just sets the bowl down. The dog does not understand conflicting rules. It understands whoever is least consistent and defaults to doing whatever it wants. Every person in the household must enforce the same rules the same way.
A 10-pound Akita puppy that pulls on a leash is manageable. A 100-pound adult that pulls on a leash is a safety hazard. Leash manners must start the week the puppy comes home. Not when it gets bigger. Not when it gets stronger. Now.
Akitas can be possessive of food, toys, and space. This is a natural breed tendency, not a personality flaw. But it must be addressed early through desensitization, not ignored because the puppy is small and the behavior seems harmless. A resource guarding puppy becomes a resource guarding adult, and an adult Akita guarding a food bowl is a serious problem.
Hoping a behavior will go away on its own is not a training plan. If your Akita is showing signs of reactivity, fear, or aggression at any age, address it immediately. The longer a behavior is practiced, the more ingrained it becomes. Early intervention is always easier and more effective than trying to undo months or years of reinforced behavior.
Leash manners are not a luxury with this breed. They are a safety requirement. An adult American Akita that has not been taught to walk calmly on a leash is a liability to itself, to its owner, and to every person and dog it encounters in public.
Start leash work at 8 weeks. The first sessions are not about walking in a straight line. They are about getting the puppy comfortable wearing a collar and dragging a lightweight leash in a safe, enclosed area. Let the puppy figure out the sensation without pressure. Once it is comfortable, begin short walks inside the house or in your yard. Reward the puppy for staying near you. Redirect it gently when it pulls. Keep sessions to five minutes.
Leash training begins at 8 weeks. A puppy that learns to walk calmly beside you at this age carries that behavior into adulthood.
By 12 to 16 weeks, the puppy should be walking on a loose leash in low-distraction environments. By 6 months, it should be able to maintain a loose leash in moderate distraction. By one year, leash manners should be reliable in most public settings.
Equipment matters. I recommend a flat buckle collar or a front-clip harness for Akita puppies. No prong collars. No choke chains. No retractable leashes. Retractable leashes teach the dog that pulling creates more freedom, which is the exact opposite of what you want. Use a standard 6-foot leash and keep it there.
Now, recall. I am going to be honest about this because too many trainers and breeders are not. Most American Akitas should not be trusted off-leash in unfenced areas. This is not a training failure. It is a breed reality. The Akita's independent nature means that even a well-trained dog may decide, in a moment of high stimulation, that the squirrel across the street is more important than your recall command.
Can you build a reliable recall in controlled environments? Yes, absolutely. Practice in your yard, in your house, in enclosed training spaces. Use high-value rewards. Make coming to you the best thing that happens to the dog all day. But understand that off-leash reliability in open, uncontrolled environments is a goal very few Akitas will achieve consistently, and the consequences of being wrong are too serious to gamble on.
A fenced yard is not optional for this breed. A reliable leash is not optional. Anyone who tells you otherwise has not spent enough time with American Akitas.
The American Akita is a dog-selective breed. This does not mean every Akita is dog aggressive. It means the breed has a natural tendency toward selectivity about which dogs it tolerates, and that tendency must be managed through training, socialization, and honest awareness of your individual dog's limits.
Champion Torro with a young puppy. Structured multi-dog interaction supervised by experienced adults is how Akitas learn appropriate behavior with other dogs.
Same-sex aggression is a real and well-documented trait in the breed. Two intact males or two intact females housed together carry significant risk, regardless of how well they are trained. This is not a training problem that can be trained away. It is a breed characteristic that must be managed through responsible ownership decisions, including which dogs you bring into your household and how living arrangements are structured.
Opposite-sex pairings raised together from puppyhood often coexist peacefully. Adult introductions to existing dogs require careful, supervised management over weeks or months, not a single meeting in the backyard.
Dog parks are not appropriate for most American Akitas. I tell every family I place a puppy with the same thing. Dog parks are uncontrolled environments with unpredictable dogs and inattentive owners. An Akita that has been rushed, mounted, or challenged by a rude off-leash dog will respond. The Akita will be blamed. The Akita will be labeled aggressive. And none of it needed to happen.
Structured socialization with known, stable dogs in controlled settings is the correct approach. Puppy classes with a trainer who understands large, independent breeds. Planned playdates with dogs whose temperament you trust. Parallel walks where the dogs are near each other but not forced to interact. These build the social skills your Akita actually needs without the risks of unmanaged free-for-all environments.
For more on this topic, including the breed's history with dog selectivity and what it means for family life, read American Akita Temperament: What to Expect.
I recommend every Akita owner invest in at least one professional evaluation between 4 and 6 months of age, regardless of how well training is going at home. A qualified trainer sees things you will miss. They can identify developing issues before they become serious problems, and they can confirm that what you are doing is working.
Beyond that baseline evaluation, seek professional help immediately if you see any of the following: escalating resource guarding that does not respond to your desensitization work, reactivity toward people or dogs that is increasing rather than improving, fear-based behaviors that interfere with daily life, or any situation where you feel physically unable to control the dog safely.
Finding the right trainer matters more than finding any trainer. The wrong trainer can do real damage to an Akita. Here is what to look for. Experience with large, independent breeds. Not just experience with dogs in general. A trainer who has worked primarily with Golden Retrievers and Poodles may not understand why your Akita does not respond to the same methods. Ask specifically about their experience with Akitas, Mastiffs, Rottweilers, or other breeds with similar temperaments.
Positive reinforcement methodology is non-negotiable. Walk away from any trainer who reaches for a prong collar, a shock collar, or any tool designed to cause pain or discomfort as a first response. Walk away from any trainer who talks about being the "alpha" or "showing the dog who is boss." Those methods fail with this breed and they damage the trust you need.
Ask for references. Speak to other clients. Watch a session before committing. A good trainer will welcome that level of scrutiny. A bad one will not.
I want to end with this, because it matters. Everything in this post requires real work. Real time. Real consistency. Real patience. And the result is one of the finest companion dogs you will ever share your life with.
Grand Champion Asa with handler Esther. This is what proper breeding, training, and socialization produce. Calm, confident, and completely reliable.
A well-trained American Akita is calm in public. It walks on a loose leash beside its handler without pulling, lunging, or reacting to distractions. It acknowledges strangers without aggression or anxiety. It settles quietly in the house, not because it has been exhausted into compliance, but because it understands the routine and trusts the structure of its environment.
A well-trained Akita is reliable. You know what the dog will do in any given situation because you have prepared it for that situation through months of consistent training and socialization. There are no surprises. There is no guessing. The dog is predictable because you made it predictable through the work you put in.
I have placed Akitas with single professionals in apartments, with families with children, and with retired couples in rural properties. The families who follow the guidance in this post, who put in the work during the first year, who treat training as a non-negotiable part of Akita ownership, send me photos and updates of dogs that are a credit to the breed. Dogs that walk through hardware stores without incident. Dogs that greet visitors at the front door without a single raised hackle. Dogs that sleep at the foot of their owner's bed after a calm, structured day.
That is the Akita I breed for. That is the Akita you can raise if you are willing to do what this breed requires.
For more on whether the American Akita is the right fit for your family, read Are Akitas Excellent Family Dogs?
At Apexx Akitas, every puppy comes from OFA health-tested, champion-bloodline parents and is raised with the early socialization foundation described in this post. We have placed over 150 American Akitas with families across the country since 2003.
VIEW AVAILABLE PUPPIESFounder and head breeder, Apexx Akitas. AKC-registered American Akita breeding program since 2003. Sussex County, New Jersey. 150+ placements nationwide. All breeding dogs OFA health-tested through hips, elbows, thyroid, eyes, and cardiac evaluations by Dr. Jonathan King, VMD, at Steinbach Veterinary Hospital.