Master all 10 CGC test items, train common mistakes out of your dog, and learn the pathway to becoming an AKC-approved CGC Evaluator — a career opportunity built for veterans.
The gold standard for well-mannered dogs
The Canine Good Citizen (CGC) program is the American Kennel Club's premier certification for dogs with good manners and responsible owners. Established in 1989, it is the foundation for virtually every advanced dog certification — including therapy dog, service dog, and working dog programs.
For veterans training shelter dogs for service work, CGC is the critical first gate. A dog that passes CGC has demonstrated basic obedience, impulse control, and social reliability — the foundation needed before any disability-specific training begins.
CGC is also the entry point into the AKC's advanced community canine programs: CGCA (Advanced), CGCU (Urban), and AKC S.T.A.R. Puppy. If your goal is a trained service dog, CGC is where it starts.
Training tips and common mistakes for each — tap to expand
The evaluator approaches and shakes hands with the handler while ignoring the dog. The dog must not break position, jump on the evaluator, or show aggression or extreme shyness. This tests basic social confidence and handler focus.
The evaluator pets the dog on the head and body. The dog must not jump up, pull away, or show shyness/resentment. This is different from Test 1 — here the stranger actively interacts with the dog.
The evaluator inspects the dog, then combs or brushes the dog and lightly examines ears and front feet. This demonstrates that the dog is cared for and accepts handling from someone other than its owner — critical for veterinary visits and public settings.
The dog walks on a loose (not taut) leash through a pattern that includes a left turn, right turn, about turn, and halt. The dog doesn't need to be in perfect heel position, but the leash must have slack. No pulling, no constant tension.
Handler and dog walk close to at least three people. The dog may show casual interest in strangers but shouldn't show shyness, resentment, or overexcitement. This tests the dog's ability to navigate public environments calmly — essential for any service dog work.
The handler asks the dog to sit, then down, then commands "stay" and walks 20 feet away, then returns. The dog must hold position until released. This is pure obedience — the foundation everything else builds on.
The handler walks 10 feet away while the dog is in a sit or down. Handler calls the dog. Dog must come reliably, with no hesitation or avoidance. Arguably the most important safety skill a dog can have — and the most undertrained.
Two handlers with dogs approach each other from about 20 feet, stop, shake hands, exchange pleasantries, and continue walking. Dogs may show casual interest but should not strain toward the other dog, show aggression, or become overly excited. For dogs headed into service work, this is critical.
The evaluator selects two distractions: one visual (dropped chair, person on crutches, jogger) and one sound (dropping a pan, rolling a cart). Dog may show interest or slight startle but should quickly recover. No aggression, panic, or barking.
The handler gives the dog's leash to the evaluator (who holds the dog but ignores it) and moves out of sight for 3 minutes. Dog must not bark continuously, whine excessively, pace, or try to escape. This tests emotional regulation and handler independence — essential for any working dog role.
A real career pathway for veterans who complete this course
Becoming an AKC-approved CGC Evaluator is a meaningful next step after mastering the CGC curriculum — and it creates a legitimate side income or career path for veterans with dog training experience. Evaluators run official CGC tests at training centers, shelters, and events, and charge per-dog testing fees.
You must demonstrate working knowledge of all 10 CGC test items and evaluation standards before applying.
Submit the CGC Evaluator application through AKC's official portal. AKC reviews your background and experience. Applicants must be 18+ and in good standing with AKC.
AKC requires attendance at an official Evaluator workshop, held at AKC clubs and events throughout the year. Workshops run 3–4 hours and cover evaluation protocols, scoring, record keeping, and ethical standards.
AKC charges an annual fee to maintain your Evaluator status. This includes access to AKC's Evaluator directory, official scoresheets, and CGC test materials.
Once approved, you can run official CGC tests anywhere — shelters, vet clinics, training facilities, events. You submit passing records to AKC digitally, and dogs receive official AKC CGC certificates.
AKC maintains a public directory of all approved CGC Evaluators. Use it to find a test near you — or once you're an evaluator, get listed yourself.
No formal degree required. AKC looks for experience with dog training, responsible ownership, and familiarity with CGC test standards. Veterans with any service dog training background are strong candidates.
Active evaluators can run 5–20 tests per event. At $20/dog, a monthly testing event generates meaningful supplemental income — and positions you as a local authority on dog training.
All official CGC information, evaluator applications, and training resources are available directly from AKC.
Issued upon completing this course — distinct from the AKC credential
A unique, verifiable certificate with its own URL. Printable, shareable, and linked to the PawForward certificate registry. Demonstrates you've completed structured CGC preparation training.
⚠️ This is a PawForward course completion certificate — not the AKC CGC certification. The official AKC Canine Good Citizen title is awarded only by an AKC-approved CGC Evaluator after your dog passes the in-person, standardized 10-item test. PawForward prepares you and your dog for that test — we don't administer it. Use the AKC Evaluator Directory to find a local evaluator to take the official test.
If you complete the course and don't feel you got value from it, email us within 30 days for a full refund — no questions asked. We're building something real here, and we only want people who found it useful.
No. The AKC CGC title requires passing an in-person test administered by an AKC-approved CGC Evaluator. PawForward teaches you how to prepare for that test — we don't administer it. Use the AKC Evaluator Directory to find a local evaluator when you're ready.
Yes. Knowing the commands and performing them reliably under CGC test conditions are different things. This course covers the specific test standards, common failure points, and how to proof behavior in realistic environments — not just your living room.
No. The course is designed for handlers at any level. If you've completed the PawForward Shelter Dog Evaluation Masterclass, you'll find this builds directly on that foundation. If this is your first PawForward course, you're fine — we cover everything from scratch.
Realistically, 8–16 weeks of consistent daily practice for a dog starting from minimal obedience training. A dog with existing basic training may be ready in 4–8 weeks. The evaluator pathway section is for the handler, not the dog — you can pursue that concurrently.
The PawForward CGC Prep certificate confirms you completed our structured preparation training. The AKC Canine Good Citizen title is awarded by AKC after your dog passes the official in-person test. Both matter — ours shows preparation, AKC's shows results.
This course covers the knowledge base you need for the AKC evaluator application. However, AKC requires attendance at an official Evaluator Workshop in addition to your training background. The evaluator pathway section of this course walks you through every step of the application process.
Yes. We offer group rates for VA programs, shelters, and nonprofits. Email us at hello@thepawforward.com with details about your program.