







🦴 Take the lead on every walk — no pull, all control!
The PetSafe Gentle Leader Headcollar is a vet-designed, no-pull dog collar crafted from durable nylon with a padded nose loop and adjustable quick-snap neck strap. It gently redirects your dog’s head to reduce pulling by up to 90%, enhancing walk safety and comfort. Trusted for over 25 years and recommended by trainers, it’s the go-to solution for professional pet parents seeking control without compromise.




























| Brand | PetSafe |
| Closure Type | Snap |
| Color | Red |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 out of 5 stars 70,177 Reviews |
| Item Display Dimensions | 7.99 x 0.98 inches |
| Material | Nylon |
| Pattern | Solid |
A**I
BEST INVESTMENT
11/10 on this gentle leader. If you have dogs that pull, I mean PULL you for anything you need this! Do the dogs hate it in the beginning, 100%, but they eventually get over it when they know it’s time for a walk. I will say it’s the most control you will have with your dog while it’s on. They can’t run or do reactive things because you have their head locked in with the collar. Quality wise and durability is fantastic, I’ve had ours for over a year and it still looks great. Because it’s so close to their mouth, you definitely gotta wash it so it doesn’t smell from all the drool but overall I highly recommend it. My dogs will not go out anywhere without it!!
A**R
Gentle Leader causes dramatic and immediate positive changes, but has vulnerabilities
The Gentle Leader has dramatically changed for the better how our dog behaves on walks and runs. Our dog is an extremely strong and athletic 50 pound pointer-pit bull mix. With only a chest-attachment harness (or a back-attachment harness), he pulls constantly and lunges at whatever he wants (rabbits, cats, dogs, or whatever, whether close or far, real or imagined). With the Gentle Leader, these problems decrease by 90% or more. He still may try to lunge when he gets excited for his target, but it is easy to give him a moderate tug to control his behavior. There is no longer any risk he will pull one of us off our feet or take himself into danger. Walks and runs with him now are truly pleasant. It's made a huge difference in our relationship with him. There are some costs to get these benefits. First, we followed the manufacturer's directions on how to get the dog comfortable with the Gentle Leader. These directions worked for us, although he still doesn't like wearing it, even now after a month of multiple times a day use. Sometimes he tries to paw away it, and if we don't stop him quickly, he'll take it off. Fortunately, he's distracted enough during a walk or run that he rarely tries to take it off during those times. Also, a couple of times during a run the Gentle Leader came off (for some unknown reason, but not due to his pawing at it). All of these episodes highlight a vulnerability of the Gentle Leader: it's not a heavy duty standalone harness or collar. Any dog that needs a Gentle Leader likely has problems behaving well on walks or runs. We read prior reviews before buying the Gentle Leader and noticed that some customers had experienced it falling off or breaking while their dogs were wearing one. Therefore, what we have done from the beginning is to attach the leash to the Gentle Leader AND to a chest-attachment harness (we added some links of chain and a carabiner to give some extra slack to the connection with the harness). This way, if/when the Gentle Leader fails, we will still have a good way to hold on to our dog. We think the manufacturer designed the Gentle Leader appropriately so that it is lightweight and comfortable for the dog. But for most dogs that need the Gentle Leader, it's probably not enough, so other connections to the leash may be necessary as an insurance policy against a failing Gentle Leader. A dog with all of these connections can look a little like Hannibal Lecter from the "Silence of the Lambs" movie, but that's a small price to pay for ensuring the dog's safety and good behavior on walks and runs.
B**A
It works great for our dog
Totally ripped off the below article from --> (http://drsophiayin.com/blog/entry/are-head-collars-on-dogs-dangerous-or-safe) ...but it says it all. It works great for our dog Attached to leashes are tools designed to help you control your dog by guiding its head, just as halters and lead ropes are used to help control horses. An animal tends to go where its head goes. So, if the dog (or horse) wants to pull on the leash and its head can’t move, it can’t pull you so well. If the dog (or horse) wants to head in one direction and you want to go in another, gently (but not daintily) guide its head in the direction you want to lead the animal. The nice thing about head collars is that with some dogs, owners can just slap a head collar on and the dog suddenly walks nicely on leash, including around distractions that the dog would have barked and lunged at in the past. But in some cases, dogs randomly paw at the funny gear hanging off their faces the way you’d paw at pesky flies buzzing around your head. In other cases, the dog walks nicely and on a loose lead but, when he sees a distraction, he starts to sprint several feet to the end of the leash or barks and lunges and flails to get at the dog, cat, or person in the distance while fighting to get its head loose. Now if this were a person, flailing on the end of a leash attached to an apparatus on his head, he’d surely have a neck injury. But anyone who has seen a dog that goes to town playing tug-o-war knows that a dog’s neck is built differently. Because of this neck strength, few cases of injury due to head collars have been proven or medically documented (I actually haven’t seen any). Not to say injury could not happen. However, veterinary documented injuries caused or exacerbated by choke chain corrections and electronic collars are easy to find. . Most likely if dogs are pulling on their head collar a lot or running to the end, they may need massage or chiropractic care just the way people who work or study at a desk all day need back adjustments periodically. In fact, I think I need a lower back adjustment right now. The Basics of Teaching Dogs to Understand Head Collar Guidance The fact of the matter is, that as a trainer, if you’re concerned about injury due to head collars or difficulty accepting the collar, it’s best to learn the skills needed to actually train the dog to love wearing the head collar and walk politely on a head collar, as well as to teach the owner how to correctly guide the dog in an anatomically natural way. The first step of training dogs to love the head collar is easy. Just pair the head collar with food and systematically train the dog to stick its head further and further through. In most cases where the food and the collar are handled correctly, the dog can learn to shove his nose through in just a minute or two. Practice over several sessions if you’re worried that your dog will especially dislike wearing something odd on his head. On a side note, this method for training dogs to love their head collar is virtually identical to training dogs to love wearing a muzzle. Once the dog is good at shoving his nose into the head collar, then put the head collar on. Keep the dog focused on you instead of the funny thing on his face. You can lure him with a treat to hurry and follow you a few steps at a time; if he’s doing well after you repeat this five to ten times, increase the number of steps he must take to get the treat. You can also use targeting instead of luring if he already knows how to touch a target with his nose and loves it. Once your dog’s walking nicely and no longer has the desire to paw the head collar, it’s time to teach him that the leash has a limit. Every time his front feet pass yours, meaning he’s just a second or two from getting far enough ahead to pull, stop dead in your tracks. That will make it clear you’ve stopped and even the slightest pull will mean a halt to his forward movement. Once he clearly steps back towards you and then stands with a loose leash (or better yet, sits), walk forward briskly on a loose leash. In other words, he learns the leash hanging in a lazy “U” means he gets to walk forward. If the leash starts to tighten, it means you’re stopping. By doing this consistently for as little as one 5-10 minute session, Fido can learn that the leash has a limit that’s predictable. Note: in order for Fido to learn this and continue walking nicely you have to be consistent about how you walk and hold the leash. If you sometimes let him walk ahead and pull a little such that the leash is hanging but like a wide smiley face, or if you stop when his feet get ahead of yours but instead of keeping your leash–holding hand down low at your side-- you let Fido pull your hand forward when he continues to walk, you’re sending mixed signals about what you want. Fido may never clearly get what you’re imagining in your head. Have someone watch you so that you can see if you’re always being clear. Now that Fido can walk with a head collar on in a non-distracting environment, you may be ready to guide him better when distractions appear. When you see something that normally catches his eye, react ahead of time so that he can’t run to the end of a his 6-foot lead. Hold his leash so it’s just one to two feet long but still handling loosely so that you can easily and quickly guide Fido in the direction you want to go. If you hold the leash that way, it will only tighten when you head in the new direction if Fido does not immediately follow. Then, so that Fido knows you have a direction in mind, you must clearly and quickly move in the different direction the same way you’d move if you and a friend were jogging and you had to grab her arm to guide her away from the hole she was about to fall in (To understanad the importance of movement, read Dealing with Difficult Dogs at the Vet: 5 Tips That Don't Involve Food or Training Time). Head Collars Are Most Effective and Safe if You Have the Necessary Skills Of course the choice to use a head collar is up to the individual; however, if you’re a dog trainer, it’s helpful to know why a head collar might be useful and how to use it more skillfully, beyond the basics described above. The number one reason I recommend head collars to some owners is that a head collar can level the playing field for owners who have mediocre timing and speed. Because the owners are able to guide the head, they can more easily get their dogs’ attention. The use of a head collar can greatly speed up the process of training dogs to focus on their owners and perform fun, polite behaviors instead of reacting to other dogs, people and stimuli. When used correctly, a head collar can even help control anxious dogs so that they can calm down enough to focus and take treats.
S**I
What you need to know (read the bottom to skip the story)
I have a border collie mix, and she wasn't too bad at pulling however she always got overexcited whenever she saw a person/bird/squirrel or another living thing and this would cause her to pull. I tried a lot of methods to prevent this, from treats to shock collars (which not only didn't work I felt so bad and guilty for using one in the first place) I even tried harnesses with the front loop to prevent pulling. It didn't work, she kept pulling or lunging spontaneously at something, it not only made people fear her (and she is a very friendly dog) but the strength of her lunges was really taking a toll on my shoulder, and my hand. After being hesitant I finally decided to get this head harness, I was hesitant to buy it at first because I thought it would be cruel and painful to my dog, but I needed something stern and something stubborn like me. Now onto getting the product, it came with everything advertised. You don't really need to watch the CD as most of the information is on the paper pamphlet it provides you, which comes with images. I put it on my dog no problem took it off put it on rewarded her for keeping it on her without her trying to scratch or pull it off. Now this was fine however when we began to walk she HATED this being on her face, I tried to walk inside my home first before I moved out into the outside world where there would be a lot of distractions, and living in NYC there is a lot of those. I tried regular dog treats however I needed something she desired more, something to take her mind off of the strap on her face. This is were cold cuts ham came in, I let the leash drag so she can get use to that weight and walked back and forth my home every time she went down I quickly whipped out the ham to distract her and it worked. I did this a couple of times sometimes I would have to unhook her claws from getting stuck in the strap but needless to say the ham did a pretty good job. Now going outside for the first time, she was stupidly calm, not gunna say I was dumbstruck but honestly I was pretty dumbstruck. I felt like one of those people in the infomercials with where you go from and over excited dog to a very calm and behaved one in five minutes (except it took me about an hour and a half to get her use to it) the pressure from the head harness seemed to do the trick, every time she would go just a little too far walking not pulling the head harness would very slightly tug and she would quickly get back a little. Within one day she was respecting the leash boundaries. Every once in a while within the two days she would try and fight it and I would whip out the ham just give her a very small piece and she would be back to forgetting all about it. Now there is a problem with this, the material I can't say for sure how long it would last but I would update if it ends up breaking. There is also an issue with the padding, there is very little padding on the underside of the strap that goes onto the dogs muzzle, so even if a dog does pull harshly with the head harness on, it is going to give sort of an Indian burn on their muzzle. I found out the hard way when one of my neighbors dog got loose, and they made no effort to go grab it as it came after my dog and go underneath her biting her. Now my dog does not tolerate another dog biting her and will attack, as I was trying to get the smaller dog out from underneath her, my left hand which held the leash had a firm grip so her head couldn't, get down and bit my hand or the smaller dog. Grabbing the smaller dog I made sure to separate it even though my dog still wanted revenge on the little sh**t. After the incident however, when I took off the head harness it rubbed off a small bit of her fur creating this very narrow line, though my dog didn't seem to be in any pain and other then that she was fine it still bother me. SO BOTTOM LINE: Yes, it will HELP PREVENT your dog from pulling, the material is not the best of the best but it seemed pretty good, maybe it would last a couple months maybe not, I will have to continue using it to see. Make sure your dog is okay with the head harness instead of just putting it on and going out with it, because if they are trying to pull it off their face, they can cause serious injury to their eyes or cut their muzzle up and get highly frustrated, and most likely create a bad experience in which they will refuse to put it on. Dogs who continue to pull very aggressively with this on, beware, because it will grind into their muzzle and continue use it could cause a gash in their muzzle from the strap, it does not have much to any cushion on the strap that goes onto the muzzle, so it would probably feel like an Indian burn on your arm but onto the dogs face. Other then that dogs who don't have that much problem with the head harness or got use to it being on their face, this will help them to respect the leash boundaries (which just means the length of the leash you have given them for walking), it is also quite a pain for them (or at least my dog) to try and get it off their face with one or two of their paws.
J**.
Great fit for a husky (medium). Works as designed.
Great product. Works as designed. Stops my husky from going full sled dog. I can even walk her without her normal harness (though I still have it in my pack just in case). I have a full size husky approximately 50lbs and ordered a medium. It fits around her 17” neck with an inch or so to spare but not much more.
J**N
Not like the original. Newer is not better.
I had purchased a Gentle Leader 30 years ago, for my Rottweiler, and it was the best thing ever. Even at 150 lbs, I could control him, and never had to worry about him walking me. It lasted his entire life, never needing to be replaced. I decided it was worth it to get one for my 130 lb Swissy. I should have taken into account that there might have been changes in the design, after 30 years, and they have been a few that make it less than what I loved in my first one. there is now a clip, where the neck and nose pieces meet, where it had been a ring. This alone has made it less comfortable for my dog. It tends to ride up on his snout and gets too close to his eyes, for his liking. It is extremely light weight, and the webbing is now thinner, so I am not sure how long it will last. I would have happily spent more to get one like the first one I had. Newer is not always better..
J**R
The best
I purchased my dog's Gentle Leader when he was about a year old. He's a big boisterous Lab, and I'd been unsuccessful at curbing his enthusiasm on walks, although not for a lack of trying every technique I could think of, short of a choke chain. I have the best of intentions, but I'm apparently not trainer enough for this dog. The first walk with the GL was like a whole different experience, and made our walks far more enjoyable. I knew he didn't really like having it on his face, and so eventually tried a front clip harness on the advice of an all-positive trainer, which he seemed to greatly prefer, and it worked pretty well in general, although he found out in short order that he was more than strong enough to drag me over to visit passing neighbors and lunge at ever dog or cat he came across. Sadly he had an experience at doggie day care that transformed him from a very friendly, well socialized dog to a dog that can't be trusted to play nice with unfamiliar dogs, or meet them politely on leash, so I have to be very careful not to allow too much close contact. The front-clip halter made the problem worse...he seemed to feel so free when wearing it that his reactions on leash to other dogs just got worse and worse, despite my efforts at distraction, treats for looking away, etc. Plus, I cannot really control him physically with that. So I finally decided to go back to the GL to see if it helped at all. It did, immediately. He is now able to remain calm, even when he sees the dog he hates most, which used to send him into an absolute rage. With GL on, the biggest reaction when we pass that dog is just pricked up ears, a brief look, then moving on...no pulling, growling, no hair up, nothing. I've noticed that his lack of reaction creates a much better response from the other dog as well. I don't doubt that my much higher confidence levels using the GL are part of the magic. I would get very anxious near other dogs when he was in the harness, knowing how reactive he would be. At least with the GL, I know I can physically handle him if he does get agitated, and am therefore able to remain calm, and it makes all the difference in my own demeanor. Whatever the reason, I'm going to stick with GL from now on. I know it has to be better for him both physically and psychologically, not getting all worked up just by seeing other dogs coming in our direction. I think I'll get a black one, though (mine is bright red) so it will be less noticable on his black fur. The GL is also the only thing I know of that will allow me to keep this 4 y/o puppy from jumping on people when he meets them. He's fine with people who know how to behave with large rambunctious dogs, but others tend to get him all worked up (he LOVES all people). When someone wants to interact with him, I just step on his leash so he can move around without tension, but can't launch himself off the ground for that surprise kiss/head bump that he's so good at. After just a few seconds, he calms right down and gets lots of affection, which is his drug of choice. Bottom line: Even though my dog would probably prefer to wear something else for walking, I think he is actually happier due to the effects of the GL. He gets longer walks, far fewer emotional highs and lows, and is allowed to interact with many more people. I can take him almost anywhere with me while wearing GL without worrying that he'll behave badly, so it really makes his world much larger than it would otherwise be. Many thanks to Premier for creating this collar. ETA: If you purchase and use this collar, please remember to let your dog sniff and pee and explore here and there on your walks while you maintain slack in the leash. It's great to have him heel so nicely, but remember he's a dog and he needs to enjoy the walk too. It's probably the most interesting part of his day :)
M**L
Unless you've got a super agreeable dog, skip this and get a no-pull harness
We have two dogs, a Great Pyrenees that we've had since she was a puppy, and a 2 year old Pit Bull that we just rescued from a pretty bad situation. He didn't know how to live in a house, didn't know how to interact with other animals, had never been on a walk, etc. Despite being a rescue who was crated almost 24/7, he has not only taken to the life of a pampered pet very quickly and very well, he has so far tolerated, and in some instances downright embraced, everything we've introduced him to without freaking out. Baths? A little worried, but no major issues. Beds? He didn't get the point the first time I showed him one, but he's definitely a fan now. Car rides? Wow, those things are great! Toys, especially squeaky or plushy toys, are AMAZING. We're still working on teaching him that he can't chase cats, but he *loves* his new "sister," even though she's much larger than him. It took less than a weekend to get him to understand that his crate wasn't a punishment but a place where he can calm down when there's too much going on. He's incredibly smart and highly trainable, which I was surprised by given his previous situation. He even loves walking on a leash, but because he's not well socialized and still very young, he has a tendency to pull. Our Pyr pulled as well when she was a puppy so we got her an anti-pull harness, but I want our daughter to be able to walk our boy eventually because he's much more trainable. Since he's strong she's a little intimidated, and I figured the Gentle Leader would be perfect to give her confidence when we walk him together without requiring some of the brute strength an anti-pull harness sometimes requires. I could not have been more wrong. First, the size defaults to "large," which I did not notice, so make sure you click the correct size. That was my bad, but it's still irritating. Frankly I didn't even notice there were different sizes, I was too thrilled at the prospect of not having my arm ripped out of my socket every time Jasper sees a squirrel. I was still able to fit it to him because while he's still a little underweight, he will eventually fill out enough to be between 50 and 70 pounds. Second, you fit this in two separate steps. You have to fit it around the neck initially (and it's supposed to be snug enough that it can't move), then you fit it around the muzzle, which is no easy task even if you treat the dog as they suggest to get him to put his muzzle through the straps. Jasper already was put off by the first step of fitting it. Even after I took a break and got him to let me put the darned thing on for the second step of fitting it, he was *chewing the treat* so I couldn't properly tighten it and had to go back with it off him and guess at how tight it needed to be (I got it right, but imagine this could be very uncomfortable for a dog if it's not properly sized). Third it's confusing which way you put it on (you tighten it one way but it goes on kind of backwards from that), and since Jasper learned the first time that the straps went around his muzzle, he wouldn't hold still so we could hook the other part around his neck. Mind you, I fitted it to him one day and didn't attempt to put it on him for a walk until the next day after I had *very thoroughly* reviewed the instructions to figure out why it didn't look right when I was holding it up to put it on him. I needed my daughter's help to secure the neck straps, and we'd have taken another break only I was pretty sure if we did, he'd never let us get near him with it again. That's when the real struggle began. I should have thrown in the towel, but I figured, "This will be like the bath and the car. Once he realizes it's not going to kill him, he'll settle down." Oh, how foolish I was. After we finally succeeded in hooking it around his neck, he pawed at the straps *relentlessly* until he managed to get them off his snout. He didn't care about anything else, he just wanted it OFF. Treats? Nope. Pets? Nope. His favorite Lampchop squeaky plush? Nope. We might as well not have even been in the room with how singularly focused he was on removing it from his face forthwith. We'd gotten his leash hooked to the Gentle Leader by that point, which I thought would help me get him calmed down because we should have been able to control him with it better, right? I mean, that's the whole reason we bought it. But no, I had even less control than I do just with his collar, and after fighting with it for only a few minutes he freed himself, then immediately relaxed and went, "Okay, walk now?" I absolutely did not expect this reaction because he's been so agreeable and receptive to literally everything else we've introduced him to. This thing? This thing he *hated.* The entire process did nothing but frustrate me, hype him up, and I can't even return it, which I understand because of the type of product it is, but still. Unless you've already got an easy-going dog, and that's probably not likely if you're buying this (they're more likely trying to drag you around the block every time you take them for a walk), save yourself the headache and go with something else. I had super high hopes and this was just an utter disappointment. Edit: I also tried this on our Pyr, because it's winter, she loves winter, and even now at the age of 7 she occasionally forgets that she's not supposed to pull when there's a nice fresh pile of snow *just out of reach* that she can roll in if she can only manage to drag me over. We long ago stopped using her anti-pull harness because 99% of the time she doesn't need it, but now that we've got two dogs to walk I figured, "Well, this doesn't work on Jasper. Let me try it on Loki so my daughter can walk her while I work with him and not get dragged across someone's lawn." Loki likewise hated it. Not as vehemently as Jasper, but she, too, pawed at it until it came off. She was much more calm about the process of removing it, but no less determined. It's officially going in the trash.
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