You can find the cost for each of our programs and services on the program overview page. On the top menu, go to “Training Programs” and then choose the program you are interested in. The price will be at the bottom.
Our prices depend on whether the program is group-based or one-on-one, and whether you can come to us in Coquitlam and surrounding cities or whether we must travel into Vancouver to meet you.
If you’re looking for the cost of training your dog from start to finish, that varies widely based on many factors including your dog’s age, aptitude, and your patience/dedication to working with your dog daily, not to mention the amount of support you need from us.
This page can help you decide where you should start.
- All
- Ethics and Ethos
- Getting Started
- Offer Your Support
- Programs and Classes
- Puppy Socialization and Training
- Service Dog Laws In Canada
- Service Dog Training
- Service Dogs In BC
Yes, donors who sponsor specific teams receive monthly updates on their progress and successes. Other donors can follow our impact and stories by viewing our social media channels on Instagram and Facebook.
Yes, donations can be made in honor or memory of a loved one. Please let us know when you donate if you would like us to acknowledge this special dedication.
Your donation directly funds training resources, instructor time, equipment, and outreach efforts to empower individuals training their own service dogs. Every dollar helps us expand access to these vital services.
We are currently in the process of obtaining official charity status. Once approved, donations will be tax-deductible. We will update this page as soon as that designation is in place.
We process all donations securely through Stripe and accept major credit cards via our online donation links. If you prefer other payment options, please contact us directly to discuss alternative methods.
Yes, all donors receive an email confirmation and receipt immediately after donating through our online system for your records.
Yes, we gratefully accept in-kind donations. We have an Amazon wishlist of items currently needed for training and care. Please contact us for the wishlist link or to discuss other donated supplies that may help our programs.
All of our staff are dedicated to providing a safe and empowering learning environment. While we are always learning better ways to support our clients and help them feel confident and comfortable, we have a strict policy against bullying, shaming, pressuring, and other tactics either with the dogs or with their human guardians.
If you feel unsafe with a staff member please do not hesitate to contact our executive director at Michelle.hunt@heelingassistants.org and ask that the matter be brought to the Board of Directors.
You can easily support us by clicking the donation links at the top of this page. We offer options for one-time or monthly donations to fit your preference. Every contribution helps us train and support owner-trained service dogs.
Everyone wants to know how long it will take to train their dog to become a certified service dog.
We cannot tell you.
It depends on the age of your dog when you start, your dog’s aptitude for learning what they need to learn, and how much time you can dedicate to teaching your dog each day.
From puppyhood to certification, it usually takes 1-2 years to train a service dog.
Those who start with an adolescent or adult dog can take anywhere from six months to three years, depending on how much we need to untrain and retrain the dog’s brain, and depending on the dog’s aptitude for the work.
Many dogs never reach certification either because they are not suited to the job, they dislike aspects of their job, or because their human partner does not have the time or patience to teach them.
Our curriculum is not time-based so much as skills-based. We must start with the skills your dog does have, and work towards developing and improving new skills.
Since gender differences are common among neurodivergent populations, many of our clients identify as nonbinary, queer, trans etc. We think all gender identifies and preferences are fine. If you accept everyone else’s pronouns and partners, we will welcome yours.
Your dog begins learning on the day they are born. Everything that happens to them will affect how they perceive and react to the world. So whether or not you are “training” your dog, your dog is learning.
What you are really asking, though, is when you should start teaching your dog obedience, and/or service dog skills.
Obedience is over-rated in service dogs. We are much more interested in:
- Social and environmental confidence.
- Good social skills and etiquette.
- Competence and self-sufficiency.
- Good emotional regulation.
- Their ability to make good decisions.
Most of this is much easier to teach in puppyhood.
Other things, like sit-down-stay are very easy to teach at any age.
Most of the skills a service dog performs rely on abilities that are developed in puppyhood, as well. However, we should never expect a puppy to act or behave like an adult dog.
Training must be age-appropriate, but the earlier it starts, the better.
Therapy dogs need to be comfortable with a wide variety of people, have excellent social skills, and are interested in meeting and interacting with new people. We can absolutely help you with raising your potential therapy dog to maximize these skill sets, and we can help your highly social and cuddly dog learn how to “read the room” and behave appropriately.
We cannot turn a shy dog into an outgoing dog, or certify a pet dog so it can fly on a plane or be permitted in a no-dogs housing situation.
We are a non-profit, but our services are not free. Until we receive enough in grant and donations to subsidize every single person, we cannot sponsor all of you.
Currently, our goal is to have enough left-over money after paying our staff to sponsor individual teams whose circumstances make them especially in need of our support. We hope to increase the number of teams we can offer this to.
Follow-up support for our certified teams is free/by donation according to that individual’s financial abilities. We ask those who can afford to pay for our services and support to do so, because in doing so, you help fund training for someone less fortunate.
Many people reach out to us looking for help with certifying their dog so the dog can fly in an airplane cabin with them.
We do not help with this.
If your dog would be too stressed or unprepared to fly in cargo, then your dog would not make a good service dog candidate. Somewhat ironically, a properly raised service dog would be just fine relaxing in their crate on a plane ride. Service dogs ride in the cabin because they have an important job to do.
If you are looking to bring your dog on a plane, we encourage you to look into the pet-friendly start-up airlines out there. If at all possible, please seek these airlines and use them. We want them to succeed so we can have happy pets flying in cabins without them taking a service dog seat which results in a brittle diabetic having to fly without their dog.
We are very familiar with the world of disability. We understand that you can have a bad pain day, or an important medical appointment, and that these things sometimes crop up at short notice. 24 hours notice is not always possible. We get that.
Our programs are designed to be inherently flexible. We allow last-minute rescheduling due to health concerns, although if we actually show up on your doorstep for a private session and you aren’t there, we will consider that appointment officially missed. You don’t even have to call us – your confirmation email and your automated reminders have rescheduling and cancellation links in them. Just click!
Group classes happen several times a week at different times of day, and members are welcome to attend either one, or both if they missed a week entirely. We have limits within reasonability – you can’t disappear entirely, then show up a year later and demand all your sessions when we may not have room for you. We have a three month expiry limit on the classes you pay for.
But we are absolutely flexible and willing to work toward an accommodation that works for everyone involved.
One-on-one training sessions happen in your home or neighbourhood ( our in-zone region of Tricities/New Westminster/Burquitlam or our out-zone region of West Burnaby, Vancouver, or North Van which we travel to on certain days) or at a park or store.
Most of our group classes happen at a rotating variety of public locations, from parks to stores. Occasionally we have seasonal special event field trips, like a movie night. These locations are usually in our
We try to ensure that many of our locations are close to skytrain/transit, but not all of them are. Sometimes clients arrange carpools when they live close to each other. We’re all disabled and we all try to help each other.
Example locations for puppy/remedial classes include Canadian Tire, Chapters, Michaels, and even locations like IKEA by special permission from management.
Example locations for our advanced training classes include Coquitlam Centre Mall, Lincoln or Lougheed Skytrain Station, Royal City Centre in New Westminster, and Lougheed Mall.
Below is an example calendar, showing the days when our trainers are available for one-on-ones in zone or out of zone, and when and where classes are held. The image below is not current but should give you a good idea of how our schedule works.
Each of our classes occur twice a week. The active days for each are listed along with their prices on the page for that class. Each one has a weekend morning and a weekday evening available. Enrolment is rolling so you can start almost any time (except when they are paused for Christmas, for example).
Many businesses and organizations prey on the disabled population, so this is a question everyone should be asking. We strive to be ethical and humane in all of our dealings with people and animals. You can read about our ethics here.


