By KakiList Editorial Team·Updated April 2026·Editorial standards
Looking for pet training near Kent Ridge MRT (CCL line)? This page lists KakiList-verified providers serving the Queenstown area around the station, ranked by Google rating and review count. All listings are independent — no paid placements, no affiliate fees.
A CCL station beneath the National University Hospital, serving both NUS staff-and-student traffic and patient visits to NUH. Booking a pet training provider already working near National University Hospital avoids the surcharges some cross-zone teams add.
The CCL connection makes Kent Ridge accessible for providers coming from other Central-zone estates, which usually means faster response for one-off jobs and more flexible slot availability for recurring pet training work.
pet training providers active around Kent Ridge MRT regularly handle group obedience classes, private in-home sessions, and behaviour modification programmes.
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A CCL station beneath the National University Hospital, serving both NUS staff-and-student traffic and patient visits to NUH.
National University Hospital, National University of Singapore, Singapore Science Park I, Kent Ridge Park
CCL — Queenstown, Central Singapore
Contact providers directly for pricing.
Prices are estimates for Queenstown and may vary based on scope, property type, and urgency. Get exact quotes by requesting free quotes.
Pick a provider from the list above — each card has a direct WhatsApp button. Mention your block number or distance from Queenstown MRT so the provider can quote a realistic arrival time. Same-day bookings are common for Queenstown.
Look for CPDT-KA or CPDT-KSA (Certification Council for Professional Dog Trainers), KPA-CTP (Karen Pryor Academy), VSA-CDT (Victoria Stilwell Academy), or IAABC for behaviour-focused work. AVS Pet Enterprise Licence for commercial operations. Unqualified trainers with "experience" but no formal training produce inconsistent results and can worsen behavioural issues.
Group obedience class (6-8 sessions): S\$200-450. Private in-home session: S\$120-250/session. Behaviour modification programme (reactivity, anxiety, aggression): S\$800-3,500 across 8-12 sessions. Board-and-train (dog stays with trainer 2-4 weeks): S\$2,500-6,500 including handler transfer sessions.
Evidence-based training has moved past these tools. Research shows aversive methods produce measurably worse long-term outcomes for anxiety and reactivity. Force-free methods work better, especially for the issues most owners bring to trainers. Trainers still recommending prong or e-collars are working from outdated frameworks.
For genuine aggression (not just reactivity), start with veterinary consultation to rule out medical causes, then a veterinary behaviourist (VCS-registered with behaviour specialisation). Second-line: IAABC-credentialed trainers with documented aggression-case portfolios. Avoid generic obedience trainers who claim to "fix" aggression — aggression is complex and often misdiagnosed.
Classic indicator of trainer-focused training without handler transfer. Dogs learn context-specifically — a dog that listens to the trainer in class but not you at home hasn't generalised the learning. Look for programmes that coach you (the handler) to practice techniques at home between sessions. Board-and-train without handler sessions leaves you back at square one.
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