I bought this dog bark deterrent hoping for peace and quiet, something I could use quickly without yelling, shocking, or stressing my dog. The ads made it look simple: point, press, silence. But once I started using it, I realized this device wasn’t the “smart solution” it claimed to be… it was more work than advertised, and far less effective than expected.

What Is the Dog Bark Deterrent Device?
This is a handheld ultrasonic dog bark deterrent designed to emit a high-frequency sound when you press the button. The sound is supposed to interrupt barking behavior without physical contact or pain. Unlike automatic bark deterrents, this device does nothing unless you actively use it, making it a manual training tool rather than a set-and-forget solution.
Why I Tried It
I wanted an alternative to shouting commands or constantly correcting barking. I also liked the idea of something marketed as “humane” and non-invasive. The product images and descriptions heavily imply quick, reliable results, especially for indoor barking, so I expected at least consistent improvement.
My Experience Using It
Using this device quickly turned into more effort than it was worth. From the very first day, it was clear this wasn’t a passive or convenient solution. The barking had to be actively happening, I had to be physically present, and I had to press the button at the exact right moment. Missed the timing by a few seconds, and the device did nothing.

At close range, the first few uses sometimes caused a reaction… my dog would pause, tilt their head, or briefly stop barking. But that reaction was inconsistent and short-lived. In many cases, the barking resumed almost immediately, as if nothing had happened.
What became frustrating was how quickly the effectiveness dropped off:
- The initial “surprise” effect faded within days
- Repeated button presses produced weaker or no response
- Eventually, my dog seemed to ignore it entirely
Instead of reducing barking, I found myself chasing the noise… hovering with the device in my hand, waiting for barking to start so I could react fast enough. That’s not training; it’s constant interruption with no lasting behavioral change. Distance also mattered more than advertised. If I wasn’t close enough, the device was useless. If there was background noise, it struggled. If my dog was already overstimulated, the sound didn’t cut through at all.
Another issue was confidence. Because results were so inconsistent, I never knew whether pressing the button would actually do anything. That made it unreliable as a tool… you can’t build a routine around something that only works sometimes.
After a few weeks, it became obvious this wasn’t improving behavior… it was just momentarily interrupting it, and even that stopped working over time. Eventually, the device ended up unused, which says a lot more than the marketing ever will.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- No physical contact or shock
- Lightweight and portable
- May briefly interrupt barking in some dogs
Cons
- Completely manual… no automatic detection
- Inconsistent effectiveness
- Dogs often adapt quickly
- Requires constant user involvement
- Feels overpriced for what it actually does
Product Claims vs. Reality
Claim: Stops barking safely and effectively
Reality: Sometimes interrupts barking, sometimes doesn’t, rarely lasts
Claim: Easy to use
Reality: Requires constant attention and timing
Claim: Works on most dogs
Reality: Effectiveness varies wildly based on dog sensitivity, distance, and repetition
The marketing heavily oversells how reliable this device is. It’s not automatic, not smart, and not consistent.
Is It a Scam?
I wouldn’t call it a scam, but I would call it overhyped.
What really changed my view was going online to see if this was just my experience. It wasn’t. I found:
- Numerous identical devices sold under different brand names
- Many of them priced far lower elsewhere
- The same complaints repeated over and over: “Worked briefly,” “Dog ignored it,” “Stopped working after a while.”
This appears to be a mass-produced, drop-shipped product with inflated marketing claims. The device itself is cheap to produce, but sold as a premium behavioral solution.
Who This Might Work For
- Owners dealing with occasional barking
- Very sound-sensitive dogs
- Short-term training reinforcement (not long-term control)
Who Should Skip It
- Dogs with frequent or habitual barking
- Nighttime or unattended barking issues
- Anyone expecting a “press once and done” solution
Alternatives to Consider
If barking is a real issue, these tend to perform better depending on the situation:
- DogRook Ultrasonic Anti-Bark Training Device
- MODUS Ultrasonic Dog Bark Control Device
- PetSafe Outdoor Ultrasonic Bark Control
- PetSafe Rechargeable No-Shock Bark Control Collar
Manual ultrasonic devices like this one are usually the weakest option long-term.
Conclusion — Would I Recommend It?
Honestly? No, not as a solution.
This device didn’t deliver on what the marketing implied. It required constant effort, worked inconsistently, and felt like a temporary distraction rather than a real fix. Once I realized how widely drop-shipped and rebranded it was, the price and promises felt even less justified.
If you’re expecting quiet, convenience, or reliability, this isn’t it. At best, it’s a short-term experiment. At worst, it’s another gadget that ends up in a drawer once the novelty wears off.
Also read – I Tried the Palladio Under Eye Brightener — Honest Review, Pros & Cons
