Quick Summary
The short answer: Shock collars are banned in the Netherlands since 1 January 2022 and a broader EU ban is progressing. Vibration and tone collars are legal, work for most dogs short-term, but suppress barking without explaining it. Camicoo is the only collar that detects why your dog barks using AI — and monitors health at the same time. If you just want to stop the barking cheaply and quickly, JC Pets (EUR 24.95) is the most straightforward option.
Important: If your dog barks from anxiety, pain, or cognitive decline — no collar will help. It will make the situation worse. Rule out a medical or behavioural cause first.
Updated: April 14, 2026 — Author: Sanne de Vries
What is a shock-free bark collar?
A shock-free bark collar is a device worn around a dog’s neck that detects barking and delivers a correction that does not involve electric shock. The correction is designed to interrupt the barking behaviour without causing pain.
There are four main types on the market in 2026:
What these four types have in common: they all suppress barking rather than explain it. If your dog’s barking has a root cause (anxiety, pain, under-stimulation), the collar will interrupt the symptom — not address the problem.
The law: what is allowed in the Netherlands?
Shock collars are banned in the Netherlands
Since 1 January 2022, the use and possession of electric shock collars for dogs is prohibited in the Netherlands under the Besluit houders van dieren (Animal Act, Article 2.1). The ban covers both commercial and private use. The NVWA (Netherlands Food and Consumer Product Safety Authority) actively enforces the law. Fines: EUR 87,000 for commercial use, EUR 8,700 for private use.
The Netherlands joins Wales (2010), Scotland (2018), and several other jurisdictions that have already banned shock collars. At EU level, the European Parliament passed a resolution in June 2025 calling for an EU-wide ban on electric shock training devices. The Council vote is ongoing as of April 2026.
| Collar type | Legal in NL? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Vibration collar | Yes | Most common type sold in NL |
| Tone / beep collar | Yes | Often combined with vibration |
| Citronella collar | Yes | Less common; effectiveness varies |
| Ultrasonic device | Yes | Stand-alone unit, not worn |
| Shock / e-collar | No — BANNED | Banned since 1 Jan 2022. Fine up to EUR 87,000 |
If you see a product on an international webshop described as an “e-collar”, “training collar”, or “remote training collar” — check whether it includes a shock/static correction mode. If it does, it is illegal to use in the Netherlands.
Do bark collars actually work?
The honest answer is: sometimes, for some dogs, for some types of barking. The evidence varies significantly by collar type and the underlying cause of barking.
Most studies on vibration collars report a 70-85% reduction in barking frequency in the first 2-3 weeks of consistent use. The mechanism is simple: the correction interrupts the bark reflex before it escalates into a full barking episode.
The limitation: habituation. A significant proportion of dogs (estimates range from 20-40%) adapt to the correction within 4-6 weeks. This is especially common when the collar is not used consistently or when the dog is highly motivated to bark (territorial, high-drive breeds).
Stand-alone ultrasonic deterrents show the weakest performance across independent tests. Results vary widely by breed and hearing sensitivity. High-frequency sound may not be audible to all dogs (especially older dogs with hearing loss). At EUR 5-15, the cost is low — but so is the expectation.
Camicoo’s dual-sensor approach (PDM MEMS microphone + IMU motion sensor) classifies whether a detected sound is a genuine bark before triggering a correction. In controlled conditions, the system achieves approximately 88% classification accuracy with a 3% false positive rate.
The practical difference: your dog is less likely to receive a correction for a sneeze, a cough, or a passing truck. This matters for anxious dogs — unnecessary corrections increase stress rather than reduce barking.
Additionally, Camicoo screens bark patterns against a behavioural baseline. An unusual spike in barking frequency can be flagged as a potential anxiety pattern rather than simply corrected. No other collar on the market currently does this.
What no collar can fix
Barking from separation anxiety, pain, cognitive dysfunction syndrome (CDS, common in dogs over 8), or attention-seeking in under-stimulated dogs does not respond reliably to any collar. In these cases, suppressing the bark addresses the signal without addressing the cause. A vet or CPDT-KA certified behaviourist is the right first step.
When barking is a signal, not a behaviour
Before reaching for a bark collar, it is worth asking: what is my dog trying to communicate? Barking is a dog’s primary vocal communication tool. In many cases, the behaviour is a symptom — not the problem itself.
Health and behavioural causes of excessive barking that a collar will not address:
Dogs in pain often bark more, particularly at night. Arthritis, dental pain, or internal discomfort can trigger barking episodes that look like behavioural problems.
Similar to dementia in humans. Affects approximately 28% of dogs aged 11-12 and up to 68% of dogs over 15. Nighttime barking, disorientation, and anxiety are common symptoms.
Estimated to affect 14-20% of dogs. Barking when left alone is a distress signal. Correction collars intensify the stress response — they do not reduce it.
Hypothyroidism is associated with increased anxiety and reactivity. Sudden onset of excessive barking in an otherwise calm dog can be a thyroid symptom.
A bored, under-exercised dog will bark because it has nothing else to do. Increasing physical and mental stimulation is more effective than any collar.
Camicoo’s dual IMU + PDM MEMS sensor tracks body temperature, activity levels, and sleep quality alongside bark frequency. A sudden change in bark patterns correlated with a temperature spike or sleep disruption is flagged in the app — giving you data to bring to your vet, not just a silenced dog.
The practical rule: if your dog started barking more recently and you cannot identify an environmental reason, see a vet before buying a collar. If the barking has been consistent and situational (doorbell, passersby, when alone), a collar is more likely to help. See the Best Anti-Bark Collar 2026 comparison for a full breakdown by collar type and use case — including JC Pets, Strex, Vulpes PRO, Maxipets, and PetSafe VBC-10.
How to choose the right shock-free bark collar
The five criteria that actually matter, in the order you should evaluate them:
Territorial barking, alert barking, and demand barking all respond to correction collars. Anxiety barking does not. Before buying anything, film your dog barking for 2-3 days and note the triggers. If there are none — see a vet.
Dogs under 10 kg need lightweight units (under 50g). Collars with a minimum weight recommendation (typically 4-6 kg) will cause poor contact and false positives on smaller dogs. Always check the manufacturer’s weight range before buying.
Microphone-only collars trigger on ambient sounds (other dogs, TV, traffic). Dual-sensor designs (microphone + vibration/contact sensor) reduce false positives significantly. Single-sensor collars under EUR 15 are almost always microphone-only.
A collar with only one sensitivity level is unsuitable for most dogs. Sensitive dogs need lower sensitivity; stubborn barkers need higher. Look for at least 3-5 sensitivity settings.
If your dog is under 4 years old and healthy, bark control alone is probably sufficient. If your dog is over 7, has a chronic condition, or you simply want more visibility into their daily wellbeing — Camicoo is currently the only collar that monitors body temperature, activity, and sleep alongside bark patterns. Read more about dog health monitoring in 2026 or take the free quiz to find out which profile fits your dog.
Not sure which collar fits your dog?
The free Dog Wellbeing Check gives you a personalised recommendation based on breed, age, and behaviour — in 2 minutes.
Take the Free Quizor pre-order directly — 500 Waker spots at EUR 59.95
Frequently Asked Questions
Do bark collars really work?+
Are bark collars cruel?+
Are shock collars legal in the Netherlands?+
What is the difference between a vibration collar and a shock collar?+
Which bark collar is best without shock?+
How does AI bark detection work?+
Does a bark collar help with anxiety barking?+
What does a bark collar cost per year?+
What is the best shock-free bark collar in 2026?+
When is barking a health signal?+
Find out what your dog actually needs
The Camicoo Dog Wellbeing Check takes 2 minutes and gives you a personalised recommendation based on your dog’s breed, age, and behaviour patterns.
Take the Free Quizor pre-order directly — 500 Waker spots at EUR 59.95
Sanne writes for Camicoo about dog behaviour, health technology, and pet ownership. She focuses on translating veterinary and scientific research into practical guidance for dog owners. She holds a background in applied biology and has been a dog owner for twelve years.
Updated: April 14, 2026


