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How to Stop Dog Barking at Night Without Stress

Simple training steps to calm excessive nighttime barking and help your dog settle into a peaceful routine

What Should You Really Feed Your Dog Daily?

A clear guide to balanced dog nutrition, portion sizes, and foods that improve energy, coat health, and long-term wellbeing

How Often Should You Bathe Your Dog? (Vet-Backed Guide)

Find out the right bathing schedule for different dog types, how over-bathing affects skin, and what keeps coats truly healthy.

Undercoat Rake vs Slicker Brush

If you have a Husky, a German Shepherd, a Golden Retriever, a Corgi — any double-coated breed — and you've been brushing regularly with a slicker brush and wondering why the shedding never seems to get better, this is very likely the reason. The slicker brush is going over the surface of the coat. The dead undercoat is underneath. Those two things never meet.

The undercoat rake and the slicker brush look similar enough — both have metal tines, both get pulled through the coat — but they work at completely different depths and they do completely different jobs. Using one when you need the other is like vacuuming the top of the carpet while the dirt is at the base. The surface looks fine. The actual problem is untouched.

Here's what each one actually does, which dogs need which, how to use them, and whether you need both.




Table of Contents

  1. What Each One Actually Does
  2. The Slicker Brush — Surface Coat Work
  3. The Undercoat Rake — Undercoat Work
  4. Which Tool for Which Dog
  5. If You Have a Double-Coated Dog — You Need Both
  6. Where the Furminator Fits In
  7. Technique — How to Use Each One Correctly
  8. The Right Order to Use Them
  9. How Often to Use Each One
  10. The Mistakes People Make With Both
  11. FAQs

What Each One Actually Does

The simplest way to explain it: the slicker brush works from the outside in — it takes care of the outer coat. The undercoat rake works from the inside out — it accesses the layer underneath the outer coat that the slicker brush can't reach.

On a single-coated dog, there is only one layer. A slicker brush handles it fine.

On a double-coated dog, there are two distinct layers — the outer guard coat and the dense, soft undercoat beneath it. The slicker brush manages the outer one. The undercoat rake manages the inner one. Neither does the other's job. On a double-coated dog who is shedding heavily, the undercoat is where virtually all the actual problem sits. Brushing only the surface of that coat is a cosmetic exercise, not a real grooming session.


The Slicker Brush — Surface Coat Work

A slicker brush has a flat or slightly curved head covered in a grid of fine, closely-spaced bent wire pins, usually tipped in small balls to reduce scratching. The pins are short to medium length, close together, and angled.

What it's designed to do: remove loose hair from the outer coat, work out surface tangles and knots in the top layer, distribute the skin's natural oils along the hair shafts, and smooth and neaten the coat surface. On single-coated breeds of any length — short, medium, long, curly — the slicker brush is the primary grooming tool and it handles the job well.

On a double-coated breed, the slicker brush does all of those things for the outer coat. It tidies the guard hairs, removes loose surface hair, and makes the coat look neat. But the pins are too short and too closely spaced to penetrate through the guard hairs and into the undercoat beneath. They work in the top layer and stop there.

The slicker brush is not the wrong tool for a double-coated dog — it's an essential part of the routine. It's just not the tool for the undercoat, and that distinction is the one that most people are missing when brushing produces a tidy-looking coat but shedding doesn't improve.

🛒 Recommended — Slicker Brush

Hertzko Self-Cleaning Slicker Brush

Fine flexible pins, self-cleaning button that releases the collected hair without you picking it off by hand after every few strokes. Good for medium to long outer coats and for the finishing pass on double-coated breeds after the undercoat work is done. Works well on Goldens, Collies, Spaniels, and as the second-stage brush on double-coated breeds.

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The Undercoat Rake — Undercoat Work

An undercoat rake has widely-spaced, long metal teeth — usually one or two rows — designed to pass through the outer guard hairs without catching on them, and then engage with and pull dead undercoat out from the dense layer beneath. Some rakes have rotating tips that reduce pulling on the guard hairs as they pass through. The teeth are long enough to reach the undercoat on thick double-coated breeds and widely enough spaced to move through the coat without the resistance of the shorter, denser guard hair layer stopping them.

What it's designed to do: remove dead undercoat that's trapped beneath the guard hairs, reduce the density of the undercoat between seasonal blows, and prevent the undercoat from packing into mats at the skin level. On a double-coated dog, this is the primary work — the thing that actually addresses what's causing the shedding and the packed feeling in the coat.

On a single-coated dog — including fine-coated or thin-skinned breeds — an undercoat rake is not appropriate. The long teeth are calibrated for the density of a double coat; on a single coat they can dig into the skin or cause discomfort. Don't use one on a Greyhound, a Poodle, a Whippet, or any breed without a distinct undercoat layer.

🛒 Recommended — Undercoat Rake

GoPets Professional Double-Sided Pin & Bristle Brush with Undercoat Rake

A double-sided tool with a rake on one side and a finishing brush on the other — useful if you want one tool that handles both stages of the double-coat brushing routine without switching between separate tools. The rake side does the undercoat work; the pin side finishes the outer coat. Good for Huskies, GSDs, Malamutes, and similar. If you'd rather have a dedicated rake for heavier undercoat work, see the Furminator section below.

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Which Tool for Which Dog

Coat type Slicker brush Undercoat rake
Double coat (Husky, GSD, Golden, Corgi, Lab) Yes — outer coat finishing Yes — essential for undercoat
Short single coat (Greyhound, Boxer, Dalmatian) Optional — rubber curry brush better No — no undercoat to rake
Medium single coat (Border Collie, Spaniel) Yes — primary tool No — single coat
Long single coat (Shih Tzu, Maltese, Afghan) Yes — primary tool with detangling spray No — single coat
Curly coat (Poodle, Doodle, Bichon) Yes — long-pin slicker essential No — no undercoat
Wire coat (Terriers, Schnauzer) Yes — stiff slicker or bristle brush No — no undercoat in most wire coats

The short version: if your dog has a visible, soft, dense layer of fur beneath the outer coat when you part the hair and look underneath — undercoat rake. If you reach the skin without passing through a distinct soft underlayer — slicker brush or coat-appropriate alternative, no rake needed.


If You Have a Double-Coated Dog — You Need Both

There's no version of managing a double-coated dog's coat properly with only one of these tools. They work in sequence, not in competition.

The undercoat rake deals with the layer of dead undercoat that builds up beneath the guard hairs. Without it, that layer packs down, traps heat close to the skin, creates conditions for mats to form from the inside, and sheds diffusely around the house because it has nowhere to go. No amount of slicker brush work will shift it — the slicker brush pins are too short and too dense to reach through the guard hairs to where the undercoat lives.

The slicker brush deals with the outer guard coat — removing loose surface hair, distributing oils, and leaving the coat smooth, tangle-free, and looking neat. Without it, the guard coat becomes matted and dull even after the undercoat work is done.

Together, in the right order — undercoat rake first, slicker brush second — they address both layers fully. That's a complete brushing session for a double-coated dog. Either one alone is half the job.

📌 The "is it done?" check: After using both tools, push your hand against the direction of hair growth into the coat. If the coat feels dense and packed, there's still undercoat in there — more rake work needed. If the coat feels airy, light, and open, the undercoat has been cleared and the session is done. Then confirm with the wide-tooth comb all the way to the skin. That's when you're actually finished.


Where the Furminator Fits In

The Furminator is its own category — it's technically a deshedding tool rather than a traditional undercoat rake, but it does undercoat work and is worth addressing directly because it's the most commonly recommended tool for double-coated dog shedding.

The Furminator has a stainless steel comb edge with fine teeth that reach through the guard hairs and pull dead undercoat out in a way that's more efficient and targeted than a traditional rake. It removes significantly more undercoat per pass than a standard rake — which is its main advantage for dogs in heavy seasonal shed. The amount of undercoat a Furminator pulls out on a Husky or German Shepherd in peak shed is, to be honest, kind of alarming the first time you see it.

But the Furminator needs more care in use than a traditional rake:

Pressure matters. You don't need to press hard. The teeth do the work — dragging it across the coat with light to medium pressure is enough. Pressing hard repeatedly in the same area can cause "rake burn" — skin irritation from friction. Keep it moving.

Don't overuse it. A traditional rake can be used as part of every brushing session. The Furminator is more aggressive — once or twice a week during normal periods, daily during a heavy seasonal blow. Using it daily as the standard routine can thin the coat over time if the guard coat gets repeatedly caught in the fine teeth.

Don't use it on wet coat. The teeth grab wet hair differently to dry hair and can pull more aggressively. Use it on a dry coat or a very lightly damp post-bath coat, not on a soaking wet one.

The practical answer for most double-coated dog owners: a traditional undercoat rake for regular brushing sessions, and the Furminator reserved for the seasonal blow when the undercoat is actively releasing in volume. That combination uses each tool in the situation it's most suited for.

🛒 Recommended — Seasonal Shed and Heavy Undercoat Work

Furminator Undercoat Deshedding Tool

The tool most double-coated dog owners end up with eventually — and with good reason. The fine comb edge gets through the guard hairs and pulls out dead undercoat more efficiently than a standard rake. Use it once or twice a week during normal periods and daily during a coat blow. Light pressure, keep it moving, follow with a slicker brush to finish the outer coat. Don't use it daily year-round — it's a targeted deshedding tool, not a replacement for the regular brushing routine.

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Technique — How to Use Each One Correctly

Using the undercoat rake:

Work in sections, neck to tail. Hold the skin taut with your free hand when working on loose-skinned areas — this prevents the skin from being pulled by the rake teeth. Use short strokes in the direction of hair growth — about 10 to 15cm at a time. Medium pressure — enough to feel the teeth moving through the undercoat, not so much that you're dragging. You should be pulling out soft, downy undercoat with each stroke. If only surface guard hairs are coming out with no undercoat, you're not reaching deep enough or the undercoat isn't ready to release yet.

Spend extra time on the areas where undercoat packs most: the rump above the tail, the sides of the chest, and the neck. These are where the undercoat is densest on most double-coated breeds.

After raking a section, push your fingers through the coat against the hair direction. If it still feels packed and dense, keep raking. If it feels airy and the fingers move through easily, the undercoat in that section is clear — move to the next.

Using the slicker brush:

Work in sections in the direction of hair growth, using short strokes that reach the skin. Light to medium pressure — the pins should make gentle contact with the skin on each stroke without pressing hard. For double-coated breeds, use the slicker brush after the rake work is done. For single-coated breeds of medium to long length, use the line-brushing technique — lift the top layer of coat, brush the layer underneath, then brush through the full length from top to bottom. After every section, check with the wide-tooth comb. If it passes cleanly through to the skin, the section is done.


The Right Order to Use Them

For a double-coated dog: undercoat rake first, slicker brush second. Always.

Using the slicker brush first on a dog in heavy shed smooths the surface over a packed undercoat. You end up with a coat that looks neat on the outside and is still full of dead undercoat underneath. The rake then has to work through the freshly tidied surface coat to get to what it needed to reach in the first place. It's not catastrophic but it's inefficient and slightly more uncomfortable for the dog.

Rake first — this is the hard work, clears the undercoat, opens the coat up. Slicker second — this is the finishing pass, tidies the guard coat, distributes oils, leaves the coat looking neat. Comb check last — this is the honest confirmation that both layers have been properly addressed.


How Often to Use Each One

For a double-coated dog in normal periods (not a seasonal blow):

  • Undercoat rake: two to three times a week. It takes longer than the slicker brush and does more work — you don't need to do it every day outside of shedding season.
  • Slicker brush: three to five times a week — more frequent because it's quicker and manages the surface coat that needs regular maintenance.
  • Furminator: once or twice a week as an addition to, not replacement for, the regular rake sessions.

During a seasonal coat blow:

  • Undercoat rake or Furminator: daily. The undercoat is actively releasing in volume and needs daily attention to keep pace.
  • Slicker brush: after every rake session as the finishing pass.

The blow typically lasts two to four weeks before the daily volume clearly drops. Once you're pulling significantly less undercoat per session, the blow is winding down and you can return to the regular frequency.


The Mistakes People Make With Both

Using only the slicker brush on a double-coated dog. The most common one. The coat looks fine. The undercoat is a mess. The shedding never improves because the problem layer isn't being addressed. Get a rake.

Using too much pressure with the Furminator. The teeth are sharp enough to damage the guard coat and irritate the skin if pressed hard repeatedly in the same spot. Light pressure, keep it moving. The tool does the work — you're just directing it.

Using the undercoat rake on a single-coated or fine-coated breed. Greyhounds, Whippets, Italian Greyhounds, short-coated thin-skinned breeds — the long rake teeth have nothing to engage with and end up scratching the skin surface. Rubber curry brush for these dogs.

Using the Furminator daily year-round. It's a targeted deshedding tool, not a daily brush. Daily use outside of coat blow season can thin the coat over time by repeatedly removing not just dead undercoat but live guard hairs caught in the fine teeth. Once or twice a week during normal periods is the right frequency.

Skipping the comb check at the end. A brush can pass over the top of a packed undercoat section and look like it's done. The wide-tooth comb to the skin tells you honestly whether both layers are clear. Don't skip it — it takes thirty seconds and catches the sections that need more work before the next brushing session.

Not doing the post-bath brush-out. The best time to use both tools is when the coat is slightly damp after a bath. The bath has loosened dead hair; the tools remove it. The damp coat session with rake then slicker brush is the most efficient single grooming session you can do for a double-coated shedding dog. Most of the shedding management benefit from a bath comes from this post-bath brushing, not from the bath itself.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between an undercoat rake and a slicker brush?

The undercoat rake has widely-spaced, long teeth that pass through the outer guard hairs to remove dead undercoat from the dense layer beneath. It works at depth. The slicker brush has fine, closely-spaced bent wire pins that work on the outer coat — removing loose surface hair, detangling, and distributing oils. On a double-coated dog, you need both: rake for the undercoat, slicker for the outer coat. Neither does the other's job.

Do I need an undercoat rake if I have a slicker brush?

If you have a double-coated breed — yes. The slicker brush cannot reach the undercoat on a double-coated dog. The pins are too short and too dense to pass through the guard hairs to the layer underneath. If you have a single-coated breed, a slicker brush is sufficient and an undercoat rake is unnecessary and potentially irritating on a coat without a true undercoat.

Can you use an undercoat rake on any dog?

Only on double-coated breeds. Using an undercoat rake on a single-coated, fine-coated, or thin-skinned breed can scratch the skin surface because the long teeth have no thick undercoat layer to engage with and go too deep. For single-coated dogs, use a slicker brush, rubber curry brush, or pin brush appropriate to the coat length.

How often should you use an undercoat rake?

Two to three times a week during normal periods. Daily during a seasonal coat blow. The Furminator can be used similarly but needs lighter pressure and shouldn't be used daily year-round — once or twice a week for regular undercoat maintenance, daily only during a heavy blow.


What breed are you working with and have you been using a slicker brush only, or do you already have a rake as well? The moment you first use a proper undercoat rake on a double-coated dog that's only ever been slicker-brushed is genuinely eye-opening in terms of how much was being left behind. Drop the breed in the comments and we can tell you which tools the specific coat needs.


Related Posts

Best Dog Dryers for Home Grooming: What Actually Works and Why

 For a long time I dried my dog with a regular hairdryer and thought it was fine. It was slow, she tolerated it without enjoying it, and I noticed her coat always seemed a bit frizzier and drier after a bath than it looked before. I put it down to the bath itself and moved on.

It was not the bath. It was the dryer. A human hairdryer on a warm or hot setting is the wrong tool for a dog — the heat concentration is too high, the airflow too narrow, and the motor too loud at a frequency that most dogs find genuinely stressful. Switched to a proper high-velocity dog dryer and the difference was significant: faster drying, calmer dog, noticeably better coat texture afterwards. The dryer had been undoing some of what the bath was trying to do.

Not everyone needs a dedicated dog dryer. If you have a short-coated dog who air-dries in twenty minutes, a microfibre towel and a warm room is genuinely sufficient. But for medium coats, long coats, double coats, and especially curly coats — where air drying alone takes hours and leaves the undercoat damp enough to smell — a proper drying tool makes home grooming meaningfully faster, more comfortable for the dog, and better for the coat.

This guide covers the different types of dog dryers, which coat types benefit from each, what to look for when buying, the best options at different price points, and how to introduce a dryer to a dog who has never used one without it becoming a negative experience.




Quick Answer

For most home groomers, a two-speed high-velocity dog dryer — also called a force dryer — is the right choice. It moves enough air to blow loose undercoat out of double coats during drying, dries thick coats in a fraction of the time of a hairdryer, and uses airflow rather than heat to dry which is significantly gentler on the skin and coat. For small dogs or dogs who are nervous about high-velocity air, a quieter variable-speed dryer or a stand dryer at low speed is more appropriate. Human hairdryers should be used on dogs only as a last resort and always on the cool setting — the heat concentration and noise frequency are both problematic for most dogs.


Table of Contents

  1. Why a Regular Hairdryer Is the Wrong Tool
  2. Types of Dog Dryers — What the Options Actually Are
  3. High-Velocity Force Dryers — The Home Standard
  4. Stand Dryers — Hands-Free Convenience
  5. Quieter and Variable-Speed Dryers — For Nervous Dogs
  6. Which Dryer for Which Coat Type
  7. What to Look For When Buying
  8. Recommendations by Budget and Use Case
  9. How to Use a Dog Dryer Correctly
  10. Introducing a Dryer to a Nervous Dog
  11. Do You Actually Need a Dog Dryer?
  12. FAQs
  13. Conclusion
  14. Related Posts

Why a Regular Hairdryer Is the Wrong Tool

Human hairdryers are designed for human hair — fine, sparse, and growing from skin that has a different pH, oil composition, and sensitivity profile from dog skin. Using one on a dog is not catastrophic but it is genuinely suboptimal in ways that matter, especially if you are doing it regularly.

Heat concentration. A human hairdryer on a warm or hot setting concentrates heat in a narrow beam at close range. Dog skin is more sensitive to heat than human skin because it is thinner and has less dense vasculature to dissipate heat. The result is skin surface dehydration — the same mechanism that causes post-bath dryness and dandruff when bath water is too hot, but delivered through air rather than water. Over repeated sessions, regular hairdryer use on a hot or warm setting dries out the skin surface and coat progressively.

Airflow design. Human hairdryers produce relatively low-volume, focused airflow. For a thin human hair length, this is efficient. For a dog coat — especially anything beyond a short smooth coat — the volume of air is insufficient to penetrate through the coat to the skin. You end up drying the outer surface of the coat while the undercoat and skin level remain damp for hours. A damp undercoat is where the musty smell that some owners notice after bathing their double-coated dog comes from — the surface appears dry but the undercoat is not.

Noise frequency. Human hairdryers operate in a noise frequency range that many dogs find acutely stressful — a persistent high-pitched motor whine. This is a different frequency from the noise most dogs habituate to in the environment and is one of the reasons many dogs that tolerate a bath calmly become anxious the moment the hairdryer appears. Proper dog dryers are designed with larger motors that produce lower-frequency sound at equivalent airflow volumes — they are louder in absolute decibels but less aversive to dogs in terms of frequency.

Cord and case design. Minor but real — human hairdryers are designed for use at arm's length on a stationary person. Using one on a moving dog at close range with a short cord in a bathroom creates handling challenges that proper dog dryers (longer cords, nozzle attachments, often wall-mountable stands) avoid.


Types of Dog Dryers — What the Options Actually Are

The dog dryer category is less standardised than grooming tools and the terminology is used inconsistently. Here is what the main types actually are and how they differ.

High-velocity force dryer (handheld): The most common type used by home groomers who graduate past a hairdryer. A high-powered motor in a handheld unit pushes a high volume of air at relatively low heat through a nozzle. The key mechanism is velocity — the force of the air physically lifts fur away from the skin, blows loose undercoat out of the coat during drying, and dries by moving water off the coat rather than evaporating it with heat. These are the workhorses of home dog grooming for medium and large dogs.

Stand dryer: A dryer on an adjustable stand that positions the airflow at the dog without requiring the handler to hold it. Some are heated, some forced air. Useful for hands-free drying when grooming alone, for keeping a dog warm during a grooming session, or for nervous dogs who do better with a lower-volume consistent airflow rather than a handheld unit being directed at them. Less powerful than a handheld force dryer at equivalent price points.

Cage or kennel dryer: A dryer that attaches to the door of a crate or grooming cage and circulates warm air around the dog. Not suitable for unsupervised use — overheating risk is real. Some professional grooming setups use these, but for home use they are not the right choice.

Grooming station combined units: Some grooming tables come with integrated stand dryer arms. Useful if you have a dedicated grooming space but overkill for most home groomers.

Variable-speed quieter dryers: A growing category — handheld dryers designed with noise reduction in mind, often with multiple speed settings and brushless motors. Lower maximum airflow than a full-power force dryer but significantly quieter. The right choice for small dogs, nervous dogs, or dogs with hearing sensitivity.


High-Velocity Force Dryers — The Home Standard

A high-velocity force dryer — often called an HV dryer or force dryer — is what most home groomers who regularly bathe medium to large dogs end up with, and for good reason. The core benefit is that drying works by air volume and velocity rather than primarily by heat, which means you can dry thoroughly at a low or no-heat setting without the skin dehydration that heat-based drying causes.

On a double-coated dog, a force dryer does something nothing else does: as the high-velocity air moves through the coat, it physically blows loose undercoat out during the drying process. You end up with a dried coat that has shed more undercoat than if you had brushed and towel-dried — because the force of the air removes loose fur that was still loosely anchored in the undercoat layer. This is the reason professional groomers use force dryers rather than heat dryers for most breeds, and why double-coat owners who switch from a hairdryer to a force dryer often notice a significant reduction in shedding in the days following a bath.

The practical considerations: they are louder than a hairdryer in absolute terms (though better in frequency for dogs), they require some handling technique to direct the airflow correctly, and the higher-powered models have enough airflow to tangle a long or curly coat if the nozzle is directed incorrectly. They work best at a 45-degree angle to the coat surface, moving constantly rather than staying stationary, and moving in the direction of coat growth.

 Top Pick — Best All-Round Home Force Dryer

SHELANDY 3.2HP Stepless Adjustable Speed Pet Hair Dryer

The dryer that comes up repeatedly in home grooming communities for good reason. Stepless speed control means you can dial from a gentle breeze to serious airflow rather than jumping between fixed settings. Multiple nozzle attachments for different coat needs. Temperature-adjustable so you can use cool air for heat-sensitive dogs or warm (not hot) for faster drying in cold weather. Handles everything from a Spaniel to a Husky at the right speed setting. The sweet spot between professional power and home-use practicality.

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Stand Dryers — Hands-Free Convenience

A stand dryer positions the dryer head on an adjustable arm at dog level, freeing both hands for brushing and handling during drying. This is genuinely useful for home groomers who are working alone — holding a force dryer in one hand while brushing with the other is awkward and tiring, particularly for large dogs.

The trade-off is that stand dryers at equivalent price points to a handheld force dryer typically produce less airflow — they prioritise positioning over power. They are more appropriate for maintaining warm air around the dog between drying passes or for keeping a dog comfortable during a grooming session than for the high-velocity undercoat blow-out that a handheld force dryer delivers.

For small dogs and for owners who prioritise hands-free convenience over maximum drying speed, a stand dryer is a practical choice. For large double-coated breeds during a blowout, the handheld force dryer is more effective.

 Recommended — Hands-Free Stand Dryer

Flying Pig Grooming Stand Dryer

Adjustable height arm, quiet motor, variable heat settings. Frees both hands for brushing and handling while a consistent airflow maintains drying progress. Well-suited for medium dogs and smaller, for nervous dogs who do better with a fixed low-level airflow than a handheld unit, and for home groomers who work alone and need both hands for positioning. Not as powerful as a full HV force dryer but a genuinely useful hands-free option.

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Quieter and Variable-Speed Dryers — For Nervous Dogs

Not every dog can be introduced to a full-power force dryer without a lengthy desensitisation process. Small dogs, elderly dogs, dogs with hearing sensitivity, and dogs who have had previous bad experiences with noise are genuine candidates for a quieter, lower-power option that prioritises the dog's comfort over drying speed.

Quiet dog dryers use brushless motors or noise-dampening design to produce meaningful airflow at a significantly reduced sound level compared to standard force dryers. They take longer to dry thick coats, but for the dogs they are appropriate for, the difference in how the dog responds to the session is worth the extra time.

A practical alternative for very nervous dogs: a variable-speed force dryer at its lowest setting, introduced gradually over multiple sessions, is often achievable where a full-power start would not be. Most dogs that seem dryer-averse are responding to the noise and the sudden high-velocity air rather than the concept of drying itself. Starting at the lowest speed setting from a distance and building up is the introduction protocol that works for most dogs, regardless of whether the dryer is specifically marketed as quiet.

 Recommended — For Small or Nervous Dogs

Lescolton Pet Grooming Dryer — Quiet Low Noise

Variable speed from genuinely gentle to moderate airflow, significantly quieter than a standard force dryer, with a temperature dial that includes a cool-only option. Well-suited for small dogs, puppies, senior dogs, and dogs who have historically found drying sessions stressful. Will not blow-dry a Husky's undercoat but will dry a Cavalier, a small Doodle, or a Bichon effectively and calmly. The right tool for the right dog.

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Which Dryer for Which Coat Type

Coat type Example breeds Best dryer type Do you need one?
Short, smooth coat Boxer, Beagle, Greyhound Microfibre towel + air dry in warm room Usually not — air dries in 20–30 min
Medium single coat Spaniel, Setter, Cavalier Variable-speed force dryer on low-medium Helpful — speeds drying, improves coat finish
Double coat — medium Golden Retriever, Border Collie, Lab High-velocity force dryer Yes — air drying leaves undercoat damp for hours
Double coat — dense Husky, Malamute, Samoyed, Chow Chow High-velocity force dryer (high power) Yes — necessary for thorough drying
Long, silky coat Maltese, Yorkie, Afghan, Shih Tzu Variable-speed dryer on low, or stand dryer Yes — high velocity tangles fine coats at full power
Curly or wavy coat Poodle, Doodle, Bichon, PWD Variable-speed dryer on medium, directed carefully Yes — curly coats stay damp without drying
Small dogs, nervous dogs Any small or anxious breed Quiet variable-speed dryer or stand dryer Helpful — speed and temperament dependent

What to Look For When Buying

Speed settings — variable is better than fixed. Fixed two-speed dryers jump from low to high with nothing in between. Variable or stepless speed control means you can find the right airflow for your specific dog's coat type and tolerance without committing to full power. This matters particularly for introducing a dryer to a new dog — starting at the lowest setting and building up is far more effective than switching between low and high.

Temperature control with a cool setting. Always dry on cool or low-warm at most. A dryer that only has warm and hot settings is a problem — cool air drying takes a little longer but does not strip skin moisture. If a dryer does not have an independent cool setting, it is not the right tool for a dog with dry or sensitive skin.

Nozzle attachments. A concentrator nozzle directs airflow for precise drying in specific areas (face, paws, behind ears). A wide or diffuser nozzle spreads the airflow for larger body areas and is better for curly coats where concentrated high-velocity air tangles the curls. Multiple nozzle options give you more control over how the airflow interacts with different parts of the coat.

Cord length. Dog dryers are used in bathrooms, utility rooms, or outdoors — often moving around a large dog. A cord under two metres is frustrating in practice. Three metres minimum for any usable home grooming dryer.

Weight and handle ergonomics. Drying a large double-coated dog properly takes fifteen to twenty minutes of continuous use. A heavy dryer held at the right angle for that duration is fatiguing. Lighter models with balanced weight distribution and comfortable grips make a real difference to how long the session feels.

Filter accessibility. Dog dryers accumulate fur in their intake filters faster than human hairdryers because dog fur is coarser and shed at higher volume. A dryer with an easy-to-clean filter that can be cleared between sessions without tools is worth having over one that requires disassembly.


Recommendations by Budget and Use Case

Best all-round home force dryer — SHELANDY 3.2HP Stepless Adjustable Speed Pet Hair Dryer. Stepless speed control from gentle to powerful, adjustable temperature including cool-only, multiple nozzles, and a long cord. Handles every coat type from a medium Spaniel to a Husky at the right setting. This is the dryer that appears most consistently in home groomer recommendations across different breeds and is the one I would point most owners toward as a first dedicated dog dryer.

Best for small or nervous dogs — Lescolton Quiet Variable Speed Pet Dryer. Genuinely quiet motor, variable speed from very gentle to moderate, cool and warm settings. Not built for a Husky blowout but perfect for smaller dogs, nervous dogs, and breeds where coat volume does not require high-power airflow.

Best hands-free option — Flying Pig Grooming Stand Dryer. Adjustable arm stand, consistent airflow without holding, usable for any dog who stands calmly during grooming. Less powerful than a handheld HV dryer but very practical for groomers working alone.

Budget option — any variable-speed dog dryer with a cool setting under a recognised pet brand. The market has affordable force dryers that do an acceptable job for the occasional home groom. The trade-off at lower price points is usually motor longevity and build quality rather than immediate performance — they work fine for the first year or two of occasional use. If you are grooming weekly or have a large double-coated dog, investing in a mid-range model from the start saves replacing a budget model within eighteen months.

What to avoid regardless of budget: any dryer without a cool or low-temperature setting, any dryer marketed as a human hairdryer that someone has rebranded for pets, and any dryer where the lowest speed setting is still too powerful for your dog — these cannot be safely used on sensitive or nervous dogs regardless of how good the high-speed performance is.


How to Use a Dog Dryer Correctly

The technique matters as much as the tool. A good dryer used badly produces worse results than a mediocre dryer used correctly.

Towel dry first. Always use a microfibre towel to remove as much surface water as possible before the dryer comes out. Pressing the towel into the coat rather than rubbing — rubbing creates tangles and friction on still-wet hair. The dryer finishes the job; the towel does the heavy lifting on bulk water removal. Starting with the dryer on a soaking wet coat takes twice as long and works half as well.

Start at the rear and work forward. Begin at the hindquarters and work toward the head — the same direction you brush. The dog will tolerate the dryer experience better if the first contact is at the back end rather than immediately near the face and ears.

Keep the nozzle moving constantly. Never hold the dryer still on one spot. Constant movement — short strokes or circular motions — prevents heat concentration in one area and produces more even drying. This matters even on a cool setting because localised airflow on wet skin can cause surface cooling that is uncomfortable.

Angle the nozzle at 45 degrees to the coat, not directly at it. Direct perpendicular airflow at full power blows the coat into a tangled mess on long and curly coats. A 45-degree angle lifts the coat and dries from within without the tangling effect. On double-coated dogs this angle is what allows the air to penetrate through the guard hairs and reach the undercoat.

Brush as you dry on longer coats. On medium, long, and curly coats, using a slicker brush in one hand while directing the dryer with the other produces a straighter, smoother finish and prevents tangles from setting in the drying coat. This requires some practice to coordinate but becomes natural quickly.

Finish with the cool setting. End the drying session on cool air regardless of what temperature you used earlier. This closes the hair cuticle, reduces static in the finished coat, and leaves a noticeably smoother coat surface than ending on warm air.


Introducing a Dryer to a Nervous Dog

A dog who has never experienced a dryer — or who has had a bad experience with a human hairdryer — needs a graduated introduction rather than full-power drying from the first session. Forcing the issue produces a dog who fights the drying step at every subsequent bath, which makes the whole routine more stressful for everyone.

Start with the dryer turned on in the same room as the dog without being directed at them. Treats, calm behaviour, no pressure. Let them investigate the sound. The goal for the first session is just neutral tolerance of the noise — not drying.

Second session: dryer on, directed away from the dog, brought gradually closer while treating continuously. The moment the dog shows any tension, pause and hold the current distance until they relax before moving closer again.

Third session onward: lowest speed setting, directed at the back end (the least sensitive area), brief passes, lots of treats. Extend the session and the area covered gradually over subsequent baths. Most dogs that seem dryer-averse are at neutral-to-positive after five or six patient sessions using this approach.

Two things that help significantly: a lick mat with peanut butter or soft treat paste on the bath wall keeps the dog occupied and in a positive state during the drying session. And ending each session with something the dog loves — before they have had enough, not after — means the association with the dryer is always ending positively rather than ending on the moment of stress.

 The ear protection question: Some groomers recommend cotton balls in the ears during force drying to protect from the noise and direct airflow. If your dog is particularly sensitive to ear noise or you have a breed with large open ear canals, this is a reasonable precaution for the first few sessions. Do not forget to remove them before the session ends.


Do You Actually Need a Dog Dryer?

Honest answer: it depends on your dog and your grooming frequency.

If you have a short-coated dog who air-dries in under thirty minutes and you bathe every four to six weeks, a good microfibre towel and a warm room is genuinely all you need. A dog dryer would speed things up slightly but would not make a meaningful difference to coat quality or drying thoroughness for a smooth short coat.

If you have a medium single-coated dog — a Spaniel, Setter, or similar — a dryer is helpful but not critical. Air drying takes an hour or more and the coat sometimes develops a slightly wavy set as it dries without brushing. A dryer speeds this up and produces a better finish, but it is an upgrade rather than a necessity.

If you have a double-coated dog of any size, a proper force dryer is as close to necessary as grooming equipment gets. Air drying a double coat leaves the undercoat damp for three to five hours in a warm room, longer in a cool one. That sustained dampness at skin level is where the musty post-bath smell in double-coated dogs comes from, and it is also a contributing factor to the skin conditions that develop in dogs whose coats are not fully dried between baths. A force dryer that takes twenty minutes to do what air drying takes four hours to do imperfectly is not a luxury for these dogs — it is a practical necessity for regular bathing.

Curly and long coats sit somewhere in between — air drying works eventually but the coat sets in the position it dried in rather than being blown straight, which affects how the finished coat looks and how easily it combs out. For Doodles and Poodles who go to a professional groomer regularly, this matters less because the groomer does the blow-dry. For owners doing home grooms between professional visits, a dryer produces a noticeably better result.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use a human hairdryer on my dog?

Yes, as a last resort, on the cool setting only, held at least 20cm from the coat, kept moving constantly. Never on warm or hot — the heat concentration damages the skin surface and dries the coat progressively with repeated use. The cool setting on a human hairdryer is genuinely safe for occasional use but produces noticeably less efficient drying than a dog-specific dryer because the airflow volume is lower. For regular home grooming of any coat beyond a short smooth coat, a dog-specific dryer is a worthwhile investment.

What is the difference between a force dryer and a regular dog dryer?

A force dryer (also called a high-velocity or HV dryer) dries primarily through high-volume airflow rather than heat — the force of the air physically moves water off the coat rather than evaporating it with warmth. This is gentler on the skin, faster for thick coats, and on double-coated dogs it blows loose undercoat out during drying as a bonus. A regular dog dryer operates more like a human hairdryer with lower airflow and more reliance on heat to dry. Force dryers are the standard for any dog with significant coat volume.

How do I stop a dog dryer from tangling my dog's coat?

Angle the nozzle at roughly 45 degrees to the coat surface rather than directly at it. Keep the dryer moving constantly in short strokes following the direction of coat growth rather than against it. For long and curly coats, use the widest nozzle attachment rather than a concentrator. And brush as you dry on long coats — this is what prevents tangles from setting in the coat as it dries. High-velocity air directed perpendicular at full power on an unsupported long coat is what creates the tangled result — the angle and the brushing technique prevent it.

How long does it take to dry a dog with a force dryer?

Roughly: small short-coated dog 5 to 10 minutes, medium single-coated dog 15 to 20 minutes, Golden Retriever or similar double coat 20 to 30 minutes, dense double coat like a Husky 30 to 45 minutes. These are estimates with a mid-power force dryer after thorough towel drying. Without towel drying first, add 30 to 50% to these times. A full-power professional force dryer at the higher end is faster; a lower-power home unit at the lower end is slower. The biggest variable is always how thoroughly the coat was towel dried before the dryer came out.


Conclusion

A dog dryer is one of those purchases that seems optional until you have used the right one and then cannot imagine going back to a hairdryer. Not because it is a luxury — for most coat types beyond short and smooth, it genuinely solves problems the hairdryer creates or leaves unaddressed. The damp undercoat, the frizzed finish, the dog who tolerates the noise badly and makes every drying session a negotiation.

The right dryer for most home groomers with medium or large dogs is a variable-speed force dryer with a cool setting and multiple nozzle attachments. It handles every coat type from a cautious low-speed introduction through to a full double-coat blowout at higher speed. Start at the lowest setting with any new dog, build up over a few sessions, use a lick mat to create a positive association, and most dogs reach a genuinely calm drying routine within a month.

For small dogs, nervous dogs, and anyone who values a quieter session over maximum drying speed — a quiet variable-speed dryer is the right compromise. It takes longer but the dog who is relaxed through a longer drying session is easier to groom overall than the one who endures a faster session in stress.

What were you using to dry your dog before you got a proper dog dryer, and what made you switch? The hairdryer-to-force-dryer moment is one that a lot of groomers describe as an immediate obvious difference. Drop your experience in the comments.


Best Grooming Kits for Dogs: What to Actually Buy and Why

 The grooming kit aisle — physical or online — is one of those places that looks straightforward until you are standing in it trying to figure out whether you need the pink-handled slicker brush or the blue-handled one, what the difference between a deshedding rake and a Furminator actually is, and why there are seventeen types of nail clippers that all claim to be the best.

I have bought a lot of wrong tools over the years. The ones that seemed professional but were poorly made. The kit bundles that included five things I would never use and left out the two things I actually needed. The expensive deshedding tool I bought for a dog who did not have a double coat, which did essentially nothing useful.

What actually makes a good home grooming kit is not a long list of tools — it is the right short list for your specific dog's coat type. A kit that works brilliantly for a Golden Retriever will be almost entirely wrong for a Poodle. This guide builds the right kit for each coat type from scratch, explains what each tool does and why it is on the list, and gives honest recommendations on what is worth paying for versus where the cheap option is fine.




Quick Answer

The best dog grooming kit is the one matched to your dog's coat type — there is no universal kit that works well across all coats. Every kit should include: the right brush for the coat type (slicker brush for most medium, long, and curly coats; rubber curry for short coats), a wide-tooth metal comb as a finishing tool, a pH-balanced dog shampoo and conditioner, sharp nail clippers, and styptic powder. Double-coated breeds additionally need an undercoat rake or deshedding tool. Long-coated breeds need a detangling spray and blunt-tipped grooming scissors. The four tools that matter most — brush, comb, nail clippers, and shampoo — are where quality pays dividends. Everything else is optional support.


Table of Contents

  1. What Every Dog Grooming Kit Needs, Regardless of Coat Type
  2. The Short Coat Kit
  3. The Medium Coat Kit
  4. The Double Coat Kit
  5. The Long Coat Kit
  6. The Curly and Wavy Coat Kit
  7. The Budget Starter Kit — What to Buy First
  8. Where Quality Matters vs Where Cheap Is Fine
  9. Things to Avoid Buying
  10. FAQs
  11. Conclusion
  12. Related Posts

What Every Dog Grooming Kit Needs, Regardless of Coat Type

Before we get into coat-specific kits, these are the tools that belong in every kit regardless of what your dog looks like. Think of these as the universal layer that every other kit builds on top of.

Wide-tooth metal comb

This is the most underrated tool in any grooming kit and the one most owners do not have. A wide-tooth metal comb is not a brushing tool — it is a quality-check tool. After every brush session, you run the comb through the coat. If it moves through freely, the coat is genuinely detangled. If it catches, there is a tangle the brush missed. Without the comb, you have no way of knowing whether the brush job was thorough or just superficially smooth. Buy one from the start. It costs very little and earns its place at every single session.

 Essential — Every Kit

Greyhound Comb — Fine & Coarse Tooth (7.5 inch)

Half coarse tooth for the body, half fine tooth for face, ears, and paws. Stainless steel, lasts indefinitely, costs less than a single groom. The finishing tool that tells you whether the brush job was actually done. Every kit needs one of these regardless of coat type.

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pH-balanced dog shampoo and conditioner

Dog skin pH is 6.5 to 7.5. Human shampoos are formulated for 4.5 to 5.5 and disrupt the dog's skin barrier every time they are used — regardless of how gentle the formula is. Every kit needs a dog-specific, pH-balanced shampoo. Conditioner is not optional for any coat type with medium length or longer fur — it closes the hair shaft after shampooing and protects the skin moisture that the shampoo partially removes.

Nail clippers with a safety guard

Nails need trimming every three to four weeks for most dogs. Dull clippers crush the nail rather than cutting cleanly — the crushing sensation is the main reason dogs develop aversions to nail trimming, not the trim itself. Sharp stainless steel clippers with a safety stop are the non-negotiable nail kit standard.

Styptic powder

Every nail-trimming kit needs this. If you nick the quick, styptic powder stops the bleeding in under a minute. Without it, a small accidental nick becomes a stressful event. With it, it is a ten-second fix. Having it on hand removes most of the anxiety from learning to trim nails at home.

 Essential — Every Kit

Miracle Care Kwik Stop Styptic Powder

Apply to the nail tip, hold 30 seconds, bleeding stops. Small, cheap, and the single most anxiety-reducing addition to any home nail-trimming routine. Buy it before you need it rather than after.

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Microfibre towel

Absorbs significantly more water than a regular towel and speeds up drying meaningfully. One microfibre dog towel is a better investment than three regular bath towels for grooming purposes.

Vet-recommended ear cleaner and cotton balls

Monthly ear maintenance keeps wax from accumulating and reduces the risk of ear infections — one of the most common and expensive-to-treat conditions in dogs. The cleaner goes in the canal, massage for 30 seconds, let the dog shake, wipe the outer canal with a cotton ball. Simple, quick, and worth doing every month regardless of coat type.


The Short Coat Kit

Best for: Boxers, Beagles, Dachshunds, Greyhounds, Whippets, Vizslas, Weimaraners, Dalmatians, French Bulldogs

Short-coated dogs are the lowest-maintenance coat type for grooming. No mats, no significant tangles, minimal brushing time. The grooming kit for a short-coated dog is genuinely simple — and most of the tools that get marketed toward "all dogs" are not actually needed.

The primary brushing tool for a short smooth coat is a rubber curry brush or grooming glove. The rubber nubs grip dead fur from close to the skin, massage the skin surface, and most short-coated dogs lean into it because it feels like a massage. A slicker brush does very little on smooth coats — the pins sit on top of the short fur rather than working through it. Skip the slicker brush for short-coated dogs entirely.

Tool Why it is on the list Priority
Rubber curry brush or grooming glove The right tool for short coats — grips dead fur, massages skin Essential
Wide-tooth metal comb Quick finishing check, good for face and paw areas Essential
pH-balanced dog shampoo Every bath needs dog-specific pH Essential
Nail clippers + styptic powder Every 3–4 weeks regardless of coat type Essential
Microfibre towel Faster drying after bath Recommended
Ear cleaner + cotton balls Monthly ear maintenance Recommended

 Top Pick — Short Coat Brushing

Kong ZoomGroom Multi-Use Rubber Brush

The right tool for smooth coats — rubber teeth grip and lift dead fur while massaging the skin. Works dry for routine brushing or wet as a bath brush. Most short-coated dogs actively lean into it. A slicker brush on a smooth coat does a fraction of what this does.

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The Medium Coat Kit

Best for: Spaniels, Setters, Cavalier King Charles Spaniels, Flat-Coated Retrievers, Border Collies (single coat variety), Labradoodles with wavy coats

Medium single-coated dogs are where the slicker brush earns its place as the central tool. The coat is long enough to tangle, has enough length to distribute natural oils through brushing, and benefits significantly from a conditioner step after bathing. No deshedding tool needed for single-coated medium breeds — the slicker brush used properly reaches skin level and does the whole job.

Tool Why it is on the list Priority
Slicker brush (flexible pins) Primary detangling and oil-distribution tool Essential
Wide-tooth metal comb Finishing check, especially for ears and feathering Essential
pH-balanced dog shampoo and conditioner Conditioner essential for medium length coat Essential
Nail clippers + styptic powder Every 3–4 weeks Essential
Detangling spray Pre-brush on dry or tangled coats — reduces breakage Recommended
Blunt-tipped scissors Tidying paw fur and eye area between professional grooms Recommended
Microfibre towel + ear cleaner Bath and ear maintenance Recommended

The Double Coat Kit

Best for: Huskies, Malamutes, Golden Retrievers, Labradors, German Shepherds, Border Collies, Corgis, Bernese Mountain Dogs, Samoyeds, Chow Chows, Pomeranians, Australian Shepherds

Double-coated breeds have the most demanding grooming kit requirements because there are genuinely two separate jobs to do — the outer coat and the undercoat — each requiring its own tool. This is the kit where cutting corners costs you the most in terms of shed fur around the house and coat health.

The non-negotiable addition for this kit that does not appear in others is the undercoat rake or deshedding tool. Without it, the dense undercoat layer where most of the shed accumulates is never properly addressed regardless of how thorough the slicker brush sessions are. During seasonal blowouts — twice a year for most double-coated breeds — this kit is what stands between a manageable shed and losing the battle entirely.

Tool Why it is on the list Priority
Slicker brush (flexible pins, wide head) Outer coat — detangling and surface fur removal Essential
Undercoat rake or deshedding tool Undercoat — removes loose undercoat the slicker brush cannot reach Essential
Wide-tooth metal comb Post-session quality check through both layers Essential
pH-balanced dog shampoo and conditioner Thorough rinsing critical for thick coats Essential
Nail clippers + styptic powder Every 3–4 weeks Essential
High-velocity dryer or cool-setting blow-dryer Air drying thick coats is impractical — proper drying tool is needed Strongly recommended
Detachable shower wand Thorough skin-level rinsing through thick coats Strongly recommended
Microfibre towel + ear cleaner Bath and ear maintenance Recommended

 Top Pick — Slicker Brush (Medium and Double Coats)

Chris Christensen Big G Slicker Brush

Flexible pins, wide head, professional quality. The brush that comes before everything else in the double-coat grooming sequence. Gets the outer coat genuinely detangled so the deshedding tool can do its job on the undercoat underneath. The difference between this and a cheap slicker brush is immediately obvious in how it moves through the coat.

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 Top Pick — Undercoat Removal (Double Coats)

Furminator Undercoat Deshedding Tool

Reaches through the topcoat to pull loose undercoat without cutting guard hairs when used with correct technique. Choose the right size for your dog's weight and the correct coat length version. Used after the slicker brush on a double-coated dog during a blowout, the amount of undercoat it removes is the thing that converts most people to using it permanently.

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The Long Coat Kit

Best for: Maltese, Yorkies, Shih Tzus, Lhasa Apsos, Afghan Hounds, Setters (long variety), Old English Sheepdogs, Havanese

Long-coated single-coated dogs are the most time-intensive coat type to maintain at home — not because the individual tools are complicated, but because the coat requires daily attention to prevent the mats that form quickly in fine, long hair. The kit reflects that: more tools than a short or medium coat, with a heavy emphasis on detangling and moisture management.

The key difference from the medium coat kit is the addition of a pin brush (gentler on fine silky coats than a slicker brush for initial detangling), a good mat splitter for the inevitable tangles, and a leave-in conditioning spray that is used at every single brush session to prevent the static and breakage that bone-dry long coats are prone to.

Tool Why it is on the list Priority
Pin brush Gentler initial detangling on fine silky coats than slicker pins Essential
Slicker brush (flexible pins) Finishing pass after pin brush to smooth and remove loose fur Essential
Wide-tooth metal comb Critical finishing check — long coats mat invisibly Essential
Leave-in detangling spray Used at every brush session to prevent breakage and static Essential
Moisturising shampoo and rich conditioner Long coats strip and dry more than short coats during bathing Essential
Mat splitter Safe mat removal without scissors pointing toward skin Essential
Blunt-tipped grooming scissors Eye area, paw fur, sanitary trim between professional grooms Essential
Nail clippers + styptic powder Every 3–4 weeks Essential
Microfibre towel + ear cleaner Bath and ear maintenance Recommended

 Essential — Long and Curly Coat Brushing

The Stuff Conditioner & Detangler Spray

Apply before every brush session on long or curly coats. Reduces static, helps the brush glide through tangles rather than catching, and reduces breakage significantly on fine or curly hair. The difference between brushing a dry long coat and one that has been lightly misted with this is immediately obvious in how the brush moves and how the dog responds.

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The Curly and Wavy Coat Kit

Best for: Poodles, Labradoodles, Goldendoodles, Cavapoos, Cockapoos, Bichon Frises, Portuguese Water Dogs, Lagotti Romagnoli

Curly coats are the highest-maintenance coat type to groom at home — not because the tools are complicated but because these coats mat fastest and closest to the skin, often looking fine on the surface while fully felted underneath. Daily brushing is genuinely necessary, not optional, and the consequences of skipping sessions accumulate quickly.

The most important thing to know about this kit: no deshedding tool. This is one of the most common and damaging mistakes owners of Doodles and Poodles make. These coats have no undercoat layer for a deshedding tool to work on — the tool just pulls and stresses the curls. The slicker brush used in small sections with detangling spray is the right tool, every time.

Tool Why it is on the list Priority
Slicker brush (flexible pins) The primary tool — used in small sections to skin level every session Essential
Wide-tooth metal comb Critical — curly coats mat invisibly, comb reveals what brush missed Essential
Leave-in detangling spray Every brush session without exception on curly coats Essential
Moisturising shampoo and conditioner Curly coats tend toward dryness — moisture maintenance essential Essential
Mat splitter Curly coats mat fastest — mat splitter is a weekly-use tool for many owners Essential
Nail clippers + styptic powder Every 3–4 weeks Essential
Blunt-tipped grooming scissors Between-groom tidying — professional cut every 6–8 weeks still needed Recommended
Microfibre towel + ear cleaner Curly coats hold moisture — ear cleaning especially important Recommended

The Budget Starter Kit — What to Buy First

If you are just starting and want to know what to buy first before spending on a full kit, this is the priority order that gets you the most grooming value for the least money:

First purchase: The right brush for your coat type plus a metal comb. These two tools cover the majority of your routine brushing needs and cost relatively little. The brush varies by coat type as above — slicker for most medium and long coats, rubber curry for short coats. The metal comb is the same regardless of coat type.

Second purchase: A good dog shampoo and conditioner. The shampoo you are currently using matters more than most people realise — human shampoo or a stripping dog shampoo at the wrong pH compounds every other skin and coat issue. A pH-balanced moisturising dog shampoo is a high-impact, low-cost change.

Third purchase: Nail clippers and styptic powder. These have a fixed maintenance cost associated with them — nails need trimming every three to four weeks regardless — and doing it at home versus at the vet or groomer saves money and time from the first session.

After that: Add the coat-specific extras as you identify what you actually need from using the basics regularly. The detangling spray if you notice the brush catching on the dry coat. The deshedding tool when the spring blowout starts. The mat splitter when you find the first armpit mat. Build the kit around what you are actually encountering rather than buying everything upfront.


Where Quality Matters vs Where Cheap Is Fine

Worth paying for: The main brush — cheap slicker brushes with rigid pins make brushing uncomfortable and less effective. The difference between a quality flexible-pin brush and a drugstore version is immediately apparent in how it moves through the coat and how the dog responds. Nail clippers — dull clippers crush rather than cut, which is the main reason dogs develop nail-trim aversions. Sharp stainless steel clippers are a meaningful investment. The shampoo — pH balance matters and the wrong formulation compounds skin problems at every bath.

Cheap is fine: The metal comb — a basic stainless steel Greyhound comb is the same tool regardless of price, and the cheap versions work as well as expensive ones. Styptic powder — it is cornstarch and a coagulating agent, there is no quality tier here. Microfibre towels — any microfibre dog towel does the same job. Cotton balls for ear cleaning. Basic grooming gloves.


Things to Avoid Buying

Bundle kits that include tools for every coat type. These look like value but usually include a rubber curry, a slicker brush, a pin brush, an undercoat rake, and a shedding blade — five tools, most of which are wrong for your specific dog. You are better off buying two or three correct tools than seven mixed ones.

Deshedding tools for single-coated, curly, or silky long coats. The Furminator is a genuinely good tool for double-coated breeds. On a Poodle, a Doodle, a Yorkie, or a Maltese it either does nothing or damages the coat. Know your coat type before you buy.

Human grooming products repurposed for dogs. Human shampoo, human oatmeal bath products, human nail clippers, human hair scissors. The pH is wrong, the size is wrong, and the design is wrong for dog coat and nail anatomy.

Electric clippers for beginners doing their first home groom. Clippers are powerful tools that require specific technique and knowledge about coat types, guard lengths, and growth patterns. Starting with scissors and brushing is significantly safer for a beginner. Clippers come later, ideally after watching a professional groomer work with your specific breed.


Frequently Asked Questions

What should a basic dog grooming kit include?

Every basic dog grooming kit should include: the right brush for the coat type (slicker brush for most medium, long, and curly coats; rubber curry for short smooth coats), a wide-tooth metal comb as a finishing tool, a pH-balanced dog shampoo and conditioner, sharp nail clippers with a safety guard, and styptic powder. Everything beyond this is coat-specific — double-coated breeds need a deshedding tool, long and curly coats need a detangling spray and mat splitter. Start with the basics for your coat type and add as you identify what you actually need.

Are dog grooming kit bundles worth it?

Usually not, and for a specific reason: bundle kits include tools across all coat types, which means most of them are wrong for your specific dog. A bundle that includes a rubber curry brush, slicker brush, pin brush, undercoat rake, and shedding blade covers all coat categories — but if your dog has a curly coat, three of those five tools are either useless or actively harmful on their coat. You get better value buying two or three correct tools for your coat type than buying a seven-piece bundle where half of it goes in a drawer.

What is the best grooming tool for dogs that shed a lot?

It depends entirely on coat type. For double-coated heavy shedders (Huskies, German Shepherds, Labradors, Golden Retrievers), the combination of a quality slicker brush for the outer coat plus a deshedding tool for the undercoat is what makes the biggest difference to shed volume. The slicker brush alone misses most of the undercoat where the majority of shed accumulates. For short-coated heavy shedders (Beagles, Boxers, Dalmatians), a rubber curry brush used regularly is the right tool — it grips and removes dead fur from the coat before it ends up on the furniture.


Conclusion

The best grooming kit is a short list of correct tools, not a long list of every available tool. The coat type is the starting point for every decision — brush type, whether a deshedding tool belongs in the kit, how much detangling and moisture management the kit needs to include. Get that right and the rest falls into place.

If there is one principle that runs through every kit on this list it is this: the brush and the metal comb together are the foundation of every grooming routine regardless of coat type. The brush does the work; the comb confirms it was done properly. Everything else supports those two tools doing their jobs well.

Start with the right brush for your coat type, a metal comb, a good shampoo, and nail clippers with styptic powder. Use them consistently. Add the coat-specific extras as you encounter the specific problems they solve. That approach builds a kit that actually gets used rather than a drawer full of tools that seemed like good ideas at the time.

What coat type does your dog have and what is the one tool in your kit that made the biggest difference when you added it? For me it was the metal comb — realising how much the brush was missing changed the whole grooming routine. Drop yours in the comments.