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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.

Signs Your Dog Needs Grooming: 12 Things Your Dog Is Trying to Tell You

 Here's the thing about grooming — your dog cannot come and tap you on the shoulder and say "hey, I think it's been a while." They can't look in a mirror, realise their nails are tapping on the floor like a tiny stressed accountant, and book themselves an appointment. That part is on us.

And most of us, honestly, go a bit longer than we should between grooming sessions. Not out of laziness — more out of not always knowing what to look for. The coat still looks roughly fine. The dog seems comfortable. It doesn't smell that bad. And then suddenly you're at the vet for something unrelated and they mention the nails, or the groomer books the appointment and calls you afterward to explain the condition of the coat under what looked like perfectly normal fur on the outside.

That's happened to me. It's probably happened to you too.

This post is a proper checklist — twelve signs your dog is telling you they need grooming, what each one actually means for their health and comfort, and what to do about it. Some of these are obvious. Some of them surprised me when I first learned about them. All of them are worth knowing.

signs your dog needs grooming — 12 things to look and listen for



Quick Answer

The clearest signs your dog needs grooming are: nails clicking on hard floors, visible matting or tangling in the coat, fur hanging over the eyes, a persistent dull or greasy coat, a dog smell that won't go away between baths, ears with a musty odour or dark waxy buildup, discharge accumulating in the corners of the eyes, paw fur so long it's affecting how the dog walks, scooting or excessive rear-end attention, a coat that's lost its normal texture or shape, skin flaking visibly through the coat, and a dog that's increasingly reluctant to be touched in certain areas. Any one of these is a signal. Several at once means the appointment is genuinely overdue — and some of them, left longer, move from cosmetic issues to health ones.


Table of Contents

  1. Nails Clicking on the Floor
  2. Visible Matting or Tangling in the Coat
  3. Fur Growing Over the Eyes
  4. A Smell That Doesn't Go Away
  5. Musty Ears or Visible Wax Buildup
  6. Eye Discharge and Staining
  7. Paw Fur So Long It Affects the Walk
  8. Scooting or Excessive Rear-End Attention
  9. Coat That's Dull, Greasy, or Lost Its Shape
  10. Visible Flaking or Dandruff Through the Coat
  11. Reluctance to Be Touched in Certain Spots
  12. Coat That's Simply Too Long
  13. The Full Grooming Check — Printable Checklist
  14. How Often Should Your Dog Be Groomed?
  15. At-Home Grooming vs Professional Groomer — What Each Covers
  16. FAQs
  17. Conclusion
  18. Related Posts

1. Nails Clicking on the Floor

This is the most reliable and easiest-to-catch sign that grooming is overdue — and it's one a lot of people hear every day without registering what it means. If you can hear your dog's nails on a hard floor, they are too long. Full stop.

A dog's nails should just skim the ground when they're walking, making no sound at all. When the nails are the right length, the paw sits flat and the toes make contact with the ground naturally. When the nails are too long, they make contact with the ground first — before the paw does — which forces the toe joints back into an unnatural angle with every single step.

This isn't just uncomfortable in the moment. Long nails change the dog's gait. That changed gait puts abnormal stress on the joints in the paw, the wrist, and progressively higher up the leg. In dogs with already compromised joints — older dogs, larger breeds — overgrown nails make things meaningfully worse. And in extreme cases, nails left to grow can curve around and grow into the paw pad, causing a puncture wound that's painful, prone to infection, and entirely avoidable.

The dewclaw — the nail on the inner side of the leg that doesn't make contact with the ground at all — is especially easy to forget and especially prone to overgrowing and curling into the skin. Check it every time you check the rest of the nails.

What to do

If you're comfortable trimming nails at home, a good guillotine clipper and a tube of styptic powder (for the occasional quick) is all you need. If the clicking has been going on for a while, have a groomer or vet do the first trim — overgrown nails have a longer quick (the blood vessel inside the nail) that needs to recede gradually with regular short trims rather than being cut back all at once. Going forward, nail trims every 3–4 weeks keeps them at the right length.

🛒 Recommended — For At-Home Nail Trims

Safari Professional Nail Trimmer for Dogs

A stainless steel guillotine-style clipper that cuts cleanly without crushing the nail — the crushing sensation is what causes most nail-trim anxiety in dogs. Sharp blades, comfortable grip, and a safety stop to prevent over-cutting. Pair it with a small tube of styptic powder on the table next to you and the occasional accidental quick becomes a two-second fix rather than a drama. Works for small to large breeds depending on size chosen.

Check Price on Amazon →

2. Visible Matting or Tangling in the Coat

A mat isn't just untidy. A tight mat pulls continuously on the skin beneath it — and because it's pulling all the time, not just when you touch it, the dog is living with low-level discomfort that accumulates over days and weeks. Skin under a mat can't breathe properly, tends to collect moisture and debris, and is prone to irritation and infection. Dogs with chronic mats in sensitive areas like the armpits or groin are often more reactive about being handled in those areas — because handling hurts, and they've learned to expect that.

The tricky thing about mats is that the surface coat can look broadly fine while the undercoat is matted solid. Run your fingers through the coat all the way to the skin, not just over the surface. Common hiding spots: behind the ears, under the collar, armpits, groin, the back of the hind legs, and the base of the tail. These are friction zones — where coat rubs against itself or against a harness or collar — and they mat fastest.

What to do

Small, loose mats can be worked out at home with a detangling spray, your fingers, and a wide-tooth comb — working outward from the skin, not inward toward it. Tight, dense mats need a mat splitter to break them into manageable sections first. Anything you can't get your fingers into, anything near sensitive skin, or anything causing the dog visible discomfort when you touch the area — take to the groomer. A groomer can remove a tight mat in a minute. Attempting to force it out at home risks nicking the skin (which is easy to do when the skin folds into the mat) and seriously damaging the dog's tolerance for being groomed.

🛒 Recommended — For Loosening Mats at Home

The Stuff Conditioner & Detangler Spray

Apply generously to the mat, let it soak for a minute, then work through with fingers and a wide-tooth comb. Makes a real difference to how easily tangles come apart — the difference between pulling and gliding. Works on small to medium mats; anything dense and tight still needs a mat splitter or groomer. Doubles as a pre-brush conditioning spray between baths, which helps prevent mats forming in the first place.

Check Price on Amazon →

3. Fur Growing Over the Eyes

This one looks cute. I want to be upfront about that — a fluffy dog with a long fringe hanging over their face is objectively adorable. But fur growing into or over the eyes is genuinely uncomfortable for the dog, and if it's been there long enough, it's not just a cosmetic issue.

Hair in the eyes causes constant irritation. It triggers a persistent need to blink and squint. The fur itself touches the cornea — the surface of the eye — with every blink, which can cause scratching over time. Breeds prone to this — Shih Tzus, Lhasa Apsos, Old English Sheepdogs, Bearded Collies, many Doodle crosses — are also prone to a condition called entropion (eyelid rolling inward) that's made worse by chronic fur irritation. And because the dog can't see properly through a full fringe, they become more hesitant and startled — which looks like a personality quirk but is actually an impaired-vision response.

What to do

If the fur is long enough to touch the eyes, it needs trimming. This is almost always a groomer job — trimming safely around a dog's eyes requires the right scissors (blunt-tip only), the dog being completely still, and experience with how dogs move unexpectedly. At home, you can keep the fur out of the eyes between grooming appointments with small clips or a soft topknot — a simple, practical solution that most dogs tolerate well once they're used to it.

🛒 Recommended — Between-Appointment Eye Area Solution

Bow Wow Bows Dog Hair Clips — Mini Bow Set

Small, lightweight clips that hold the fringe above the eyes without pulling on the hair. A practical in-between solution for breeds that grow fast and go longer between grooming appointments than their face fur would prefer. Most dogs adapt to wearing them within a day or two. Far preferable to the alternative, which is the dog squinting through fur for three weeks until the next groomer visit.

Check Price on Amazon →

4. A Smell That Doesn't Go Away

Every dog has a smell. That's just the deal. But there's a difference between normal dog smell and a persistent, can't-ignore-it odour that follows them around even after a recent bath. The second kind is a sign that something in the coat or on the skin needs attention — and grooming is usually where you find it.

The most common culprits are: a coat that hasn't been thoroughly cleaned in a while and has accumulated oil, dirt, and debris deep in the undercoat (the surface might smell fine; it's what's underneath that's contributing); yeast overgrowth on the skin, which produces a distinctive musty, corn-chip smell that regular bathing doesn't fully clear; ears that haven't been cleaned and are brewing an early infection; and anal gland secretion, which has a very particular smell that most dog owners recognise after their first encounter with it.

What to do

A thorough grooming session — proper bath with the right shampoo, complete brush-out of the undercoat, ear cleaning, anal gland check, and nail trim — addresses the majority of persistent dog odour that isn't coming from a medical source. If the smell returns within a few days of a proper groom, or if it's specifically musty and localised to the ears or skin folds, that's worth a vet check — yeast infections and early ear infections respond to grooming hygiene but need treatment to fully clear.

🛒 Recommended — For Persistent Coat Odour

Veterinary Formula Clinical Care Antiseptic & Antifungal Shampoo

Formulated to address the bacterial and yeast overgrowth on skin that contributes to persistent dog odour — not just a fragrance mask. Benzethonium chloride and ketoconazole work on the microbial causes of smell rather than covering them. Particularly effective for dogs with skin folds, dense coats, or a history of recurring yeast smell. Use as a medicated wash when the smell is the main issue, then return to a milder everyday shampoo once cleared.

Check Price on Amazon →

5. Musty Ears or Visible Wax Buildup

A dog's ears — especially floppy, drop-eared breeds like Cocker Spaniels, Basset Hounds, Cavaliers, and Poodles — are warm, dark, and often poorly ventilated. That combination is exactly what bacteria and yeast need to get going. Regular ear cleaning as part of grooming keeps the environment hostile to infection. When it gets skipped, wax accumulates, the microclimate tips, and what starts as a mild buildup can progress to a full infection that needs veterinary treatment.

What you're looking for: a smell from the ear that's musty, yeasty, or just off. Dark brown or black wax that's thicker or more abundant than usual. Your dog shaking their head or scratching at one ear repeatedly. Any redness, swelling, or discharge visible at the ear canal entrance. A dog flinching when you touch the ear that normally wouldn't.

Light tan wax in small amounts is normal and healthy — it's part of the ear's self-cleaning mechanism. It's the abundance, colour change, smell, and behavioural signals that indicate a problem is developing.

What to do

If it's early-stage buildup with no smell and no behavioural signs — a proper clean with a vet-recommended ear cleaner and cotton wool, or as part of a grooming appointment, usually sorts it out. Breeds with hair growing into the ear canal need that hair plucked regularly during grooming sessions to maintain airflow — this is a groomer task, done with ear powder to grip the hair and remove it cleanly. If there's already a smell, significant discoloured wax, or the dog is showing pain or head-shaking — that's a vet visit, not just a grooming appointment. Ear infections need prescription treatment to clear properly.

🛒 Recommended — Regular Ear Maintenance

Virbac Epi-Otic Advanced Ear Cleaner

A veterinary-grade ear cleaner used as routine maintenance — not for treating active infections, but for preventing them from developing in the first place. Gently removes wax buildup, dries the canal after swimming or bathing, and maintains the ear environment. The one our vet recommended and the one we've used consistently ever since. A monthly clean with this between grooming appointments makes a real difference for floppy-eared and swimming breeds.

Check Price on Amazon →

6. Eye Discharge and Staining

A small amount of clear or slightly tan discharge in the inner corner of the eye when your dog wakes up — the equivalent of sleep in the corner of a human eye — is completely normal. What you're watching for is something beyond that: reddish-brown staining that extends down the muzzle from the eye corners, thick or coloured discharge that accumulates during the day, or crust that builds up and seals the eye corner closed.

The reddish-brown tear staining that's so common in white or light-coloured breeds — Maltese, Bichons, white Poodles, white Shih Tzus — isn't just a cosmetic issue. It signals that tears are overflowing rather than draining through the tear duct as they should, which keeps the skin beneath the eye permanently damp. Permanently damp skin grows yeast. The staining is literally a visible record of how long the moisture has been there. Groomers clean this area as part of a face trim and can help manage it — but if the overflow is constant and significant, the underlying cause (blocked tear duct, eyelid conformation, or chronic low-level irritation) is worth discussing with a vet.

What to do

Wipe the eye area gently with a warm, damp cloth daily if discharge accumulates. For tear staining, a groomer can trim the stained fur and clean the area thoroughly. Eye-safe tear stain wipes used daily keep the area between grooming appointments cleaner and drier. For thick, coloured, or crusted discharge — or any redness or swelling around the eye — see a vet rather than managing it cosmetically.

🛒 Recommended — For Daily Eye Area Maintenance

Burt's Bees Tear Stain Remover for Dogs

Gentle, eye-safe wipes specifically formulated for the sensitive skin around the eye area. Removes tear staining and the accumulated discharge that contributes to it. Free of harsh chemicals and safe for daily use — which is what breeds prone to heavy staining genuinely need. Not a cure for the underlying overflow, but a practical daily management tool that keeps the area cleaner between grooming appointments and significantly reduces the buildup.

Check Price on Amazon →

7. Paw Fur So Long It Affects the Walk

This one sneaks up on you. The paw fur grows gradually and you're looking at the dog every day — so it doesn't look dramatically different until suddenly the dog is slipping on the kitchen floor, or you notice they're lifting their feet oddly, or you look down and see little fur tufts splaying out between the toes with every step like tiny mops.

Long fur between the paw pads does several things, none of them good. It reduces traction on smooth surfaces, making slipping more likely — especially in older dogs or dogs recovering from injury. It mats between the toes very easily, creating tight, uncomfortable mats right against the sensitive skin of the paw pad. In wet weather it accumulates mud, moisture, and debris, which stays trapped against the skin. It also interferes with normal nail wear — nails grow against the fur rather than against the ground, making overgrowth happen faster.

What to do

The fur between the pads should be trimmed level with the paw pad — not shorter, just flush. The fur around the edge of the paw is trimmed to a neat outline. Both are a groomer job for most owners, but with a pair of blunt-tip scissors and a dog that tolerates paw handling, the between-pad trim can be done at home between appointments. A paw balm applied after trimming keeps the pads themselves from drying and cracking, which tends to happen more when long fur isn't protecting them from hard or rough surfaces.

🛒 Recommended — Post-Trim Paw Care

Musher's Secret Paw Wax

A wax-based paw balm that creates a breathable barrier on the pads — protects against hot pavement, rough ground, ice, and salt in winter, and keeps the pads from cracking and drying after the fur has been trimmed back. Applied once a week or before walks in rough conditions. Dogs don't object to the texture the way they do with creamy balms, and it absorbs quickly so they're not sliding around on it after application. A legitimate year-round paw care product, not just a seasonal one.

Check Price on Amazon →

8. Scooting or Excessive Rear-End Attention

Scooting — dragging the backside along the floor — is one of those things that looks funny the first time and feels slightly mortifying when it happens in front of guests. But it's your dog telling you something back there is uncomfortable, and it's worth paying attention to.

The most common grooming-related cause is anal gland fullness. Dogs have two small glands just inside the anal opening that normally express their contents during defecation. When they don't empty properly — and for many dogs on modern diets or with certain conformations, they don't — pressure builds up and the dog tries to relieve it by scooting or by licking and chewing at the area obsessively. A groomer checks and expresses the anal glands as part of a full grooming session. For dogs who need frequent expression — and some do, every 4–6 weeks — this alone can justify a regular professional grooming schedule.

Other causes of scooting to rule out: fur around the anus that's become matted or soiled (another grooming issue — the fur around this area is trimmed as part of a full groom, called a "sanitary trim"), intestinal parasites, allergies, or a genuine anal gland infection or impaction that needs veterinary treatment. If the scooting is accompanied by swelling, redness, discharge, or a strong smell at the rear end — skip the groomer and go straight to the vet.

What to do

A full grooming appointment that includes anal gland expression and a sanitary trim addresses the grooming-related causes. If scooting continues after a proper groom, or is accompanied by any swelling or discharge, see a vet — impacted or infected anal glands need veterinary care to resolve safely.


9. Coat That's Dull, Greasy, or Lost Its Shape

A healthy, well-groomed coat has a particular quality to it — a slight sheen, a good texture, a shape that matches the breed. When that changes, it's worth noticing. A coat that's become dull and lifeless usually means it hasn't been properly cleaned and brushed in a while, or that the skin underneath isn't producing enough oil to keep the coat conditioned. A coat that feels greasy or looks lank has the opposite problem — oil and debris have accumulated in the coat without being washed out, which also creates the conditions for skin problems underneath.

For breeds with a specific cut — Poodles, Schnauzers, Cockers, Westies — a coat that's lost its shape and is growing in all directions is simply telling you the haircut is overdue. This is partly cosmetic, but for some breed cuts it's functional too — a Poodle's coat, for example, mats exponentially faster as the hair grows past a certain length, meaning an overdue haircut translates directly into a mat problem within weeks.

What to do

A full bath with an appropriate shampoo and conditioner, followed by a proper brush-out and blow-dry, resets a dull or greasy coat in most cases. For breeds with a specific cut, book the groomer. If the coat continues to look poor despite regular grooming — dull, brittle, dry, or losing hair in patches — that's worth a vet conversation, as poor coat condition is sometimes a sign of nutritional deficiency or an underlying health issue like thyroid dysfunction.


10. Visible Flaking or Dandruff Through the Coat

White flakes visible on a dark coat, or a dusty-looking surface to the fur, is dandruff — and while it's not always a grooming problem specifically, it's often a signal that something in the skin-and-coat routine needs adjusting. The most common causes are bathing with the wrong shampoo (especially human shampoo, which has the wrong pH for dog skin), bathing too infrequently so dead skin cells accumulate, bathing too frequently which strips the skin's natural oils, or a diet lacking in the omega fatty acids the skin needs to maintain its barrier function.

Seasonal dandruff — flaking that gets worse in winter or during dry weather — is extremely common and usually responds well to a grooming routine adjustment and a fish oil supplement. Dandruff that's persistent regardless of season, that's accompanied by itching, redness, or a greasy quality to the flakes, points to something more than routine dry skin and is worth a vet check.

What to do

Start with the bath routine: pH-balanced dog shampoo with moisturising ingredients (colloidal oatmeal, ceramides, or aloe vera), lukewarm water only, thorough rinsing, and a conditioner after every bath. Add a fish oil supplement at a therapeutic dose — around 20mg of combined EPA and DHA per kilogram of body weight daily — which rebuilds the skin's lipid barrier from the inside over four to eight weeks. If the dandruff doesn't respond to these changes, see a vet.

🐾

Related Reading

Dog Dandruff After Bath: Why It Happens & How to Fix It

🛒 Recommended — For Dandruff and Dry Skin

Pure Wild Alaskan Salmon Oil — Pump Dispenser

A daily omega-3 supplement that works on the skin's barrier from the inside — the part that shampoo and grooming alone can't reach. At a therapeutic dose, most dogs show measurable improvement in coat shine and reduction in flaking within four to six weeks. The pump dispenser makes accurate dosing easy — no measuring or mess. One of the most consistently effective additions to a grooming routine for dogs with ongoing dry skin or dandruff.

Check Price on Amazon →

11. Reluctance to Be Touched in Certain Spots

This one is easy to miss because it can look like personality — a dog that's "always been funny about their feet" or "never liked having their ears touched." Sometimes that's true. But reluctance to be handled in specific areas is also one of the most consistent signals that something is uncomfortable there, and it's worth investigating whether grooming is the reason before writing it off as a quirk.

A dog that flinches when you touch behind the ear often has a mat forming there. A dog that pulls away when you handle their feet might have overgrown nails or matted paw fur. A dog that reacts to touching around the collar line has probably got fur compressed and rubbing underneath. A dog that's sensitive around the rear end may have full anal glands, a sanitary area that needs trimming, or a mat in a very tender spot.

The pattern to watch for: a dog that was previously fine with being touched in an area and has progressively become less tolerant of it. That change in behaviour over time is a signal that something has changed physically, and grooming-related discomfort is one of the first things to rule out.

What to do

Don't push through it. Investigate. Run your fingers gently through the area — what do you feel? Is there a mat? Is the skin hot or inflamed underneath? Is the fur compacted against the skin? Address what you find, or take it to the groomer and ask them to pay particular attention to that area and report back what they found. If the reluctance continues after grooming, or if there's any heat, swelling, or visible skin change, see a vet.


12. Coat That's Simply Too Long

This might seem obvious but it genuinely sneaks up on you when you're seeing the dog every single day. The coat grows gradually and your brain adjusts to the new normal until suddenly your dog looks like a different animal, can't see properly, or is tripping over their own foot fur.

Beyond the visual, a coat that's grown past its ideal length is harder to maintain — it mats faster, collects more debris, is harder to dry after a bath, and is harder to brush thoroughly. A dog with a breed-specific cut that's gone six weeks past their scheduled grooming appointment isn't just shaggy — they're building up a maintenance backlog that the next grooming session has to work through, which is harder on the dog and more expensive.

A good rule of thumb for coated breeds: if you're looking at your dog and thinking "they're getting a bit fluffy," the appointment is already overdue. The right time to book is before you notice, not after.

What to do

Book the groomer. If the coat has grown significantly past the usual cut length, mention this when booking — the groomer may need a longer appointment slot, and knowing in advance means they can prepare rather than being rushed. Ask for a trim that will buy a reasonable amount of time before the next appointment rather than going as short as possible — very short cuts grow out awkwardly on most breeds and often look worse before they look better.


The Full Grooming Check — At-Home Checklist

Run through this quick check once a week. It takes about two minutes and catches most grooming issues before they become serious ones.

Check What you're looking for Action if yes
Nails Clicking on floor? Visible curve? Dewclaw curling? Trim at home or book a nail appointment
Coat — surface Dull, greasy, or carrying odour? Bath with appropriate shampoo and conditioner
Coat — skin level Fingers through to skin — any mats or tangled sections? Work out at home with detangler + comb, or groomer
Eyes Fur touching or covering eyes? Discharge or staining? Clips or topknot for fur; wipe staining daily; vet if coloured discharge
Ears Any smell? Dark or abundant wax? Head shaking? Routine clean if early; vet if smell or behavioural signs
Paws Fur splaying between toes? Slipping on smooth floors? Trim pad fur to flush; groomer for full paw tidy
Rear end Scooting? Licking? Fur soiled or matted in sanitary area? Groomer for gland expression and sanitary trim; vet if swelling
Skin Visible flaking through coat? Redness? Hot spots? Adjust bath routine; add omega supplement; vet if persistent
Touch response Flinching or pulling away from specific areas? Investigate the area; don't push through; groomer or vet if uncertain
Coat length Looking overgrown? Breed cut grown out? Eyes or paws covered? Book the groomer

📌 Good habit to build: Do this check during your dog's weekly brush. You're already handling them head to tail — it takes nothing extra to run through these points while you're there. Finding a mat behind the ear during a routine brush is a two-minute fix. Finding it three weeks later when it's tight against the skin is a much longer conversation.


How Often Should Your Dog Be Groomed?

Coat Type Examples Professional Groom At-Home Brushing
Short / smooth coat Beagle, Boxer, Dalmatian, Whippet Every 8–12 weeks Once a week
Medium coat Golden Retriever, Border Collie, Spaniel Every 6–8 weeks 2–3x per week
Long coat Shih Tzu, Maltese, Yorkie, Afghan Every 4–6 weeks Daily
Double coat Husky, German Shepherd, Corgi, Lab Every 6–8 weeks 2–3x per week; daily during blowout
Curly / wavy coat Poodle, Doodle, Bichon, PWD Every 4–6 weeks Daily

At-Home Grooming vs Professional Groomer — What Each Covers

Task At home Professional groomer
Regular brushing ✅ Primary responsibility Done at each visit but not a substitute for home brushing
Bathing ✅ Every 3–4 weeks ✅ Done at each grooming visit
Nail trimming ✅ If comfortable doing it ✅ Every visit; every 3–4 weeks ideally
Haircut / breed trim ❌ Not recommended without training ✅ Core professional grooming task
Anal gland expression ❌ Leave to professionals ✅ Checked and expressed at each visit
Ear cleaning ✅ Routine maintenance monthly ✅ Done at each visit; ear hair plucked if needed
Eye area trim ⚠️ Only with blunt-tip scissors and a very still dog ✅ Done safely at each visit
Mat removal ✅ Small/loose mats only ✅ All mat types, including tight mats requiring shaving
Sanitary trim ❌ Leave to professionals ✅ Done at each visit

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know when my dog needs grooming?

The most reliable signs are nails that click on hard floors, visible matting or tangling in the coat (especially behind the ears, in the armpits, and at the collar line), fur growing over the eyes, a persistent odour that doesn't clear up between baths, ears with a musty smell or visible wax buildup, eye discharge or tear staining, paw fur causing slipping or affecting the gait, and scooting or excessive rear-end attention. Any one of these signals that grooming is needed. The weekly hands-on check in the checklist above catches most of them early, before they become a problem.

How often should dogs be groomed?

Short-coated dogs every 8–12 weeks professionally, once a week at home. Medium-coated dogs every 6–8 weeks professionally, two to three times weekly at home. Long-coated and curly-coated breeds every 4–6 weeks professionally and daily at home — these coats require daily brushing between groomer visits or they mat faster than any grooming schedule can keep up with.

Can overgrown nails hurt a dog?

Yes, significantly. Overgrown nails change the angle at which the paw meets the ground with every step, which puts abnormal stress on the toe joints and progressively on the joints higher up the leg. Long-term overgrowth contributes to gait changes and joint discomfort. In extreme cases, nails curve and grow into the paw pad. The audible click on a hard floor is the most practical early warning — by the time you can hear it, the nails are already too long.

What happens if you don't groom your dog regularly?

The consequences go well beyond appearance. Tight mats pull on the skin continuously and can cause skin damage and infection underneath. Overgrown nails alter gait and stress the joints. Ear wax and hair buildup creates the conditions for infection. Eye hair causes corneal irritation. Full anal glands cause discomfort and can become impacted. Long paw fur causes slipping and accelerates nail overgrowth. All of these are health issues, not cosmetic ones — and all are preventable with regular grooming.


Conclusion

Your dog gives you plenty of signals that they need grooming. The problem isn't that the signals aren't there — it's that they're easy to overlook when you're seeing the same dog every day and the changes happen gradually. The clicking nails you've been meaning to sort out for two weeks. The slightly funky smell you'd put down to a muddy walk. The mat behind the ear you touched last weekend and told yourself you'd deal with later.

Most grooming issues are small and easy to address when you catch them early. And most of them caught early means five minutes at home or a quick groomer visit — not a vet trip, not sedation for mat removal, not a dog that's been quietly uncomfortable for longer than necessary.

The weekly check takes two minutes. Run your hands over the coat, check the nails, sniff the ears, look at the eyes, touch the tricky spots. It becomes automatic faster than you'd think, and it's genuinely the simplest thing you can do for your dog's comfort between formal grooming appointments.

Which of these signs tipped you off that your dog needed grooming recently? For me it's almost always the nails — I hear the clicking on the kitchen floor and immediately feel like a terrible dog parent. You're definitely not alone. Drop yours in the comments.


Warm vs Cold Water for Dog Baths: What's Actually Better?

 Most people don't think twice about bath water temperature for their dog. You turn on the tap, it's a comfortable warm, you put the dog in. Feels fine. The dog tolerates it. Job done.

But water temperature during a dog bath actually matters more than it gets credit for — specifically because what feels comfortably warm on your hand is often too hot for your dog's skin. And if your dog has been coming out of baths with dry skin, more dandruff, or seems uncomfortable during bathing, water temperature is one of the first things worth looking at.

Here's what warm and cold water each do, what the right temperature actually is, and how to tell if you've been getting it wrong.

warm vs cold water for dog baths — what temperature is actually right and why it matters



Table of Contents

  1. The Short Answer
  2. What Hot Water Does to a Dog's Skin
  3. What Cold Water Does
  4. What Temperature You're Actually Aiming For
  5. How to Test It Properly
  6. Does It Change by Breed or Size?
  7. Puppies and Elderly Dogs
  8. What About Hot Days?
  9. Other Bath Factors That Matter as Much as Temperature
  10. FAQs

The Short Answer

Lukewarm — closer to cool than warm. That's the answer. Not hot, not cold, and specifically not the comfortably-warm temperature most people default to because it feels nice on their hand.

The target is water that feels neutral to very slightly cool on your inner wrist. If it feels warm on your wrist, it's almost certainly too hot for your dog. If it feels cold, go up slightly. That narrow band in the middle — around body temperature or just below — is where you want to be for every bath.

📌 The wrist test: Run the bath water and hold your inner wrist under it for a few seconds. Inner wrist skin is more sensitive than palm skin — it's closer to the temperature sensitivity your dog's skin has. Neutral to very slightly cool on your inner wrist = right temperature for your dog. Warm = too hot. This one change fixes a lot of post-bath skin issues.


What Hot Water Does to a Dog's Skin

This is the one that catches most people out because it seems harmless — the dog doesn't complain, the bath looks fine, it's over in ten minutes. But hot water has a specific effect on dog skin that adds up across multiple baths.

The skin produces sebum — a natural oil from the sebaceous glands that coats the skin surface and hair shafts. Sebum is the skin's own moisturiser and the primary thing that keeps the coat healthy, the skin barrier intact, and hair shedding at a normal rate. Hot water dissolves and strips sebum much more aggressively than lukewarm water does. One hot bath removes a significant amount. Several hot baths in a row and the skin is struggling to keep up with the replenishment.

The consequences of this show up as:

  • Dry, rough coat texture in the days after a bath — the hair feels less soft than it did before
  • More dandruff and visible flaking after bathing, because the dry irritated skin is accelerating cell turnover
  • More shedding in the week after a bath, because the weakened follicle hold releases more hair
  • Itchiness after bathing — dry skin is itchy skin

There's also a temperature regulation issue. Dogs don't sweat through their skin the way we do — they regulate temperature primarily through panting. A hot bath raises body temperature, and for brachycephalic breeds (Bulldogs, Pugs, French Bulldogs), elderly dogs, or any dog with a heart or respiratory condition, that's worth being careful about. Even in healthy dogs, a hot bath in a warm bathroom on a warm day is more stress on the body than it needs to be.

The really frustrating thing is that if you've been using hot water and the post-bath dandruff or shedding has been getting worse, you might have been trying all sorts of other fixes — different shampoo, more conditioner, fish oil — without addressing what was actually causing the problem in the first place. Sometimes it really is just the temperature.


What Cold Water Does

Cold water isn't the opposite of harmful — it has its own issues, just different ones.

The main problem with cold water for a proper shampoo bath is that it prevents the shampoo from lathering effectively. Shampoo — including deshedding shampoo — works through a combination of chemistry and emulsification, and it does both better at lukewarm temperature than cold. A cold-water bath with shampoo ends up cleaning less, conditioning less, and deshedding less than the same products used in lukewarm water.

Cold water also causes most dogs to tense up immediately. The shock of cold water triggers a stress response — the dog stiffens, tries to back away, shakes to get it off, or just becomes generally uncooperative. This makes the whole bath harder, more stressful for the dog, and less thorough because you're rushing to get it over with. A dog who has a few cold-water bath experiences often becomes bath-averse in a way that has nothing to do with being "difficult" — they're just telling you it's unpleasant.

There are exceptions. A brief cool rinse on a very hot day, or an outdoor hose-down in summer when the goal is just cooling the dog down rather than cleaning them, is absolutely fine and most dogs enjoy it. But for a proper bath with shampoo, cold water doesn't serve the dog or the bath well.


What Temperature You're Actually Aiming For

The target is around 37–38°C (98–100°F) — roughly body temperature, or very slightly below.

In practical terms without a thermometer: neutral to very slightly cool on your inner wrist. Not warm. Not the comfortable warm you'd run a bath for yourself. Cooler than that. If you had to describe it, it should feel like water that's been sitting at room temperature in a warm house — not cold, but not warm either. That's the zone.

Why so much cooler than what we'd choose for ourselves? Because our bathing preference is for comfort, which trends warm. Dog skin is more sensitive to oil stripping than human skin, and dog normal body temperature is slightly higher than ours (around 38–39°C), so the difference between "comfortable bath temperature" and "body temperature" is smaller. Water that feels warm to us is actually warmer than their body temperature by a meaningful amount.

If you have a bath thermometer — the kind used for baby baths — 37°C is a reliable target and easy to hit consistently.

🛒 Optional but Useful

Dreambaby Bath Thermometer

A baby bath thermometer that reads water temperature accurately in seconds. Sounds like overkill but if you've been dealing with post-bath dry skin or dandruff and want to actually know whether temperature was the issue — this tells you. 37°C is the target. Inexpensive, takes up no space, and also doubles as a room thermometer. Once you've calibrated your wrist against a real reading a few times, you won't need it for every bath.

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How to Test It Properly

The palm of your hand is not a good thermometer for bath water. Your palm is calloused, used to handling things, and systematically less sensitive than the skin on your inner wrist or inner elbow. Most people test water temperature with their palm, feel "warm, fine," and end up bathing their dog in water that's genuinely too hot.

The inner wrist is better. The inner elbow is even more sensitive — it's where parents test baby bath water for the same reason. Run the water at what feels like a reasonable temperature, then hold your inner wrist or inner elbow under it for a few seconds. If it feels warm, turn it down. You're aiming for the temperature that feels like nothing in particular — neutral, neither warm nor cool. That's your dog's bath temperature.

It helps to do this test before the dog goes in rather than adjusting mid-bath. Getting temperature right from the start means the dog's first contact with the water is comfortable, which sets the tone for the whole bath. A dog who gets hit with too-cold or too-hot water at the start of a bath is already tense before you've picked up the shampoo.


Does It Change by Breed or Size?

Slightly, yes.

Small and toy breeds lose body heat faster than large breeds because they have a higher surface-area-to-body-mass ratio. They get cold more quickly in a bath, so you want to make sure the water isn't too cool — aim for the warmer end of the lukewarm range for a Chihuahua or a Toy Poodle, and work quickly. Keep them wrapped in a warm towel immediately after.

Large and giant breeds retain heat better and are less sensitive to mild water temperature variation. The 37°C target is still right, but they're more forgiving of a degree or two either way.

Double-coated breeds have a thick insulating layer that makes it hard for the bath water to reach the skin quickly. Make sure the water is genuinely penetrating to skin level — a shower wand helps — and that you're not compensating for the thick coat by running hotter water, which is a trap it's easy to fall into.

Brachycephalic breeds (Bulldogs, Pugs, French Bulldogs, Boston Terriers) are the ones where hot water matters most from a safety perspective. Their restricted airways mean they struggle to regulate temperature efficiently, and a hot bath in a warm bathroom raises their core temperature fast. Keep it lukewarm, keep the bathroom well ventilated, and keep the bath short.

Elderly dogs are often stiff and have compromised circulation, which makes temperature regulation harder. Lukewarm is important and so is not letting the bath drag on — in and out efficiently, warm towels immediately after, and somewhere warm to dry.


Puppies and Elderly Dogs

These two groups are the most temperature-sensitive and worth treating with a bit of extra care.

Puppies under 8 weeks can't regulate their body temperature properly yet — they depend on external warmth. Bathing very young puppies in anything other than very warm lukewarm water in a warm room is risky. For most puppies under 8 weeks, a bath isn't necessary unless there's a specific reason — a spot clean with a warm damp cloth is safer. If you do bathe a young puppy, keep the water at the warmer end of the lukewarm range, work very fast, and dry them immediately and thoroughly under a warm towel or a low-heat blow-dryer.

Older puppies (8 weeks to 6 months) can handle a normal lukewarm bath but are still learning that baths are not a threat. The temperature being comfortable from the very first contact makes a significant difference to how they feel about baths for the rest of their life. Get it right early and bathing is easy. Get it wrong a few times and you have a dog who panics at the sight of the shower.

Elderly dogs often have thinner skin, compromised circulation, and arthritis that makes standing in a tub difficult. Lukewarm water, non-slip mat in the tub, efficient bath, warm towels, and a warm dry spot to recover in. Don't let them stand on cold tiles or in a draught while damp.

🛒 Recommended — For Elderly or Anxious Dogs

Gorilla Grip Patented Shower and Bath Mat

A non-slip bath mat that stays put on the tub floor. For elderly dogs with wobbly back ends or dogs who tense up and scrabble during a bath, having something solid and non-slip under their feet makes a genuine difference to how they handle the whole experience. One of those small quality-of-life things that makes bathing easier for both of you.

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What About Hot Days?

On a hot summer day, the question flips slightly — you're less worried about stripping warmth and more aware that a warm bath in a warm bathroom might be uncomfortable.

The target temperature doesn't change. Lukewarm is still right for a proper shampoo bath. The shampoo needs to work and the dog needs to be comfortable. What changes is your awareness of the environment — a warm bath in a warm bathroom with no ventilation is more of a strain than the same bath in a cool bathroom with a window open.

For an outdoor hose-down on a hot day when the goal is just cooling the dog down rather than cleaning them — cold water from the hose is fine and most dogs enjoy it. That's not a bath. It's just refreshing them. If you're going to shampoo them at the same time, let the hose water warm slightly before you start the shampoo phase.

One thing worth knowing: a dog who has overheated should be cooled gradually with lukewarm or cool water, not ice cold water. Ice cold water causes the blood vessels near the skin surface to constrict, which actually slows the cooling of the core. Lukewarm to cool is safer and more effective for a genuinely overheated dog, and then a vet call if the overheating was significant.


Other Bath Factors That Matter as Much as Temperature

Temperature is important but it's one of several bath variables that affect skin and coat health. If you've sorted the temperature and still seeing issues, here's what else to look at:

Shampoo choice. Human shampoo on a dog — even gentle or baby formulas — has the wrong pH for dog skin (4.5–5.5 vs dog skin's 6.5–7.5) and disrupts the skin barrier regardless of water temperature. Always a dog-specific, pH-balanced shampoo.

How long you leave the shampoo on. Regular shampoo — rinse fairly quickly. Deshedding shampoo — leave the full contact time (5–10 minutes). Medicated shampoo — follow the vet's instructions precisely. Rinsing everything off immediately defeats the purpose of specialist formulas.

How thoroughly you rinse. Shampoo residue left on the skin continues to dry it out after the bath. Rinse until the water runs completely clear and the coat feels squeaky rather than slippery. Double your usual rinse time as a starting point.

Conditioner. For medium, long, double, and curly coats — conditioner after every shampoo bath isn't optional. It restores surface moisture and closes the hair shaft after cleansing. Skipping it leaves the coat and skin more exposed than before the bath.

Drying temperature. A blow-dryer on a hot setting does the same oil-stripping damage as hot bath water, concentrated directly on the skin. Cool or low-warm setting only, kept moving, held at a distance. Or air-dry in a warm draught-free room.

🛒 Recommended — If Temperature Was the Problem and the Coat Needs to Recover

Burt's Bees Hypoallergenic Shampoo with Colloidal Oatmeal

If you've been bathing in hot water for a while and the coat is dry and flaky as a result, a moisturising shampoo helps the recovery process while the skin's oil production catches back up. pH-balanced, fragrance-free, with colloidal oatmeal that soothes and seals the skin surface. Use at the correct lukewarm temperature from here on and the improvement within two to three baths is usually clear.

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🛒 Recommended — To Rebuild the Skin Barrier After Repeated Hot Baths

Zesty Paws Pure Wild Alaskan Salmon Oil

If hot bathing has left your dog's skin consistently dry over time, the lipid barrier needs rebuilding from the inside as well as being protected from the outside. Fish oil at a therapeutic dose — around 20mg combined EPA+DHA per kg of body weight daily — is the most effective way to do that. Fix the temperature going forward and add fish oil to speed up the skin's recovery. Takes 4–6 weeks for the full difference to show in the coat.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Should you use warm or cold water to bathe a dog?

Lukewarm — closer to cool than warm. The target is around 37°C, which is roughly body temperature. Test on your inner wrist rather than your palm — if it feels warm, it's too hot. If it feels neutral to very slightly cool, you're in the right zone. Hot water strips the skin's natural oils and causes dry skin, dandruff, and more shedding over time. Cold water is uncomfortable for most dogs and prevents shampoo from working properly.

Is hot water bad for dogs during a bath?

Yes — not dramatically bad in a single bath, but cumulatively bad across multiple baths. Hot water strips sebum from the skin much more aggressively than lukewarm water. The result over several hot baths is dry skin, more dandruff, more post-bath shedding, and itchiness. For brachycephalic breeds and elderly dogs there's also a temperature regulation concern. The water that feels comfortably warm on your palm is usually too hot for your dog — test it on your inner wrist instead.

Can you bathe a dog in cold water?

For a proper shampoo bath, cold water isn't ideal. It prevents shampoo from lathering effectively and causes most dogs to tense up and become uncooperative. A brief cool rinse on a hot day is completely fine and often enjoyed — but for a full bath with shampoo, lukewarm produces better results and a calmer dog.

What temperature should dog bath water be?

Around 37°C (98–100°F) — body temperature or just slightly below. In practical terms: test on your inner wrist and aim for water that feels neutral, not warm. For puppies and toy breeds, aim for the slightly warmer end of that range. For brachycephalic and elderly dogs, keep it at the cooler end and work efficiently.


Has water temperature been something you've thought about before — or has this changed how you're going to approach the next bath? If you've been dealing with dry skin or extra flaking after bathing and nothing else has explained it, try dropping the temperature to genuinely lukewarm for the next two baths and see what changes. Drop a comment with what you notice.


Related Posts

Should You Bathe a Shedding Dog More Often?

 When the shedding is bad, bathing more feels like the obvious move. Get the loose hair out in the tub rather than all over the house. Logical, right? And it's not wrong — bathing does help with shedding. The question is how much and how often, because there's a point where it flips and starts making things worse instead of better.

If you've been bathing your dog more frequently to manage the hair situation and it keeps getting worse rather than better, this is probably why.

should you bathe a shedding dog often — the right frequency and what to use for heavy shedders



Table of Contents

  1. Does Bathing Actually Help With Shedding?
  2. How Often Should You Bathe a Shedding Dog
  3. What Happens When You Bathe Too Often
  4. What to Do During a Heavy Seasonal Shed
  5. The Best Bath Routine for a Shedding Dog
  6. Which Shampoo Actually Makes a Difference
  7. Brush Before or After the Bath?
  8. What to Do Between Baths
  9. Does It Depend on the Breed?
  10. FAQs

Does Bathing Actually Help With Shedding?

Yes — when done right, a bath genuinely helps. Here's what it's actually doing:

When dead hair sheds from the follicle, it doesn't always fall out immediately. It gets held in the coat by the surrounding fur, especially in double-coated and dense breeds, and then falls out gradually over the following week or two — on your sofa, your clothes, your food, everywhere. A bath loosens all that dead hair at once and removes a lot of it in the tub during rinsing. Instead of two weeks of gradual hair-everywhere, you get one concentrated cleanup and then a relatively lower-shedding period afterward.

A deshedding shampoo amplifies this further — the formulation helps loosen dead undercoat from the follicle during the bath so even more comes out in the tub. And a thorough brush-out immediately after, while the coat is still slightly damp, removes whatever the bath loosened but didn't fully rinse away.

So yes, it works. The catch is frequency.


How Often Should You Bathe a Shedding Dog

Every 4 to 6 weeks. That's the answer for the vast majority of shedding dogs.

This gives the bath enough time to be meaningfully useful — the coat has accumulated enough loose dead hair that removing it all at once makes a real difference — while also giving the skin enough time to fully replenish its natural oils before you strip them again with the next bath.

During a heavy seasonal shed — the spring and autumn coat blows that double-coated breeds do — lean toward the 4-week end of that range. Outside shedding season, 5 to 6 weeks is completely fine. Some short-coated breeds with naturally oilier skin can go a little shorter. Some dense double-coated breeds are actually better at 6 weeks rather than 4, because their undercoat needs more time between baths to loosen properly.

📌 Quick guide by coat type:

Short coat (Beagle, Boxer, Lab): every 4–6 weeks
Medium coat (Golden, Border Collie): every 4–6 weeks
Double coat (Husky, GSD, Corgi): every 4–6 weeks; use a deshedding shampoo
Long coat (Shih Tzu, Afghan): every 3–4 weeks; focus is more on conditioning than deshedding
Curly coat (Poodle, Doodle): every 3–4 weeks; shedding less of an issue than matting


What Happens When You Bathe Too Often

This is where a lot of people get stuck in a frustrating loop. The shedding is bad, so they bathe more. The shedding gets worse, so they bathe more. And so on.

Every bath, even with a gentle shampoo, removes some of the skin's natural sebum — the oil produced by the sebaceous glands that keeps the skin moisturised and the hair shaft healthy. At 4 to 6 week intervals, the skin fully replenishes that oil before the next bath. At weekly or twice-weekly intervals, the skin can't keep up. It becomes progressively drier and more irritated.

And dry, irritated skin does two things that make shedding worse: it accelerates skin cell turnover, producing more flaking and dead cells, and it weakens the skin's hold on the hair follicles, causing hair to shed faster and earlier than it should. So the more often you bathe, the worse the shedding gets — not immediately, but over the following few weeks as the skin dries out cumulatively.

If you've been bathing weekly and the shedding has been getting worse rather than better, extend the interval to 4 to 6 weeks, add fish oil to the diet to help the skin barrier recover, and give it a month. It usually turns around clearly within that window.


What to Do During a Heavy Seasonal Shed

Double-coated breeds — Huskies, German Shepherds, Corgis, Pomeranians, Goldens, Bernese Mountain Dogs and similar — go through two significant coat blows a year, usually spring and autumn, where the undercoat sheds in volume that can feel genuinely alarming if you haven't been through it before. Some dogs look like they're dissolving.

During a seasonal shed, a bath at the start of the blow is one of the most effective things you can do. Use a deshedding shampoo, let it sit for the full contact time, rinse really thoroughly, and then do a long thorough brush-out while the coat is still damp. You'll remove an enormous amount of dead undercoat in one session that would otherwise have come out gradually over the following two to three weeks.

After that initial bath, daily brushing with an undercoat rake or deshedding tool is what keeps pace with the volume coming out during the blow. Another bath at the 4-week mark if the shed is still active. A lot of people try to manage a seasonal shed with bathing alone — it helps but it's not enough on its own. The brushing between baths is the part that actually keeps it manageable.

The seasonal shed typically lasts two to four weeks. Once it's through, you'll notice the coat suddenly looking much neater and the hair volume dropping back to normal. That's the undercoat replacement completing — the new undercoat is growing in and has stopped shedding the old one.

🛒 Recommended — Seasonal Shed Bath

FURminator deShedding Ultra Premium Dog Shampoo

Formulated to loosen dead undercoat during the bath so more of it comes out in the tub. Leave it on for the full recommended contact time — the loosening effect is time-dependent, rinsing it off immediately doesn't give it a chance to work. Contains omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids to support the skin at the same time. Use every 4–6 weeks, not more.

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🛒 Recommended — Pair With the Shampoo

FURminator deShedding Ultra Premium Dog Conditioner

Use after the deshedding shampoo. It continues the loosening work and adds enough slip to the coat that the brush-out afterward goes smoothly rather than pulling and snagging. Skipping the conditioner step and going straight to brushing a deshedded-but-dry coat is where a lot of the discomfort happens — the conditioner makes it significantly more comfortable for the dog.

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The Best Bath Routine for a Shedding Dog

The routine matters as much as the frequency. A bath done well removes significantly more dead hair than a bath done quickly. Here's the order that works:

1. Brush before the bath. Get out any surface tangles and mats before they get wet. Wet mats tighten and become much harder to deal with. For short-coated dogs this is quick; for long and curly coats it matters a lot. You don't need to do a full thorough brush — just enough to make sure nothing is tangled going in.

2. Wet the coat thoroughly to skin level. Don't just wet the surface — the shampoo needs to reach the skin to work. For thick double coats this takes longer than you'd think. A detachable shower head or a dog shower wand makes this much easier and more thorough.

3. Apply deshedding shampoo and actually wait. Work it all the way through to the skin, then leave it on for the full contact time on the bottle — usually 5 to 10 minutes. This is where most people short-change the process. The loosening effect requires time. Set a timer if you need to.

4. Rinse extremely thoroughly. Longer than feels necessary. Any shampoo left on the skin continues to strip oils after the bath and causes the dry skin that makes shedding worse. The water should be running completely clear and the coat should feel squeaky-clean, not slippery.

5. Apply conditioner and wait again. Work it through, leave it the full contact time, rinse well. For shedding dogs this isn't optional — it replenishes the oils the shampoo removed and adds enough slip to the coat that the brush-out is comfortable.

6. Towel dry and then brush while still damp. This is the most important step for shedding. While the coat is still slightly damp — not soaking wet, not fully dry — is when the most dead hair comes out on the brush. The bath has already loosened it; the brush removes it. Do the full thorough brush-out now. This is where most of the benefit of the deshedding bath is actually captured.

🛒 Recommended — For Thorough Wetting and Rinsing

Waterpik Pet Wand Pro Dog Shower Attachment

Attaches to any standard shower or outdoor hose and directs water at skin level through thick coats — the bit that's nearly impossible to do by pouring water from above. Genuinely changes how thoroughly you can wet and rinse a double-coated or dense-coated dog. Also a lot calmer for most dogs than being dunked in a tub.

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Which Shampoo Actually Makes a Difference

For shedding specifically, a deshedding shampoo is worth the upgrade from a regular dog shampoo. The formulation is different — it's designed to penetrate the coat and loosen dead undercoat at the follicle level rather than just cleaning the surface. The difference in how much comes out in the tub versus with a regular shampoo is noticeable.

What you want to avoid for a shedding dog:

  • Human shampoo — wrong pH for dog skin, disrupts the skin barrier, increases dryness and shedding over time even in "gentle" formulations
  • Very stripping or degreasing shampoos — designed for oily coats or yeast treatment, too drying for a dog whose shedding problem is already linked to skin health
  • Heavy fragrance — often indicates formulation priorities that don't favour skin health; synthetic fragrance compounds can irritate sensitive skin

For dogs whose shedding is partly driven by dry skin — which is more common than people realise — a shampoo with omega-3 or moisturising ingredients does double duty: it helps loosen dead hair and supports the skin barrier at the same time.


Brush Before or After the Bath?

Both, if you can. But if you're short on time or patience, after is more valuable for shedding.

Brushing before removes tangles before they get wet and tighten — important for long and curly coats, less critical for short and double coats. It also removes some loose surface hair so the shampoo can do its job more effectively.

But the real payoff is the post-bath brush-out. The bath loosens dead hair; the brush removes it. That damp-coat window — after you've towel dried, before the coat is fully dry — is when more dead hair comes off the brush in one session than any other time. It's almost satisfying how much comes out. Do the thorough brush-out here, every time, and the between-bath shedding drops noticeably.

🛒 Recommended — Post-Bath Brush-Out

Furminator Undercoat Deshedding Tool

This is the brush to use during the post-bath brush-out for double-coated dogs. Gets through the guard hairs and pulls the loosened dead undercoat out rather than just going over the surface. Use it while the coat is still damp — not wet enough to drip — for the best result. The amount that comes out in one post-bath session with this is the reason groomers keep a dustpan nearby.

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What to Do Between Baths

The bath is the event but what you do between baths is what actually keeps shedding manageable day to day. A dog who gets a great deshedding bath every 4 weeks and is never brushed in between will still shed constantly. A dog who gets a decent bath every 5 weeks and is brushed four times a week in between will shed significantly less.

Brush regularly. Three to five times a week for heavy shedders, daily during a seasonal blow. The hair that comes off the brush doesn't go on your furniture. An undercoat rake a couple of times a week for double-coated dogs, plus a regular slicker or bristle brush for the surface coat.

Keep fish oil in the daily routine. This is the dietary side of shedding management and it works. Around 20mg of combined EPA+DHA per kilogram of body weight daily, over food. It strengthens the follicle and supports the skin barrier, which means less non-seasonal shedding and a coat that handles the seasonal blows better. Takes 4 to 6 weeks to show a clear difference — it's not instant, but it's consistent.

Keep the water bowl fresh. Dehydrated skin sheds more. Simple fix, easy to overlook.

A leave-in conditioning spray after brushing. For dogs whose shedding is linked to dry coat — the hair feels rough and brittle rather than soft — a light leave-in conditioner during brushing sessions adds a layer of moisture that reduces how much hair breaks and falls out between baths.

🛒 Recommended — Between-Bath Shedding Support

Zesty Paws Pure Wild Alaskan Salmon Oil

Daily over food. Check the EPA+DHA per pump and calculate the dose from your dog's weight — around 20mg EPA+DHA per kg per day is the target, which is usually higher than the standard serving suggestion on the label. Refrigerate after opening, use within 60 days. Most dogs are immediately enthusiastic about it over food, which makes the daily routine easy.

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🛒 Recommended — For Dry Coat Alongside Shedding

Chris Christensen Ice on Ice Leave-In Conditioner Spray

A light leave-in spray for use during brushing sessions between baths. Adds enough moisture to a dry coat that the brushing is more comfortable and less hair breaks. Not a substitute for a proper conditioner in the bath, but a useful daily supplement to it. Particularly helpful during winter when dry indoor air is making the coat rougher and more brittle than usual.

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Does It Depend on the Breed?

A bit, yes — here's what changes by breed type:

Double-coated breeds (Husky, GSD, Corgi, Pomeranian, Malamute): These are the ones where a proper deshedding bath makes the biggest difference. The undercoat is what you're managing and a deshedding shampoo with a full contact time genuinely shifts the volume. Stick to 4 to 6 weeks strictly — these breeds' skin is more sensitive to oil stripping than their thick coat suggests.

Short-coated shedders (Labrador, Beagle, Boxer, Dalmatian): A regular good-quality dog shampoo works fine — a deshedding formula helps but is less critical than for double coats. The post-bath rubber curry brush session is arguably more valuable than the shampoo choice for short-coated shedders.

Medium-coated shedders (Golden Retriever, Border Collie, Australian Shepherd): Good candidates for deshedding shampoo, especially during seasonal blows. Pay extra attention to the feathering — the longer hair on the legs, ears, and tail — during the post-bath brush-out as that's where the dead hair tends to clump.

Low-shedding coats (Poodle, Doodle, Bichon): Shedding is much less of a concern for these breeds — matting is the bigger issue. Standard moisturising shampoo every 3 to 4 weeks, focus the post-bath brush-out on detangling rather than deshedding.


Frequently Asked Questions

Does bathing a dog help with shedding?

Yes, when done at the right frequency with the right products. A bath loosens dead hair and removes it all at once instead of letting it fall gradually over the next two weeks. A deshedding shampoo plus a thorough post-bath brush-out amplifies this significantly. The key is keeping it to every 4 to 6 weeks — more frequent bathing strips natural oils, dries the skin, and actually increases shedding over time.

How often should you bathe a dog that sheds a lot?

Every 4 to 6 weeks is the right answer for most heavy shedders. During a seasonal coat blow, lean toward 4 weeks. Outside shedding season, 5 to 6 weeks is fine. The most effective approach is combining the bath with daily brushing between sessions — the bath does the big removal, the brushing keeps up with what comes out in between.

What is the best shampoo for a shedding dog?

A deshedding shampoo formulated to loosen dead undercoat — the Furminator deShedding Shampoo is the most widely used and consistently produces noticeable results. The key is leaving it on for the full contact time rather than rinsing it straight off, and following with a conditioner and a thorough damp-coat brush-out. A shampoo used correctly at 4 to 6 weeks beats a better shampoo used incorrectly every week.

Should I brush my dog before or after a bath to reduce shedding?

Both if possible — a light pre-bath brush to remove tangles before they get wet, and a thorough post-bath brush-out while the coat is still slightly damp. The post-bath session is the more impactful one for shedding because the bath has already loosened the dead hair. That damp-coat window is when the most comes off the brush in a single session.


What breed have you got and how often are you currently bathing? If the shedding has been getting worse rather than better despite more baths, the interval is almost always the first thing to look at — drop it in the comments and we can help work out what the right routine looks like for your specific dog.


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