Dog shampoo
for Siberian Huskies
Plant-based formulas matched to the Siberian Husky coat and the breed’s known skin needs.
Huskies have one of the most functional working coats on the planet — engineered for arctic conditions, with self-cleaning properties most owners actively damage by over-bathing. A Husky bathed monthly with regular shampoo will be uncomfortable, smell worse, and have a duller coat than a Husky bathed twice a year.
About the Siberian Husky coat
Extremely dense undercoat (insulating) under a coarse outer coat (weather-resistant). The system actively repels dirt — a clean-looking Husky might not have been bathed in months. Blows coat twice a year in dramatic seasonal shedding events.
Common skin and coat issues in Siberian Huskies
- Atopic dermatitis
- Zinc-responsive dermatosis (breed-specific; relevant to diet not shampoo)
- Cold-weather skin dryness
- Hot spots (rare in Huskies but possible)
Husky baths should be infrequent — every 8-12 weeks at most. The shampoo should rinse extremely cleanly because anything trapped in the dense undercoat causes itching for weeks. Brushing is the real Husky care — daily during shed, twice weekly otherwise.
Bathing tips for Siberian Huskies
- Brush thoroughly before AND after the bath
- Use a high-velocity dryer if you have one — speeds drying enormously
- Don't shave or trim the coat (ruins the insulation system)
- Bathing during shed loosens dead coat, but the brushing removes it
- Use plain water rinses for mud — no need for full shampoo
What we recommend for Siberian Huskies
Lightweight rinse-clean formula that doesn't damage the Husky's self-cleaning, weather-resistant double coat.
Common questions about Siberian Husky bath care
Won't my Husky get gross if I only bathe them every 3 months?
Usually no — the coat self-cleans surprisingly well. A regularly brushed Husky on a sensible diet doesn't smell. If yours does, check diet first, then look for skin conditions. Frequent bathing makes it worse, not better.
How do I survive Husky shedding season?
A high-velocity pet dryer is a game-changer (the kind groomers use). Daily brushing with an undercoat rake. A bath at the start of the blow loosens the coat. The shed lasts about 3 weeks; then you have 6 months of relative peace.
Can I shave my Husky in summer?
No. The double coat keeps them cool by trapping insulating air. Shaving removes that and exposes skin to sunburn. Brush more often instead — the dead undercoat is what's actually making them hot.
Made for the Siberian Husky —
delivered in 3–5 days
Free shipping over $35. 30-day satisfaction guarantee. Currently shipping in NY, NJ, MA, DC, CT, PA.
