This is a specific conversation about Dog collars — fit, material and safety — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Three broken clasps on the same dog tells you something important: standard plastic quick-release buckles simply aren't built for the force a determined Husky can generate, especially one who pulls or lunges. Collar fit and safety features matter far more than most people realise — too loose and it slips, too tight causes injury, and some dogs genuinely need hardware rated for their strength. To point you toward the right option, can you tell me roughly how much your Husky weighs and what neck size you're currently fitting? And is this collar mainly for ID and daily walks, or does he also wear it during off-lead time in a garden or secure area?
He's about 28kg and his neck is around 55cm. It's for everyday wear — ID tag, daily walks on a lead. He's not a massive puller but he does lunge occasionally at squirrels and the clasps just keep giving way. Three collars in two years, two different brands.
inparticular.ai
That's a classic pattern — occasional hard lunges put a sudden shock load on the clasp that slow steady pulling never would, and most consumer collars aren't rated for that kind of impact force. At 28kg with a 55cm neck you're right in the range where standard buckles fail. Before I give you a specific recommendation, one quick question: is he wearing the collar 24/7 including when he sleeps, or does it come off at home?
It stays on all the time — he has his microchip but we want the ID tag visible too, so it never really comes off.
inparticular.ai
Perfect, that confirms what you need: a collar with a solid metal buckle rather than any plastic quick-release mechanism, comfortable enough for all-day wear, and robust enough to take a sudden lunge without any flex in the hardware. My clear recommendation for your Husky is the Ruffwear Flat Out Collar. It uses a metal buckle with a side-release that's rated for working and high-activity dogs, the webbing is 38mm wide nylon which distributes pressure well across a Husky's neck, and it has a built-in ID tag attachment point so the tag sits flat rather than dangling and spinning. It's available in a size that fits 48–66cm necks, which covers your 55cm comfortably with room to fit two fingers. The reason I'm recommending this over cheaper metal-buckle options is the hardware quality — the aluminium alloy buckle won't corrode, and the webbing stitching is reinforced at the stress points where cheaper collars fail first. It's well established on Amazon UK and has a strong track record specifically with Huskies and similarly strong Nordic breeds.
That sounds good. Is the metal buckle harder to get on and off quickly compared to the plastic clip ones we've been using?
inparticular.ai
Slightly, yes — it's a two-step press-and-pull rather than a single squeeze, so there's maybe two extra seconds. For a collar that stays on most of the time that's barely noticeable in practice. The trade-off is that it won't accidentally release if the buckle catches on something, which is actually an additional safety benefit for a dog who wears it overnight. If you ever need to remove it quickly in an emergency it's still fast enough — it's not a traditional belt buckle that you thread. Most owners who switch from plastic to metal for this reason say after a week they don't notice the difference at all.
Great, I think I'll go with that. Should I size up or down if he's right in the middle of the range?
inparticular.ai
At 55cm you're nicely centred in the medium range, so go straight for the size listed as 48–66cm and adjust the strap so you can fit exactly two fingers flat between the collar and his neck — not three, not one. That's the consistent benchmark for a safe fit on a dog this size. Avoid the temptation to leave it looser thinking it's more comfortable; a Husky that lunges at squirrels needs the collar snug enough that it can't slip over the widest point of his skull if he backs up suddenly. The Ruffwear Flat Out adjusts smoothly and holds its set position well, so once you've got it right it shouldn't creep loose over time the way some nylon collars do.