This is a specific conversation about Flea treatment for dogs — getting on top of it fast — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Running a grooming business from home puts you in a genuinely tricky position — your dog is exposed to new dogs almost daily, which means the usual 'treat once and you're done' approach simply won't hold. Treating fleas effectively always means tackling both the dog and the environment, because around 95% of fleas live in bedding, carpets and furniture rather than on the dog itself. A single product rarely handles both sides of that. To point you in the right direction: what breed and size is your dog, how bad is the infestation right now, and have you treated the home and your grooming area yet?
She's a 4-year-old miniature Schnauzer, about 7kg. We've spotted a few fleas on her and on a client's dog this week, so it's early but I'm worried it'll escalate. I haven't treated the home yet — I wasn't sure what to use.
inparticular.ai
Good that you've caught it early. The concern with your setup isn't just the current infestation — it's that your grooming space is essentially a revolving door for fleas. Even after you clear the house, you'll keep getting reintroduced unless your dog has continuous, reliable protection on her. So the priority is twofold: get the environment treated now, and put something on her that works long-term rather than monthly spot-ons you might miss. Before I give you a specific recommendation — is she on any medication currently, and does she have any skin sensitivities? Schnauzers can be prone to reactions, so it's worth knowing.
No medications, and her skin's been fine so far. She gets groomed herself every 6 weeks or so.
inparticular.ai
Perfect, that makes this straightforward. For your Schnauzer, I'd go with the Seresto Flea and Tick Collar for Small Dogs — it gives 8 months of continuous protection, which is the real advantage for you. Because client dogs are coming through your space so regularly, a monthly spot-on leaves gaps and relies on you remembering exactly when to reapply. The Seresto collar sits there working in the background and survives regular bathing and grooming, so the 6-weekly washes won't affect it. For the home and grooming area, pair it with Indorex Defence Household Flea Spray — it kills adult fleas and contains an insect growth regulator that stops eggs and larvae developing for up to 12 months. Treat your whole house and especially the grooming zone thoroughly, vacuum first, and reapply to the grooming area every few months given the footfall. Those two products together cover both sides of the problem properly.
That makes sense. Should I be asking client owners to check their dogs before appointments?
inparticular.ai
Absolutely — it's completely reasonable to add a flea check to your intake process. You could ask clients to let you know if their dog has had any recent flea activity, and do a quick visual check at the start of each appointment. Some groomers wash client dogs with a flea shampoo as a matter of course regardless, which is an extra layer. You won't eliminate the risk entirely given the volume of dogs, but the Seresto collar means your Schnauzer is protected even when things slip through. Staying on top of the Indorex in the grooming space every few months is probably the most important ongoing habit for you specifically.
Really helpful, thank you. I'll order both today.
inparticular.ai
Good plan. Get the Indorex down this weekend if you can — vacuum everywhere first, spray thoroughly including under furniture and into the grooming area, then keep pets and people out for a couple of hours. Fit the Seresto collar on your Schnauzer straight after. You should see a clear improvement within a few days, and you'll be in a much stronger position going forward with that ongoing protection in place.