Dog Grooming Styles: 10 Popular Cuts, Pro Techniques, and the Right Tools for Each

Dog grooming styles range from the low-maintenance kennel cut to the sculpted Asian Fusion trim. Each style demands a different technique, blade selection, and set of shears to deliver a clean, professional result. Understanding how to execute each cut - and which tools to reach for - is what separates a competent groom from a consistently great one.

A client shows you a photo and expects you to recognise the dog grooming style immediately. A professional groomer does not hesitate - they identify the cut, select the right tools, and know what is achievable for that dog on that day. This guide covers the 10 most requested dog grooming styles in UK salons: execution technique, tool selection, and the client consultation approach for each.

Why Grooming Style Knowledge Is a Core Professional Skill

Knowing the different dog grooming styles at a technical level - not just by name - determines how efficiently a groomer works, how accurately they price services, and how effectively they manage client expectations. The table below covers the 10 dog grooming styles most requested across UK salons.

Style

Coat Type

Complexity

Key Tools

Avg. Time

Client Tip

Kennel Cut

All coats

Low

Clippers, #5-#7 blade

45-60 min

Ideal for high-frequency, budget-conscious clients

Puppy Cut

Curly / wavy

Low-Medium

Straight shears, thinning shears

60-75 min

Clarify length expectation upfront - no industry standard

Teddy Bear Cut

Curly (Doodles, Bichon)

Medium

Curved shears, round-tip scissors

75-90 min

Most-requested UK style - photo reference is mandatory

Lion Cut

Long / thick

Medium-High

Clippers + finishing shears

60-75 min

Never on double-coated breeds - confirm at intake

Lamb Cut

Curly / long

Medium

Body clippers + leg scissors

60-75 min

Frame leg length contrast vs kennel cut for clients

Top Knot

Long-haired (Yorkie, Shih Tzu)

Low

Thinning shears

20-30 min

Upsell as a between-groom maintenance add-on

Summer Cut

Double coat

Low-Medium

Wide guard clippers

45-60 min

Trim only - never shave; document client insistence

Breed Standard

Breed-specific

High

Full kit, breed chart

Varies

Confirm show vs pet trim at intake every time

Asian Fusion

Curly / fluffy small breeds

High

Round-tip scissors, curved shears

90-120 min

Highest-margin style - photo reference non-negotiable

Neaten / Tidy Up

Any

Very Low

Finishing scissors

20-30 min

Low-friction entry point for converting new clients

The table covers all ten dog grooming styles by coat type, complexity, and key tools. Use it as an intake reference to match each request to the correct dog grooming style before selecting any equipment.

The 10 Dog Grooming Styles - Techniques, Tools, and Client Tips

Each of the following dog grooming styles is covered across technique, tool selection, and client consultation angle - ordered from highest UK request volume to most specialised.

1. The Kennel Cut - Speed, Consistency, and Versatility

The most versatile of all dog grooming styles, suited to virtually every breed. Technique: all-over clipper pass with uniform blade guard - #7 blade for 3mm, #5 for 6mm. No complex scissor finishing required. Client tip: position this dog grooming style as the most practical option for active or outdoor dogs and recommend a return every 8 to 10 weeks.

The Kennel Cut - Speed, Consistency, and Versatility

2. The Puppy Cut - Managing the Expectation Gap

Among the most requested dog grooming styles in UK salons and the most frequent source of miscommunication. No industry standard exists - the puppy cut means a uniform length across the body, typically 1 to 2 inches. Technique: straight shears for body length, thinning shears for transitions. Client tip: confirm the exact length and whether face and body should match before starting.

3. The Teddy Bear Cut - The Most-Requested Style in UK Salons

The most requested of all dog grooming styles in the UK, particularly for Doodles and Bichon Frise. Technique: curved shears of 6.5 to 7 inches for rounded head shaping, round-tip scissors around the muzzle, thinning shears to blend the body-to-leg transition. Photo reference is non-negotiable for this dog grooming style. For professional curved shears, see EliteTrim's Shears & Thinners collection.

The Teddy Bear Cut - The Most-Requested Style in UK Salons

4. The Lion Cut - Drama, Contrast, and Breed Awareness

A dog grooming style defined by a closely clipped body contrasted with a full mane around the head, neck, front legs, and tail tip. Technique: #10 or #15 blade for the body, finishing shears to define the mane edge at the shoulder. Critical: never perform this dog grooming style on a double-coated breed - shaving through a double coat permanently alters coat texture and removes heat insulation.

5. The Lamb Cut - Contrast Trimming for Curly Coats

A dog grooming style for curly and long-coated breeds, most commonly Poodles and Airedale Terriers. Technique: clip the body short, scissor the legs longer, then blend at the shoulder and hip with chunker or thinning shears. The blending stage determines whether the result looks professional or amateurish - rushing produces a visible step edge. Client tip: explain leg length contrast to distinguish this dog grooming style from a kennel cut.

6. The Top Knot - Functional Style for Long-Haired Breeds

A practical dog grooming style for long-haired breeds such as Shih Tzus and Yorkies, where facial fall hair obscures the eyes and collects moisture. Technique: gather the facial fall, secure with an elastic, and trim outer edges with thinning shears - not straight scissors - to avoid a blunt line. Client tip: offer the top knot as a between-groom add-on to increase visit frequency without a full appointment.

The Top Knot - Functional Style for Long-Haired Breeds

7. The Summer Cut - The Double-Coat Danger Zone

One of the most misunderstood dog grooming styles: clients frequently request it expecting a shave. A summer cut is a trim-down - clippers with a #4 or #5 guard to reduce bulk while preserving the insulating undercoat. For double-coated breeds, shaving removes UV protection and heat regulation. Document any insistence on a full shave before proceeding. 

See also: Can You Use Human Clippers on Dogs? Safety Guide & Tips.

8. Breed Standard Cuts - Precision for the Discerning Client

The most technically demanding category of dog grooming styles, with breed-specific scissor lines and presentation patterns. Key examples: Miniature Schnauzer (eyebrows, beard, hard-edged skirt), Poodle Continental (shaved patches, ankle pom-poms), Portuguese Water Dog (lion trim or retriever trim). Always confirm show standard or pet trim at intake - the two versions differ significantly. 

9. Asian Fusion Grooming - The Fastest-Growing Style in the UK

The premium-tier dog grooming style in UK salons by both skill requirement and revenue per appointment. Originating in Japan and South Korea, this dog grooming style features a rounded face, voluminous ears, and dramatically full legs. Almost entirely scissor-based: round-tip scissors for face work, curved shears (5.5 to 6 inches) for legs and ears, thinning shears throughout. Flawless coat condition is required. Investing in quality professional shears directly determines the finish.

Asian Fusion Grooming - The Fastest-Growing Style in the UK

10. The Neaten / Tidy-Up - Low Effort, High Client Retention

The lightest of all dog grooming styles: targeted scissor work at the face, paws, and sanitary areas without changing coat length overall. Finishing scissors (5 to 5.5 inches) are the primary tool, with thinning shears for face blending. This dog grooming style converts first-time visitors into regulars through low commitment and visible results. Recommend Best Tools for Grooming Dogs at Home: What to Use by Coat Type and Breed for clients maintaining coats between visits.

How to Advise Salon Clients on Choosing the Right Grooming Style

Most service breakdowns across dog grooming styles happen not because of poor execution but because expectations were misaligned at intake. The same three questions apply regardless of which dog grooming style is being discussed.

The Three Questions Every Groomer Should Ask First

First: has your dog been brushed regularly since the last groom? Coat condition determines which dog grooming styles are achievable - a matted coat cannot reach the finish of a teddy bear cut or Asian Fusion. Second: how active is the dog and where does it spend most of its time? Active outdoor dogs suit lower-maintenance dog grooming styles. Third: how often can you brush at home between visits? The answer determines both the realistic dog grooming style recommendation and the appropriate return frequency.

Using Photo References as a Professional Standard

The terms teddy bear cut, puppy cut, and kennel cut mean different things to different clients. Requiring a photo reference at intake for any dog grooming style beyond a standard clip significantly reduces post-groom disputes. A before-and-after library built from your own salon work is the most reliable reference - it sets expectations using results you can reproduce, not stock images from a different breed.

Using Photo References as a Professional Standard

When to Recommend Against a Requested Style

Knowing when to decline a dog grooming style is as important as knowing how to execute it. The most common cases: a lion cut on a double-coated breed, and Asian Fusion on a matted coat. Explain the technical reason, propose the nearest achievable alternative, and document the request in writing before proceeding. See: Convex vs Beveled Edge Shears: Which is Best for Grooming?.

Selecting the Right Tools for Each Grooming Style

Across all dog grooming styles, the core distinction is clipper-dominant versus scissor-dominant work. Volume dog grooming styles rely on clippers; sculptured dog grooming cuts are shear-driven, where shear type and quality determine whether the finish looks hand-scissored or machine-done.

 

Style

Straight Shears

Curved Shears

Thinning / Chunkers

Clippers

Priority Tool

Kennel Cut

Optional

-

-

Yes (#5-#7)

Clippers

Puppy Cut

Yes (body)

Optional

Yes (blend)

Optional

Straight shears

Teddy Bear Cut

Yes (body)

Yes (face/head)

Yes (transition)

Optional

Curved shears

Lion Cut

Yes (mane edge)

-

-

Yes (#10-#15)

Clippers

Lamb Cut

Yes (legs)

-

Yes (hip/shoulder)

Yes (body)

Chunkers

Asian Fusion

Yes

Yes (legs, ears)

Yes

Minimal

Curved + round-tip

Breed Standard

Full set

Full set

Full set

Yes

Varies per breed

Neaten / Tidy Up

Yes (small)

-

Yes (face)

-

Finishing scissors

Clipper-dominant dog grooming styles prioritise speed and uniformity. Scissor-dominant dog grooming styles require the right shear at each stage: curved for shaping, thinning for blending, round-tip for face work.

For shears covering all dog grooming styles in this guide, see EliteTrim's Shears & Thinners collection. For kennel, summer, and lion dog grooming cuts, the Dog Clippers & Trimmers collection is the right starting point.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions professional groomers encounter when discussing dog grooming styles with clients and newer team members.

What dog grooming styles are most requested in UK salons?

The teddy bear cut and puppy cut lead demand across UK salons, driven by Doodle breed owners. Asian Fusion has grown rapidly over the past 12 to 18 months, particularly in urban areas.

How do I choose the right blade for a kennel cut?

A #7 blade leaves 3mm; a #5 leaves 6mm. No standard exists for this dog grooming style, so confirm the client's preferred length and cross-reference with coat condition before selecting.

What shears do I need for a teddy bear cut?

Curved shears (6.5 to 7 inches) for head shaping, round-tip scissors for the muzzle, and thinning shears for transitions. No dog grooming style depends more on curved shear quality than this one.

How do I handle a client who requests a style not suited to their dog's coat?

Explain the technical reason, propose the nearest achievable dog grooming style, use a photo to show the difference, and document the client's decision in writing before proceeding.

What is Asian Fusion grooming and how is it different from other dog grooming styles?

A scissor-dominant dog grooming style from Japan and South Korea: rounded face, fluffy legs, voluminous ears. Unlike most Western dog grooming styles, it uses minimal clippers and requires flawless coat condition.


Conclusion

Mastering dog grooming styles at a professional level means knowing the correct technique, selecting the right tool, and guiding the client from intake to finish. A groomer who applies all three consistently delivers fewer complaints and stronger client retention. The ten dog grooming styles in this guide cover the core of what any UK salon needs to execute with confidence.

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