Puppy Love Pet Grooming
4018 E Main St , Mesa, AZ 85205-8608
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Pet Store, Pet Grooming, Pet Services
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Dog Grooming Repair repair in Phoenix — fast diagnosis, honest pricing, and lasting fixes. Compare 72 local repair specialists and get back to normal without overpaying.
Typical cost in Phoenix
$50–$150 / session
72 contractors in Phoenix
4018 E Main St , Mesa, AZ 85205-8608
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Pet Store, Pet Grooming, Pet Services
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
2824 E Indian School Rd Ste 5 , Phoenix, AZ 85016
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Pet Grooming, Pet Services, Dog Wash Stations
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
1805 E Mcdowell Rd , Phoenix, AZ 85006-3052
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Pet Supplies, Pet Grooming
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
107 , Phoenix, AZ 85033-1047
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Eyebrow Threading, Pet Grooming
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
1933 E University Dr Ste 10 , Mesa, AZ 85203-8297
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Pet Grooming, Pet Services
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
2135 E University Dr Ste 113 , Mesa, AZ 85213-8334
BBB Accredited A rated. Esthetician, Pet Grooming, Skin Care ...
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Phoenix, AZ 85019-4206
BBB Accredited A rated. Mobile Pet Grooming, Pet Grooming
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
Phoenix, AZ 85019-4206
BBB Accredited A rated. Mobile Pet Grooming, Pet Grooming
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
2824 E Indian School Rd Ste 5 , Phoenix, AZ 85016
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Pet Grooming, Pet Services, Dog Wash Stations
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
1805 E Mcdowell Rd , Phoenix, AZ 85006-3052
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Pet Supplies, Pet Grooming
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
107 , Phoenix, AZ 85033-1047
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Eyebrow Threading, Pet Grooming
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
4015 E Bell Rd , Phoenix, AZ 85032-2243
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Pet Grooming, Pet Services, Pets
Serves: 85001, 85002, 85003, 85004 +37 more
For: medium-breed dog groom in Phoenix, AZ
Phoenix's metro area houses over 1.6 million households in Maricopa County — and dog ownership rates in the Southwest consistently run above the national average (approximately 40–45% of households). The Valley's year-round outdoor lifestyle, extensive trail systems (South Mountain, McDowell Sonoran, Papago Park), and dog-friendly culture in neighborhoods like Old Town Scottsdale, Arcadia, and Chandler drive strong, consistent demand for professional dog grooming services. BLS SOC 39-2011 animal care and service workers in the Phoenix MSA earn $14–$22 per hour, placing Phoenix dog grooming pricing in the mid-range nationally.
| Service | Small Dog (<20 lbs) | Medium Dog (20–50 lbs) | Large Dog (50–90 lbs) | Giant Breed (90+ lbs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bath & dry only | $30–$50 | $40–$65 | $55–$85 | $75–$120 |
| Bath + trim (breed-appropriate) | $50–$80 | $65–$100 | $85–$140 | $120–$200 |
| Full groom (bath + haircut + nail + ear) | $55–$90 | $75–$120 | $100–$160 | $150–$250 |
| Add-on: nail grinding | $10–$20 | $10–$20 | $10–$20 | $15–$25 |
| Add-on: teeth brushing | $10–$15 | $10–$15 | $10–$15 | $15–$20 |
| De-shedding treatment | $20–$50 | $35–$75 | $55–$100 | $75–$150 |
| Flea bath | $15–$30 add-on | $15–$30 | $20–$40 | $25–$50 |
| Desmat / dematting | $25–$75 (by extent) | $40–$100 | $60–$150 | $75–$200 |
Mobile dog grooming (van-based, door-to-door service) carries a $15–$40 premium over salon prices for equivalent service. In Phoenix's summer heat (110°F+ June–September), mobile grooming has practical advantages: the dog doesn't sit in a cage waiting between appointments, and transport stress is eliminated. Most Phoenix mobile groomers use temperature-controlled vans, but responsible pet owners should confirm this during booking — the Arizona Department of Agriculture enforces animal welfare rules prohibiting leaving animals in vehicles in excessive heat, but mobile grooming standards are largely self-regulated.
Popular Phoenix mobile grooming services: prices run $75–$180 for a full groom depending on breed and size, with 6–8 week booking windows during peak spring (March–May) season when shed season peaks.
Dogs with double coats (Siberian Husky, Labrador Retriever, Australian Shepherd, German Shepherd) experience high-stress shedding cycles in Phoenix's climate. The combination of Phoenix's intense heat and year-round artificial air conditioning cycles creates atypical shed patterns:
Important: Phoenix grooming professionals and veterinarians consistently advise against shaving double-coated dogs for Phoenix summer heat, despite intuitive reasoning. A double coat protects dogs from solar radiation and heat stress — shaving removes this insulation and can cause "coat funk" (post-clipping alopecia) and permanent coat damage in some breeds. The American Kennel Club and professional groomers with PNW desert experience both reinforce this guidance.
Phoenix's desert environment — particularly during haboob season (July–September) — deposits fine abrasive silt on dogs' coats and between toe pads. Dogs active on Valley trails (South Mountain Park, Estrella Mountain Regional Park) accumulate caliche dust, thorns, and foxtail grass seeds (Hordeum murinum — invasive, barbed, dangerous if embedded) in their coats, ears, and paw pads. Professional Phoenix groomers trained for desert environments check and clean between toe pads and around ears specifically for foxtail embedded seeds during each appointment.
Phoenix's water costs (among the higher utility rates in the Southwest for commercial users) are reflected in professional grooming pricing — bathing a high-volume grooming business in Maricopa County's 115°F summer heat adds operational costs not present for northern-state groomers. This is reflected in Phoenix salon pricing running 5–10% above comparable-service pricing in less water-stressed metro areas.
Arizona is one of the least regulated states in the U.S. for pet grooming — there is no mandatory state license for dog groomers under Arizona law (contrast with Florida, which requires state licensing under Florida Statute §455 through the Department of Agriculture). The Arizona Department of Agriculture Animal Services Division regulates animal cruelty enforcement and commercial animal facility standards, but does not currently require a grooming license for individual operators.
What this means for Phoenix pet owners:
IPG offers the Internationally Certified Pet Groomer (ICPG) — a multi-tier certification program with written and practical examination. IPG-certified groomers complete hands-on breed-specific evaluation across coat type categories.
NDGAA offers examination-based certification: Certified Master Groomer (CMG) at the highest level. NDGAA-certified groomers pass breed-specific practical tests administered by regional examiners — meaningful in Phoenix's highly diverse breed population (Doodles, Aussies, Poodles, Schnauzers are among the most popular grooming clients in the Valley).
For Phoenix owners of wire-coated terriers, Schnauzers, or Nordic breeds, groomers who have completed breed-specific continuing education through American Kennel Club events or grooming competition experience provide higher confidence for breed-standard cuts that require knowledge of correct hand-stripping techniques or correct breed silhouette.
Phoenix summer heat creates genuine safety concerns for grooming transport and facility environments. When evaluating a Phoenix grooming salon:
Facilities checklist:
The Arizona Anti-Tethering and Cruelty statute (ARS §13-2910) prohibits subjecting animals to cruel treatment including exposure to extreme temperature that could cause injury. This applies to grooming facilities — a complaint can be filed with Arizona Department of Agriculture Animal Services.
Foxtail and embedded debris detection: Phoenix-experienced professional groomers know to systematically check between toe pads, inside ear canals, around the groin, and against the belly for foxtail grass awns (Hordeum species) — a hazard unique to arid/semi-arid climates. Foxtail awns are barbed, migrate through soft tissue, and can penetrate deeply into paw pads, ear canals, or nasal passages. DIY bathing typically misses embedded foxtails; professional groomers familiar with Valley trail-walking dogs identify them routinely. Veterinary removal of a deeply embedded foxtail costs $200–$800.
Catching ear infections early: Phoenix dogs with floppy ears (Cocker Spaniels, Doodles, Beagles) are prone to ear infections — Maricopa County's year-round heat and pool season create constant moisture exposure in ears. Professional groomers who pluck and clean ear canals during grooming flag early redness or odor that a home bather would miss.
For many Phoenix dog owners, the grooming decision is driven by time, breed coat complexity, and in Phoenix's context, summer heat logistics. Here's an honest comparison:
| Factor | DIY Grooming | Professional Groomer |
|---|---|---|
| Cost per session | $20–$60 (product investment + water) | $55–$160 (breed and size variable) |
| Time per session | 1–3 hours (longer with drying) | 1.5–3.5 hours (you're not present) |
| Foxtail/debris detection | Usually missed | Phoenix-experienced groomers check systematically |
| De-shedding effectiveness | Moderate with proper tools | High-velocity force dryers remove 60–80% more undercoat |
| Nail grinding | Difficult without training | Professional standard with proper tools |
| Ear cleaning depth | Surface only | Ear plucking, canal cleaning (floppy ear breeds) |
| Summer heat transportation risk | Applies equally to DIY bathing outside | Mobile grooming eliminates it; salon requires 1 trip |
| Breed-specific cutting | High learning curve for Poodles, Doodles, Schnauzers | Certified groomers deliver correct breed silhouette |
| Water usage (Phoenix drought context) | Full tub or outdoor hose | Professional salons use high-efficiency spray systems |
| Grooming table and restraint | Improvised | Proper non-slip grooming table, restraint loops |
Short-coated or wash-and-wear breeds: Labrador Retrievers, Boxers, Beagles, Pugs, and American Pit Bull Terriers all have low-maintenance coats that a home bathing routine handles well. A rubber curry brush, good shampoo, and outdoor bathing (in shade, morning hours only during Phoenix summers) plus a pet blow dryer handles basic maintenance. These dogs need professional grooming 2–4 times per year rather than 6–8 weeks.
High-frequency maintenance between professional sessions: Brushing, nail checks, and ear cleaning between appointments is appropriate and encouraged by professionals. A Doodle that sees a groomer every 6–8 weeks still needs daily or every-other-day brushing at home to prevent the matting that turns a $100 groom into a $175 dematting session or a full shave-down.
The Phoenix heat consideration for outdoor DIY: If you bathe your dog outdoors in Phoenix, do it before 9 AM or after 7 PM during summer months. Concrete and pavement in direct Phoenix sun reach 170°F in peak summer — paw pad burns happen in under 60 seconds on bare asphalt at 110°F ambient temperature.
Double-coated breeds in spring blow-out season (February–April). The volume of undercoat coming off a Husky, German Shepherd, or Sheltie during spring blow-out exceeds what DIY bathing with a standard pet dryer can handle. Professional force-drying equipment removes 3–4× more undercoat in a single session than home dryers, dramatically reducing the 4–6 week indoor shed storm Phoenix double-coat owners experience every spring.
Any breed that requires scissoring or hand-stripping: Poodles (and Doodle mixes, now Phoenix's most popular breed), Schnauzers, and wire-coated terriers require breed-specific cutting techniques that are acquired through hundreds of hours of professional training. Incorrect cutting on a Poodle or Schnauzer is visible immediately — uneven scissor work, failure to blend, incorrect breed silhouette.
Dogs that resist home grooming. Some dogs quickly learn that home grooming is optional in a way that salon grooming is not. A dog that snaps at nail trimming at home will often tolerate it on a professional grooming table with restraint — both for safety reasons and because professional groomers develop handling skills that reduce dog anxiety over multiple visits. A dog-reactive home grooming session where you or the dog gets bitten is not a cost saving.
The foxtail risk season (April–October). Any Phoenix dog that walks on natural terrain during foxtail grass awn season should have trail-run coats checked by a professional groomer at least every 6–8 weeks. Professional groomers systematically check the toe web spaces, ear canals, and belly folds where foxtails embed — a task that requires training and deliberate technique, not just a bath.
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