Ringworm in Horses: Signs, Treatment, and How To Stop It Spreading
In this article
Ringworm in Horses: Signs, Treatment, and How To Stop It Spreading
By Dr Duncan Houston
Ringworm sounds like a parasite, but it is not a worm. It is a fungal skin infection, also called dermatophytosis.
In horses, the real problem is not usually that ringworm is life-threatening. The real problem is that it spreads easily. One small scaly patch on the face, neck, girth area, or saddle region can turn into a yard problem if shared brushes, rugs, halters, tack, stable surfaces, or handling routines are not controlled quickly.
Ringworm can also spread to people, so this is not a skin condition to casually ignore while everyone keeps using the same grooming kit.
Quick Answer
Ringworm in horses is a contagious fungal infection of the skin and hair that often causes circular patches of hair loss, broken hairs, scaling, crusting, and sometimes itchiness. It is spread by direct contact with infected horses or contaminated equipment such as tack, grooming tools, rugs, stalls, and clothing. Treatment usually involves veterinary diagnosis, topical antifungal therapy, isolation, strict hygiene, and disinfection of contaminated equipment. (MSD Veterinary Manual)
What Is Ringworm in Horses?
Ringworm is a superficial fungal infection of the skin and hair. In horses, the main causes are dermatophyte fungi, especially Trichophyton equinum and Trichophyton mentagrophytes, although other fungal species can also be involved. These organisms can infect dead skin cells and hair, leading to broken hairs, crusting, scaling, and patches of hair loss. (MSD Veterinary Manual)
Despite the name, there is no worm under the skin. The “ring” refers to the round or circular shape that lesions often develop.
The most important owner-facing point is simple: ringworm is contagious before it is convenient. It can spread through horses, equipment, handlers, stables, and grooming routines before everyone realises there is a problem.
What Does Ringworm Look Like in Horses?
Classic ringworm lesions are round or irregular patches of hair loss with broken hairs, dry scale, crusting, and sometimes redness. Lesions often appear around areas where tack rubs, especially the girth and saddle area, but they can also spread to the neck, flanks, chest, or head. (MSD Veterinary Manual)
| Sign | What you may see |
|---|---|
| Circular hair loss | Round bald patches, often with a scaly edge |
| Broken hairs | Short, snapped hairs within or around the lesion |
| Grey or white scale | Dry, flaky skin |
| Crusting | Thick dry scabs or rough surface changes |
| Redness | More obvious in some horses than others |
| Itching | May be present, but not always |
| Spread after grooming | Lesions may appear where brushes, tack, or rugs contact the skin |
| Multiple horses affected | Suggests contagious spread through the yard |
In practice, ringworm does not always look like a perfect circle. Some cases look like rough scaly patches, small tufts of raised hair, rubbed areas, or crusty bald spots. That is why diagnosis matters.
Where Does Ringworm Usually Appear?
Ringworm can occur anywhere on the body, but common sites include:
| Area | Why it is common |
|---|---|
| Girth area | Tack friction can damage skin and help infection establish |
| Saddle region | Heat, pressure, sweat, and shared saddle pads increase risk |
| Neck and shoulders | Common grooming and rug contact areas |
| Face | Halters, nosebands, brushes, and direct contact can spread spores |
| Chest and flanks | Can occur with wider spread |
| Legs | Less classic, but possible |
The pattern often gives clues. Ringworm around the girth or saddle area should immediately make you think about tack, saddle pads, rugs, and grooming gear as possible sources of spread.
How Does Ringworm Spread?
Ringworm spreads through direct contact with infected horses and indirect contact with contaminated objects. Broken hairs and fungal spores are important sources of spread, and contaminated grooming tools, tack, stalls, rugs, clothing, and surfaces can all contribute. (MSD Veterinary Manual)
Common spread routes include:
| Spread route | Example |
|---|---|
| Horse-to-horse contact | Nose-to-nose contact, rubbing, shared turnout |
| Grooming tools | Brushes, curry combs, clippers, cloths |
| Tack | Saddles, girths, bridles, halters, boots |
| Rugs and saddle pads | Especially if used between horses |
| Stable surfaces | Doors, rails, walls, tie-up areas |
| Human handling | Hands, clothing, gloves, shared towels |
| New arrivals | Horses may be exposed before lesions are obvious |
UC Davis notes that the incubation period can be up to 3 weeks, meaning horses and people may be exposed before visible lesions appear. (Center for Equine Health)
That is why new horse isolation and not sharing equipment are not overreactions. They are basic disease control.
Can Humans Catch Ringworm From Horses?
Yes. Ringworm is zoonotic, which means it can spread from horses to people. Transmission can occur through contact with infected skin or hair, or by touching contaminated objects. In people, it often causes a scaly, red, circular rash. (Center for Equine Health)
Higher-risk people include:
| Higher-risk person | Why extra care matters |
|---|---|
| Children | More hand-to-face contact and less consistent hygiene |
| Elderly people | Skin and immune resilience may be reduced |
| Immunocompromised people | Infection may be harder to control |
| Pregnant people | Should avoid unnecessary infectious exposure |
| Yard staff and vets | Repeated contact with horses and equipment |
| Owners treating lesions daily | More frequent exposure |
Use gloves when handling affected horses, wash hands after contact, wash contaminated clothing, and avoid touching your face after handling infected areas.
Which Horses Are Most at Risk?
Any horse can develop ringworm, but some are more vulnerable.
| Risk factor | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Young horses | Immune systems may be less experienced |
| New arrivals | May introduce infection before signs are visible |
| Horses in busy yards | More shared equipment and contact |
| Show, racing, or training environments | Higher movement and equipment sharing |
| Horses with skin damage | Fungi establish more easily through damaged skin |
| Poor grooming hygiene | Spores spread through shared brushes and tack |
| Stress or illness | Immune defence may be reduced |
| Damp, dirty, or crowded environments | Increases skin irritation and contamination risk |
The horse most likely to start a yard outbreak is often not the sickest horse. It is the horse with one small lesion that everyone keeps grooming with the shared brush.
How Worried Should You Be?
| Risk level | What it looks like | What it may mean | What to do |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low concern | One small scaly patch, horse bright, no pain, no rapid spread | Possible early ringworm or minor skin irritation | Stop sharing equipment, photograph it, monitor closely, arrange vet advice if it persists |
| Moderate concern | Circular hair loss, crusting, broken hairs, mild spread, one or two horses affected | Ringworm is possible and contagious | Isolate affected horse, use gloves, call your vet, start biosecurity |
| High concern | Multiple lesions, multiple horses affected, lesions near tack areas, show yard or shared equipment setting | Outbreak risk | Veterinary diagnosis, treatment plan, equipment disinfection, movement restriction |
| Critical | Severe skin pain, swelling, pus, fever, depression, lesions near the eyes, secondary infection, or immunocompromised handler exposure | Ringworm may not be the only problem | Call your vet promptly |
Ringworm itself is usually not a same-hour emergency, but ringworm in a shared yard is a biosecurity problem that becomes harder every day it is ignored.
What Else Can Look Like Ringworm?
Not every circular bald patch is ringworm.
Important rule-outs include:
| Condition | Why it can look similar |
|---|---|
| Dermatophilosis, also called rain scald or rain rot | Causes crusting and hair loss, often linked with wet conditions |
| Bacterial folliculitis | Can cause crusts, hair loss, and small skin lesions |
| Fly bite hypersensitivity | Itchy hair loss and crusting, often seasonal |
| Lice or mites | Itching, rubbing, hair loss, scaling |
| Tack rubs | Hair loss where gear contacts the skin |
| Allergic skin disease | Itch and patchy skin changes |
| Pemphigus foliaceus | Rare autoimmune skin disease that can mimic crusting disorders |
| Sarcoids or skin tumours | Non-healing or unusual lesions |
| Trauma or bite wounds | Localised crusting and hair loss |
MSD Veterinary Manual specifically lists dermatophilosis, pemphigus foliaceus, and bacterial folliculitis among important differentials for equine dermatophytosis. (MSD Veterinary Manual)
The real clinical question is not “does it look round?”
It is: is this fungal, bacterial, parasitic, allergic, traumatic, or something more serious?
How Do Vets Diagnose Ringworm?
A vet may suspect ringworm based on appearance, location, contagious spread, and history of shared equipment or new arrivals. Confirmation is often made by testing hairs, scales, and crusts from active lesions.
Common diagnostic steps include:
| Diagnostic step | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Clinical examination | Assesses lesion pattern, spread, and severity |
| Hair and scale sampling | Collects material from the active edge of lesions |
| Direct microscopy | May identify fungal elements faster |
| Fungal culture | Helps confirm diagnosis and identify dermatophytes |
| PCR testing | May identify dermatophyte DNA in some laboratories |
| Skin scraping or cytology | Helps rule out mites, bacteria, and other causes |
| Biopsy | Rarely needed, but useful for unusual or non-healing lesions |
MSD notes that diagnosis can be confirmed by direct microscopic examination or fungal culture, and that early lesions should be sampled with scales, hairs, and crusts. Lesions should not be wiped with alcohol before sampling because this can interfere with culture results. (MSD Veterinary Manual)
Why Diagnosis Matters
Ringworm is contagious, but it is not the only cause of scaly hair loss.
If the horse actually has rain scald, bacterial folliculitis, mites, fly allergy, or an autoimmune condition, ringworm treatment alone may not work. If the horse does have ringworm and you treat it like a harmless rub, you may allow it to spread through the yard.
Diagnosis matters because it changes:
| Decision | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Whether to isolate the horse | Ringworm needs biosecurity |
| Whether to disinfect equipment | Spores can spread through shared gear |
| What medication is used | Antifungal therapy differs from antibacterial or antiparasitic care |
| Whether other horses need checks | Yard spread is common |
| Whether handlers need precautions | Ringworm can spread to people |
| When the horse can return to group contact | Clearance matters |
The mistake I see most often is treating every scaly patch as “probably a rub” until three horses have it.
How Is Ringworm Treated in Horses?
Treatment has two goals:
-
Help the affected horse recover
-
Stop the infection spreading
Topical antifungal therapy is the mainstay. MSD Veterinary Manual describes recommended treatments as twice-weekly whole-body leave-on rinses with lime sulfur or enilconazole, or a 2 percent miconazole and 2 percent chlorhexidine shampoo. Topical treatment should continue until mycological cure, such as a negative fungal culture or PCR result, is achieved. (MSD Veterinary Manual)
Treatment may include:
| Treatment step | Why it helps |
|---|---|
| Vet-directed antifungal washes or rinses | Reduces fungal load on skin and hair |
| Whole-body treatment when needed | Helps control spores beyond visible lesions |
| Local topical treatment | Useful for small lesions under veterinary direction |
| Gentle removal of loose crusts | Helps medication reach affected skin |
| Isolation | Prevents spread to other horses |
| Equipment cleaning and disinfection | Reduces reinfection and outbreak risk |
| Repeat testing when needed | Confirms true clearance |
Chlorhexidine alone should not be oversold as the complete answer. Combination antifungal products, such as miconazole with chlorhexidine, or other veterinary antifungal rinses, are more appropriate wording for ringworm management.
Can Ringworm Go Away Without Treatment?
Yes, some cases eventually resolve without treatment, but that is not a good reason to ignore it.
MSD notes that ringworm infections usually clear without treatment, but treatment with medicated shampoos can speed recovery in some cases. UC Davis states that untreated cases may resolve on their own in 2 to 3 months, while treated horses may show hair regrowth in 1 to 4 weeks. (MSD Veterinary Manual)
The problem is the waiting period.
During those weeks, the horse can spread infection to:
| Risk group | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Other horses | Direct contact and shared equipment spread infection |
| Humans | Zoonotic risk |
| Tack and grooming tools | Fungal spores contaminate surfaces |
| Rugs and saddle pads | Re-exposure and spread |
| Stables and fencing | Environmental contamination |
| New horses | Outbreak risk in yards and show settings |
So yes, ringworm may self-resolve. But in a real yard, untreated ringworm is basically a fungus with a networking strategy.
How To Stop Ringworm Spreading
Biosecurity is just as important as medication.
MSD recommends isolating infected animals, cleaning tack by removing gross organic debris first, washing thoroughly with detergent soap, disinfecting with an antifungal-labelled cleaner, and washing fabric leads or blankets twice. (MSD Veterinary Manual)
Use this practical plan:
| Control step | What to do |
|---|---|
| Isolate the affected horse | Separate stall or paddock where possible |
| Stop shared equipment | No shared brushes, tack, rugs, saddle pads, boots, or halters |
| Label equipment | Make affected-horse gear obvious |
| Wear gloves | Especially when treating lesions |
| Wash hands | After handling the horse or equipment |
| Clean before disinfecting | Dirt, hair, and organic material reduce disinfectant effectiveness |
| Wash fabrics | Rugs, saddle pads, towels, and cloth items need proper washing |
| Disinfect hard surfaces | Use a suitable antifungal disinfectant and follow label contact time |
| Monitor in-contact horses | Check daily for new lesions |
| Avoid transport and shows | Do not move infected horses unnecessarily |
Veterinary Ireland’s equine hospital guidance also emphasises gloves, not sharing tack or grooming equipment, keeping affected horses separate, inspecting in-contact horses, avoiding movement to other premises until cleared, and frequent handwashing. (Veterinary Ireland Journal)
Should You Clip the Lesions?
Sometimes, but not always.
Clipping can help expose lesions and remove infected hairs, but it can also spread contaminated hair if done carelessly. It may irritate skin and contaminate clippers, rugs, floors, and handlers.
If clipping is recommended:
| Rule | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Use dedicated clippers | Avoid spreading spores to other horses |
| Disinfect clippers afterward | Blades and guards can carry spores |
| Collect and dispose of hair carefully | Infected hair is a contamination source |
| Wear gloves and protective clothing | Reduces zoonotic exposure |
| Avoid aggressive clipping | Damaged skin can worsen irritation |
Ask your vet before clipping widespread lesions or sensitive areas such as the face, eyes, or areas under tack.
When Is Ringworm an Emergency?
Ringworm is not usually a same-hour emergency, but some situations need faster veterinary involvement.
Call your vet promptly if:
| Red flag | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Lesions are spreading quickly | Outbreak risk and possible incorrect diagnosis |
| Multiple horses are affected | Yard-level biosecurity is needed |
| Lesions are near the eyes | Medication choice and diagnosis matter |
| Skin is painful, swollen, hot, or oozing pus | Secondary infection or another condition may be present |
| Horse has fever or depression | Ringworm alone usually should not cause systemic illness |
| Lesions are severe or widespread | Treatment and isolation plan may need escalation |
| A foal or immunocompromised horse is affected | Higher risk patient |
| A handler develops a skin rash | Zoonotic transmission may have occurred |
| Lesions fail to improve | Diagnosis or treatment plan may be wrong |
A scaly patch can wait for a planned call. A rapidly spreading outbreak cannot.
What Should You Do Right Now?
1. Stop sharing equipment
Immediately stop sharing brushes, rugs, saddle pads, girths, boots, halters, and clippers.
2. Separate the horse if possible
Use a separate stall, yard, or paddock. Avoid nose-to-nose contact and shared fence rubbing if practical.
3. Wear gloves
Use gloves when touching lesions or applying treatment. Wash hands afterward.
4. Take clear photos
Photograph the lesions in good light from close-up and wider views. Repeat every few days to monitor spread.
5. Call your vet
Ask whether testing is needed and whether treatment should begin while waiting for results.
6. Do not scrub aggressively
Harsh scrubbing damages skin and can spread infected hairs. Gentle crust loosening may be useful only as directed.
7. Do not use random household chemicals on the horse
Do not apply bleach, harsh disinfectants, essential oils, or caustic products to the skin. Skin treatment and environmental disinfection are different things.
8. Clean the environment properly
Remove hair, dirt, and organic debris first, then disinfect appropriate surfaces and equipment using suitable products and correct contact time.
9. Check every in-contact horse
Look around the face, neck, girth area, saddle region, shoulders, and any area where equipment sits.
10. Avoid shows, sales, clinics, or moving yards
Do not spread the problem to the wider horse world. Ringworm is socially active enough already.
Common Mistakes Owners Make
Mistake 1: Thinking ringworm is a worm
It is a fungal infection, so wormers will not treat it.
Mistake 2: Waiting because the horse is not very itchy
Ringworm may or may not be itchy. Lack of itch does not rule it out.
Mistake 3: Treating only the visible patch
Spores may be present beyond the obvious lesion, especially in widespread or outbreak cases.
Mistake 4: Sharing brushes “just once”
This is how one horse becomes three horses, then the whole yard suddenly discovers biosecurity.
Mistake 5: Cleaning without disinfecting
Cleaning removes dirt and hair. Disinfection reduces fungal contamination. You often need both.
Mistake 6: Disinfecting without cleaning first
Organic material can reduce disinfectant effectiveness. Remove hair, dirt, and crusts first.
Mistake 7: Using harsh products on the horse
The skin is already damaged. Harsh chemicals can worsen irritation and delay healing.
Mistake 8: Declaring it cured when the skin looks better
Clinical improvement is good, but fungal clearance may require ongoing treatment and, in some cases, negative culture or PCR confirmation.
How Long Until a Horse With Ringworm Can Return to Normal Contact?
That depends on the severity, treatment response, and yard biosecurity risk.
A horse may look better before fungal spores are fully controlled. UC Davis notes that treated horses often show hair regrowth within 1 to 4 weeks, while untreated cases may take 2 to 3 months to resolve. MSD professional guidance recommends continuing topical therapy until mycological cure, such as a negative fungal culture or PCR result. (Center for Equine Health)
A practical return-to-contact decision should consider:
| Question | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Are new lesions still appearing? | Ongoing spread suggests infection is active |
| Are old lesions improving? | Good sign, but not the whole answer |
| Has treatment been completed correctly? | Missed treatments delay control |
| Has equipment been cleaned and disinfected? | Reinfection risk |
| Are in-contact horses clear? | Outbreak control |
| Is the horse going to a show, sale, or new yard? | Higher biosecurity standard needed |
| Has your vet recommended repeat testing? | May be needed in outbreaks or high-risk settings |
For a private horse with one lesion, decisions may be simpler. For a racing yard, breeding farm, show barn, riding school, or agistment yard, clearance standards should be stricter.
Can Ringworm Damage the Skin Permanently?
Most horses recover well, and hair regrowth is common once infection is controlled. Permanent damage is uncommon in straightforward cases.
The risk increases when:
| Risk factor | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Lesions are severe or widespread | More skin disruption |
| Secondary bacterial infection develops | More inflammation and skin damage |
| Horse rubs or traumatises lesions | Delays healing |
| Treatment is delayed in a busy yard | More spread and reinfection |
| Harsh products are used | Skin irritation worsens |
| Diagnosis is wrong | The real disease continues untreated |
The biggest long-term issue is usually not scarring. It is recurrence, reinfection, and yard spread.
How To Prevent Ringworm in Horses
Prevention is mostly about hygiene, quarantine, and not letting shared equipment become a fungal taxi.
UC Davis recommends separating new horses for a few weeks after arrival, monitoring them for signs of disease, and not sharing tack or equipment between horses. (Center for Equine Health)
| Prevention step | Why it helps |
|---|---|
| Quarantine new arrivals | Allows time for lesions to appear before mixing |
| Do not share grooming tools | Brushes are a major spread risk |
| Label tack and rugs | Keeps gear horse-specific |
| Clean saddle pads and girths regularly | Reduces contamination and skin irritation |
| Disinfect clippers between horses | Clippers can spread infected hairs |
| Keep skin healthy | Manage tack rubs, sweat, mud, and insect irritation |
| Avoid grooming over suspicious lesions | Can spread spores across the body |
| Train staff to recognise early lesions | Outbreak control starts with noticing |
| Use gloves for suspicious lesions | Protects handlers |
| Keep records during outbreaks | Tracks which horses and equipment are involved |
The best prevention plan is not complicated. It is consistent.
Ringworm in a Show, Racing, or Training Yard
Busy yards need stricter control because the number of contact points is much higher.
High-risk contact points include:
| Contact point | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Shared grooming bays | Hair and spores contaminate surfaces |
| Communal clippers | High spread risk |
| Shared saddle pads and girths | Direct skin contact |
| Tie-up rails | Horses rub faces and necks |
| Wash bays | Water and hair spread contamination |
| Staff clothing | Spores can move between horses |
| Horse transport | Close contact and shared partitions |
| Competition yards | Wider spread beyond the home property |
For yards with multiple affected horses, work with a vet to build a written outbreak plan. A vague “everyone be careful” plan is usually how everyone becomes very surprised two weeks later.
Normal Skin Rub vs Ringworm Red Flags
| More reassuring | More concerning |
|---|---|
| Hair loss exactly where tack recently rubbed | Circular or spreading patches |
| Skin is smooth and not scaly | Scaling, crusting, broken hairs |
| One obvious pressure point | Multiple lesions or new lesions appearing |
| Improves quickly after removing tack pressure | Persists or spreads despite changing gear |
| No other horses affected | Other horses develop similar patches |
| No human skin lesions | Handlers develop circular rash |
A tack rub can still become secondarily infected, and ringworm can start in areas where tack rubs. If it is spreading, scaly, circular, crusty, or contagious, do not assume it is just friction.
Myth vs Reality
| Myth | Reality |
|---|---|
| “Ringworm is caused by worms.” | It is caused by fungi called dermatophytes. |
| “Only dirty horses get ringworm.” | Any horse can get it, especially where equipment is shared. |
| “If it is not itchy, it is not ringworm.” | Ringworm may or may not itch. |
| “One small patch is not a big deal.” | One small patch can seed a yard outbreak. |
| “Treatment is only about the horse.” | Equipment, rugs, tack, and surfaces matter too. |
| “Once the hair starts growing, it is definitely cleared.” | Clinical improvement does not always prove mycological cure. |
| “Humans cannot catch horse ringworm.” | Ringworm can spread from horses to people. |
Will My Horse Be Okay?
Most horses with ringworm recover well, especially when it is recognised early and biosecurity is handled properly.
The outlook is better when:
| Good sign | Why it helps |
|---|---|
| Only a few lesions are present | Easier to control |
| Diagnosis is made early | Less time for spread |
| Horse is isolated quickly | Protects the yard |
| Equipment is not shared | Cuts a major transmission route |
| Treatment is applied correctly | Speeds recovery and reduces contamination |
| No secondary infection | Skin heals more cleanly |
| In-contact horses are monitored | Outbreaks are caught early |
The outlook becomes more frustrating when multiple horses are involved, shared gear has been used widely, lesions are missed for weeks, equipment is poorly disinfected, or treatment stops too early.
Related Horse Health Topics To Link Internally
| Related topic | Why it connects |
|---|---|
| Rain Scald in Horses | Common skin condition that can mimic ringworm |
| Hair Loss in Horses | Ringworm is one cause among many |
| Itchy Skin in Horses | Ringworm may or may not itch |
| Mud Fever and Scratches in Horses | Damaged skin can complicate diagnosis |
| Horse Skin Infections | Helps compare fungal, bacterial, and parasitic causes |
| Biosecurity for New Horses | Quarantine helps prevent ringworm outbreaks |
FAQs About Ringworm in Horses
Can horses get ringworm from shared brushes?
Yes. Shared grooming tools are one of the classic ways ringworm spreads between horses. Tack, rugs, saddle pads, clippers, stalls, clothing, and other contaminated objects can also spread infection.
Can humans catch ringworm from horses?
Yes. Ringworm can spread from horses to people through direct contact with infected skin or hair, or through contaminated objects. Wear gloves, wash hands, and seek medical advice if you develop a suspicious rash. (Center for Equine Health)
Does ringworm in horses go away on its own?
It can, but it may take months, and the horse can spread infection during that time. Treatment is usually recommended to reduce discomfort, speed recovery, and limit spread to other horses and people. (Center for Equine Health)
What is the best treatment for ringworm in horses?
The best treatment depends on the horse and severity, but veterinary-directed topical antifungal therapy is usually the main approach. Recommended options include lime sulfur or enilconazole rinses, or miconazole and chlorhexidine shampoo, with treatment continued until fungal clearance is confirmed where needed. (MSD Veterinary Manual)
Should I isolate a horse with ringworm?
Yes. A horse with suspected or confirmed ringworm should be separated from other horses where possible, and its tack, rugs, grooming tools, and handling equipment should not be shared.
The Bottom Line
Ringworm in horses is usually manageable, but it is highly contagious and easily underestimated.
The key signs are circular or patchy hair loss, broken hairs, scaling, crusting, and spread through areas where tack or grooming tools touch the skin. The key risks are yard contamination, spread to other horses, reinfection from equipment, and zoonotic spread to people.
The safest rule is simple: if you suspect ringworm, stop sharing equipment, isolate the horse, use gloves, call your vet, and treat both the horse and the environment seriously.
Ringworm is rarely a disaster when handled early. It becomes a disaster when everyone keeps brushing, rugging, clipping, and tacking up as if the fungus is not quietly organising a barn-wide meet-and-greet.
If you are unsure whether your horse’s skin lesion is ringworm, rain scald, bacterial infection, parasites, tack rubs, or something more serious, ASK A VET™ can help you understand what signs matter and when veterinary care is needed.