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Hot Spots on Dogs 2025: Causes, Treatment & How to Stop the Itch 🐶✨

  • 88 days ago
  • 4 min read
Hot Spots on Dogs 2025: Causes, Treatment & How to Stop the Itch 🐶✨

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Hot Spots on Dogs 2025: Causes, Treatment & How to Stop the Itch 🐶✨

By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc

One day your dog’s skin looks fine. The next? A raw, red, weeping patch appears seemingly out of nowhere. That’s a hot spot—and it’s as painful as it looks.

I’m Dr. Duncan Houston, veterinarian and founder of Ask A Vet. Hot spots can pop up quickly and worsen even faster. Let’s go through what causes them, how to treat them, and how to prevent them for good.

🔥 What Is a Hot Spot?

  • Also called acute moist dermatitis
  • An inflamed, infected patch of skin that appears suddenly
  • Usually red, moist, oozing, and painful to touch

📍 Common Locations

  • Neck and cheeks (especially in dogs wearing collars)
  • Hips, thighs, rump area (often from flea bites or allergies)
  • Chest, belly, or feet (from licking or environmental irritants)

🔍 What Causes Hot Spots?

  • Fleas: The #1 trigger for scratching and chewing
  • Allergies: To food, pollen, dust, or grass
  • Moisture: Under the collar, after swimming or bathing
  • Insect bites: Mosquitoes, ants, ticks
  • Ear infections: Cause itching near the head/neck
  • Stress or boredom: Leads to obsessive licking or chewing

⚠️ What a Hot Spot Looks Like

  • Red, raw, wet or shiny skin
  • Hair loss around the area
  • Sometimes crusty or oozing discharge
  • Dog may constantly lick, chew, or scratch it

🩺 How Vets Treat Hot Spots

  • Shave the fur to allow the skin to dry and breathe
  • Clean with antiseptic solution (chlorhexidine or iodine)
  • Apply topical treatment: steroid creams, antibiotic ointment
  • Oral medications: antibiotics, anti-inflammatories, antihistamines
  • Address underlying cause (flea control, allergy management, etc.)

💡 Home Care Tips

  • Keep your dog from licking—use an e-collar or soft cone
  • Clean gently 1–2 times daily as instructed by your vet
  • Use hypoallergenic shampoo and avoid scented products
  • Monitor for spreading, increased redness, or odor

🛡️ Preventing Future Hot Spots

  • Stay up to date with flea and tick prevention
  • Dry thoroughly after swimming or bathing
  • Keep long-haired dogs groomed and mat-free
  • Address allergies with vet guidance and dietary trials
  • Provide enrichment to prevent boredom licking

🔗 Products That Help Ask A Vet

  • Explorer Harness – Adjustable fit to avoid friction on healing skin
  • Ask A Vet – Upload photos, get vet diagnosis and treatment advice in minutes

📋 Summary Excerpt

Hot spots are red, raw, and painful. A vet breaks down what causes them, how to treat them at home or with your vet, and how to prevent them from coming back.

❓ FAQs

  • Q: Can I treat a hot spot at home?
    A: You can start by trimming fur, cleaning gently, and preventing licking. But vet treatment is best to control pain and prevent infection.
  • Q: Do hot spots go away on their own?
    A: Not usually. They often worsen quickly without treatment and can spread or become infected.
  • Q: Are hot spots contagious?
    A: No. But if caused by fleas, other pets can be at risk of infestation.
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Build to Last
Easy to Clean
Vet-Designed & Tested
Adventure-ready
Quality Tested & Trusted