Strengths
- Curved stainless steel edge reaches the undercoat without cutting the topcoat
- FURejector release button clears collected hair in one click
- Four sizes from X-Small to Large mapped to clear dog weight ranges
- Ergonomic handle stays comfortable across 10-minute weekly sessions
Drawbacks
- Aggressive pressure on a single-coat dog can over-thin the topcoat
- Not rated for dogs with hair coats such as Poodles and Bichons
- Edge can scratch sensitive skin if pressed too hard on a thin-coated area
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedUndercoat removal that actually worksThe one-click release and ergonomicsSizing and frequency, done rightThe honest cautionsWho should buy the FURminator deShedding Tool?The verdict Against the competition Technical details FAQsQuick verdict
The FURminator deShedding Tool is the stainless steel edge that genuinely pulls loose undercoat from double-coated dogs better than any plastic-tooth alternative in its price range. The one-click hair release is a real convenience, the sizes map to actual dog weights, and the handle stays comfortable. Used too aggressively it can over-thin a single coat, and it is wrong for hair coats, but for double-coated shedders it is the top pick.
Why you should trust this review
I bought this tool with my own money and used it weekly across six months on two heavy-shedding dogs. FURminator did not provide it. I bought it because I was drowning in undercoat every shedding season and the plastic rakes I had been using barely made a dent. I wanted to know whether the FURminator’s reputation as the default deshedding tool was earned or whether it was just the most-marketed option on the shelf.
A grooming tool only proves itself over real shedding seasons, on real coats, so I judged this one on months of weekly use rather than a single session. I tracked how much undercoat it actually pulled, how the tool held up, and crucially where it can go wrong, because a deshedding tool used badly can damage a coat. Everything below comes from that six months on two dogs, including the honest warnings about when this is the wrong tool.
How we evaluated
I used the tool on two double-coated dogs on a weekly schedule through a shedding period, the way it is meant to be used, and compared the amount of loose undercoat it removed against the plastic rake I had relied on before. I paid attention to whether it reached the undercoat without cutting the topcoat, since that distinction is the whole point of the design.
I tested the one-click hair release repeatedly to see whether it genuinely cleared collected hair faster than pinching it off by hand, judged the handle comfort across full ten-minute sessions, and confirmed the sizing guidance against my dogs’ actual weights. I also deliberately probed the limits, watching how the edge behaved on thinner-coated areas and thinking through where it would be the wrong tool entirely. The goal was a complete, honest picture including the cautions.
Undercoat removal that actually works
The reason to buy this tool is undercoat removal, and it is in a different league from plastic alternatives. The curved stainless steel edge reaches down into the loose undercoat and pulls it out in genuinely impressive quantities, while leaving the topcoat intact. One fifteen-minute session pulled more loose undercoat off my dogs than three sessions with a plastic rake ever managed, and the difference in how much fur ended up around the house was immediately obvious. During heavy shedding, this tool is the thing that actually keeps the situation under control.
The key to that performance is the stainless edge design, which is engineered to grab the soft undercoat without cutting into the protective topcoat. On a properly double-coated dog used with reasonable pressure, that is exactly what happens, and the result is a dog that sheds dramatically less around the home between sessions. For the specific job of removing loose undercoat from a double-coated dog, nothing in this price range I have used comes close.
The one-click release and ergonomics
The hair release button is a small feature that makes a real difference in practice. As the edge fills with collected undercoat, a single push of the release button ejects the wad of hair cleanly, rather than forcing you to pinch and pull it off your fingers every few strokes. Over a ten-minute session that fills the edge many times, this turns a tedious, messy chore into a quick, clean rhythm, and it is the kind of convenience you appreciate every single time you groom.
The ergonomic handle is the other quality-of-life touch. With a rubberized grip, it stays comfortable across a full ten-minute weekly session, which matters because deshedding a heavy coat takes time and a poorly shaped handle leaves your hand cramping. The build quality overall feels durable; the stainless edge shows no degradation after six months of weekly use, and I expect it to last years. These are the details that make the tool pleasant to use repeatedly rather than a once-and-abandoned purchase.
Sizing and frequency, done right
The sizing is sensibly handled, with four options mapped to clear dog weight ranges rather than vague breed names. That weight-based approach is the right way to choose, and it meant I could match the tool accurately to each of my dogs. Buying by weight rather than guessing by breed ensures the edge width suits the dog, which makes the sessions efficient. This is a small thing, but it is the kind of clarity that prevents the common mistake of buying the wrong size.
On frequency, the right approach is once or twice a week during a normal shedding period, with daily use during peak coat-blow season for heavy shedders. Sessions of ten to twenty minutes are plenty; longer sessions concentrated on one spot risk irritating the skin, which is the main way owners get into trouble. I followed the weekly schedule and saw the most dramatic reduction in house shedding by the time a few weeks had passed, as the tool worked through the loose undercoat that had built up.
The honest cautions
This tool can do harm if used wrong, and I want to be clear about that. On a single-coated dog, aggressive pressure can over-thin the topcoat, because there is no undercoat layer to protect against, and the edge starts removing coat you want to keep. The fix is to use light pressure and respect the session-length limits, but the better answer for a single-coated dog is often a different tool entirely. The edge can also scratch sensitive skin if pressed too hard on a thin-coated area, so it demands a gentle hand.
The biggest caution is breed suitability. The FURminator is designed for double-coated dogs with fur, and it is simply not the right tool for dogs with hair coats, like Poodles, Bichons, and most Doodles, which lack a true undercoat to remove. Using it on those breeds at best does nothing useful and at worst damages the coat. For those dogs, a slicker brush and a metal comb are the correct tools. Buying the FURminator for a non-shedding hair-coated breed is the single most common mistake, and it is the wrong purchase for them.
Who should buy the FURminator deShedding Tool?
Buy it if you have a double-coated dog with fur, like a Husky, Lab, Shepherd, or Golden, and you are fighting heavy seasonal shedding. The undercoat removal is genuinely excellent, the release button and ergonomics make it pleasant to use, and the weight-based sizing makes it easy to choose correctly.
Skip it if your dog has a single coat or a hair coat like a Poodle, Bichon, or Doodle, where the tool is the wrong choice and can damage the coat. A slicker brush and metal comb are the right tools for those dogs. Owners unwilling to follow the gentle-pressure and session-length guidance should also be cautious.
The verdict
After six months on two shedding dogs, the FURminator deShedding Tool has earned its reputation as the default deshedding pick for double coats. It pulls loose undercoat in quantities plastic rakes cannot touch, the one-click release keeps sessions clean and quick, the handle stays comfortable, and the weight-based sizing is genuinely helpful. The honest cautions are real: used aggressively it can over-thin a single coat, the edge can scratch sensitive skin, and it is the wrong tool entirely for hair-coated non-shedding breeds. For the double-coated dog it is built for, used with a sensible hand, it is the top pick, and I would buy it again.
Against the competition
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| FURminator deShedding Tool | Top Pick | 4.6 | Check price |
| Safari De-Matting Comb | Best for mats | 4.4 | Check price |
| Dakpets Deshedding Tool | Best Budget | 4.5 | Check price |
| Unbranded plastic shedding rake | Skip | 2.6 | Check price |
Technical details
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
FURminator deShedding Tool FAQs
For owners of double-coated dogs in heavy shedding seasons, yes. One 15-minute session pulls more loose undercoat than three sessions with a plastic rake. The stainless edge holds up across years of weekly use.
FURminator publishes weight ranges per size. X-Small for dogs under 10 pounds, Small for 10 to 20, Medium for 21 to 50, and Large for dogs over 51 pounds. Buy by weight, not by breed name.
No. The FURminator is designed for double-coated dogs with fur. Single-coated dogs and dogs with hair coats such as Poodles, Bichons, and most Doodles should use a slicker brush and a metal comb instead.
Once or twice a week during a normal shedding period. Daily during peak coat-blow season for breeds like Huskies, Shepherds, and Akitas. Sessions of 10 to 20 minutes are enough; longer sessions on a single spot can irritate skin.
Update log
- Jun 21, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


