What to Post on Instagram as a Dog Groomer - A Complete Monthly Guide

You are brilliant at grooming dogs. But when it comes to Instagram, you stare at your phone wondering what on earth to post. You are not alone - it is one of the most common things we hear from groomers. This guide gives you 30 post ideas, a weekly schedule, the best times to post, and a simple system that takes the stress out of it completely.

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In this guide
  1. Why Instagram actually matters for dog groomers
  2. 30 post ideas that work
  3. A simple weekly posting schedule
  4. The best times to post
  5. How to write captions that get engagement
  6. Why Reels should be your priority right now
  7. The system that makes it easy

Why Instagram actually matters for dog groomers

Dog grooming is one of the most visual businesses that exists. Every finished groom is a transformation - and transformations are exactly what Instagram was built for. A single before and after photo of a beautifully groomed Goldendoodle can reach hundreds of local pet owners who are quietly looking for a groomer they can trust.

The numbers back this up. Businesses in visual service industries that post consistently on Instagram report a significant increase in new client enquiries within 3 months. More importantly, it builds the thing that gets you fully booked: local reputation.

more bookings reported by groomers who post weekly vs. those who don't
71%
of pet owners check a business's social media before booking
2–3
posts per week is all you need to build a consistent presence

You do not need thousands of followers. You need the right 200 people in your town to know who you are. Instagram is the most effective way to make that happen.

30 post ideas that actually work for dog groomers

The most common reason groomers stop posting is running out of ideas. Here are 30 that consistently perform well - enough to cover an entire month with some to spare.

Before and after transformations (your highest-performing content)

01

Full groom transformation - side by side or swipe gallery

02

Puppy's very first groom (always gets huge engagement)

03

A heavily matted coat transformed - show the work involved

04

Seasonal cut - summer lion cut or winter fluff-up

05

Breed-specific transformation - Poodle, Bichon, Cocker Spaniel

06

Senior dog groom - show the extra care and patience involved

Quick tip: Always take a photo before you start and after you finish. Make it a habit for every single appointment. This builds your content library without any extra effort.

Educational content (builds trust and saves you time answering DMs)

07

How often should you groom a [breed]? A quick guide

08

3 signs your dog's coat needs professional attention

09

The difference between a bath and a full groom - explained simply

10

How to brush your dog between appointments (breed-specific tips)

11

Why matting happens and how to prevent it

12

What to expect at your puppy's first grooming appointment

13

The tools I use and why (great for showcasing your expertise)

14

Dog shampoo myths debunked - what's actually safe

Behind the scenes (makes clients feel connected to you)

15

A day in the life at the salon - short Reel or Stories

16

Your grooming setup - the table, the products, the space

17

A dog who hated grooming before - and now loves it

18

The messiest groom of the week (people love honest content)

19

How you handle nervous or anxious dogs

20

A funny or sweet moment from the salon this week

Client and community content (social proof and local connection)

21

A client review or testimonial (screenshot or graphic)

22

A client photo - their dog at home after the groom

23

A shoutout to a local pet-related business

24

"Welcome to the family" post for a new regular client

25

A milestone - 100th client, 1 year anniversary, new equipment

Practical and booking-focused (drives direct enquiries)

26

Availability this week - "We have 2 slots left on Friday"

27

Seasonal reminder - "Summer is coming, book your cut early"

28

Your services and prices - a clear, simple graphic

29

How to book with you - a step-by-step post

30

A question to your audience - "What breed do you have?"


A simple weekly posting schedule

You do not need to post every day. Two to three times per week is enough to stay visible and grow steadily. Here is a simple structure you can follow every week:

DayPost typeWhy it works
Monday or TuesdayBefore and after transformationPeople are back at work, scrolling. Visual content performs best at the start of the week.
Wednesday or ThursdayEducational tip or behind the scenesMid-week content builds trust and keeps your account active between the high-reach posts.
Friday or SaturdayAvailability, booking reminder, or client reviewPeople plan weekend activities on Friday. A direct CTA here drives bookings.

The key rule: Consistency matters more than frequency. Two posts every week without fail will outperform five posts one week and nothing for the next three. Instagram rewards accounts that show up reliably.

The best times to post for dog groomers

Posting at the right time does not guarantee success, but it does give each post the best chance of being seen. For a local pet service business, these windows consistently perform well:

The most important thing is to post when your specific audience is online. After a few weeks of posting, check your Instagram Insights - it shows you exactly when your followers are most active. Use that data to fine-tune your timing.

How to write captions that get engagement

A great photo with no caption is a missed opportunity. The caption is where you build connection, drive saves, and get comments. You do not need to be a writer - you just need a simple structure.

The formula that works every time

  1. Start with a hook - the first line must stop the scroll. Use a question, a bold statement, or a surprising fact. "Did you know a Goldendoodle should be groomed every 6 to 8 weeks?" beats "New groom today!" every time.
  2. Tell the story - two or three sentences about this particular dog, what work was done, or something worth knowing. Keep it warm and personal.
  3. Add value - one quick tip the reader can use. This is what gets saves and shares.
  4. End with a CTA - ask a question ("What breed do you have?"), direct them to book ("DM us to check availability"), or ask them to tag a friend.

Caption length

Medium captions - 3 to 5 sentences - work best for most posts. Save longer captions for educational content where there is genuinely more to say. Keep booking and transformation posts punchy.

Hashtags

Use 10 to 20 hashtags. Mix broad ones (#doggrooming, #dogsofinstagram) with niche ones (#cockerspanielgrooming, #mobiledoggroomer) and local ones (#amsterdamdog, #dutchpets). Place them at the end of the caption or in the first comment - both work equally well.


Why Reels should be your priority right now

Instagram's algorithm heavily favours Reels over static images. A Reel from a small local grooming account can reach thousands of people in your area who have never heard of you - something that almost never happens with a regular photo post.

You do not need to be a video editor or a performer. The simplest Reels formats work best for groomers:

On Reels audio: Using a trending audio track can significantly boost reach. Check the Reels tab on Instagram weekly and note which sounds have the arrow icon - that means they are trending. Save them to use later.

The system that makes it easy

The biggest reason groomers stop posting is not lack of ideas - it is the time and mental energy it takes to think about it every day. The solution is a system that does the thinking for you in advance.

Batch your content creation

Set aside 30 minutes on a Sunday to plan the week ahead. Choose your three posts from the ideas list, write the captions while they are fresh in your mind, and save the photos. Then during the week, you are just pressing publish - not creating from scratch.

Use a content calendar

A simple calendar showing what goes out on which day removes the daily decision entirely. You open the calendar, see what today's post is, and post it. That is it.

Let someone else do it for you

If even the 30-minute Sunday session feels like too much on top of a full week of grooming, there is another option entirely. Fur Socials builds your entire month of content for you - branded templates in your colours, captions and hashtags written for pet businesses, and a content calendar telling you exactly what to post and when. You spend about 15 minutes a month swapping in your own photos. That is it.

Want your whole month of content sorted for you?

Fur Socials builds your branded Instagram templates, captions, and content calendar every month - built specifically for dog groomers and pet sitters. From €39 per month.

See what you get →

Key takeaways

The groomers who get fully booked through Instagram are not the ones with the most followers or the most polished feed. They are the ones who show up consistently, share their work honestly, and make it easy for local pet owners to trust them before they even pick up the phone.

Start with three posts this week. You already have everything you need.