Mini Aussie Grooming: Ear Trimming, Brushing, Bathing & Coat Care
Mini Aussies are not high-maintenance dogs, but they do need the right kind of grooming. The goal is not to over-sculpt them. The goal is to protect their natural working coat, keep them comfortable, and maintain that clean Aussie outline.
A Mini Aussie should look clean, natural, and functional — not over-groomed.
The Australian Shepherd coat was designed to work. It protects from weather, sheds dirt, insulates from heat and cold, and does not need sculpting like a doodle or poodle coat. A good grooming routine is simple: brush regularly, keep mats from forming, trim around the ears and feet when needed, and never shave the double coat.
If you are used to dogs that need constant haircuts, the Mini Aussie coat is refreshing. It does shed, especially during seasonal coat blows, but it does not require elaborate professional grooming to stay healthy. Most families can handle routine maintenance at home with the right tools and a little consistency.
Where people get into trouble is either neglecting brushing altogether or going too far in the other direction and over-trimming a coat that is supposed to look natural. The best Mini Aussie grooming is subtle. You should notice the dog looking neat, not the haircut.
The goal of grooming a Mini Aussie is not to make them look like a different breed. It is to keep the natural Aussie coat clean, healthy, and functional.
More often during seasonal shedding.
As needed, not constantly.
Keep feet healthy and movement correct.
Clean outline, never over-sculpted.
Why The Mini Aussie Coat Is Different
Mini Aussies have a medium-length double coat. The outer coat is weather-resistant and helps repel dirt, moisture, and debris. The undercoat provides insulation and is the part that sheds most heavily during seasonal coat blows.
This coat is one of the things that makes the breed so functional. A muddy Mini Aussie can dry, shake off, and look surprisingly clean again. That is not an accident. This is a working coat.
Because the coat has a purpose, it should be maintained instead of stripped, shaved, or aggressively reshaped. Brushing removes dead undercoat. Bathing loosens dirt and coat. Light trimming keeps furnishings neat. That is usually all this breed needs.

How To Trim Mini Aussie Ears
Ear trimming is one of the small grooming details that can make a Mini Aussie look cleaner without changing the natural breed outline. The idea is to remove excess wispy hair around the ear edges and soften any wild tufts, not to carve the ear into a sharp shape.
For most dogs, you only need light trimming around the ear leather, a little cleanup behind the ear where mats can form, and gentle blending so the ear looks tidy. If you are new to this, go slow. You can always take off more later, but you cannot put hair back once it is gone.
Australian Shepherd Ear Trimming Video
This video walks through the basic ear trimming process so you can see the shape, angle, and amount of hair being removed.
Ear trimming rule: keep it natural. A Mini Aussie should never look overly sculpted, shaved around the ears, or trimmed into a different breed silhouette. Clean and tidy is the goal.

The Grooming Task That Matters Most
If you only stay consistent with one thing, make it brushing. Brushing removes loose undercoat, prevents mats, distributes natural oils, and keeps hair out of your house.
Mini Aussies usually need the most brushing behind the ears, around the collar area, under the front legs, through the britches, and anywhere the coat rubs against itself. These are the spots that can mat if ignored.
- Behind the ears
- Under the collar
- Chest furnishings
- Leg feathering
- Britches and tail area
- Underarms and friction areas
Mini Aussie Grooming Tools Worth Having
You do not need a salon full of equipment. A few good tools will cover almost everything.
Slicker Brush
Use for regular brushing, light detangling, and removing loose surface hair. This is the basic tool most families will use the most.
Undercoat Rake
Best during spring and fall coat blows. It reaches through the outer coat to remove loose undercoat before it ends up on your floor.
Comb + Blending Shears
A comb helps check for hidden mats. Blending shears are useful for ears and feet because they create a softer natural finish.
Skip the heavy de-shedding blades if you are not experienced. Some tools can cut or damage healthy coat when used aggressively. For most Mini Aussie families, a slicker brush, undercoat rake, comb, and light trimming scissors are enough.



How Often Should You Bathe A Mini Aussie?
Most Mini Aussies do not need frequent baths. Every 6–8 weeks is plenty for many dogs, unless they get into something dirty or smelly. Over-bathing can strip the coat and dry the skin, especially if harsh shampoos are used.
During seasonal shedding, a warm bath can help loosen dead undercoat. Brush before the bath, bathe thoroughly, rinse extremely well, dry completely, and then brush again once the coat is dry.
The rinse matters. Product left in a double coat can irritate the skin and make the coat feel dull or sticky. When you think you have rinsed enough, rinse one more time.

Shaving a Mini Aussie is not a shortcut. It can damage the coat.
A Mini Aussie double coat protects the dog from heat, cold, sun, brush, and moisture. Shaving removes that natural protection and can change how the coat grows back. It also does not stop shedding. The undercoat will still shed — it will just shed as shorter hair.
There are rare medical reasons a dog may need to be clipped by a veterinarian, but routine shaving for convenience is not good coat care. Brush out the undercoat. Do not shave the dog.
The Little Grooming Habits That Make A Big Difference
Nails should be trimmed every 2–4 weeks depending on growth and activity level. Long nails change how a dog stands and moves, which matters for an athletic breed. If you hear nails clicking constantly on hard floors, they are probably too long.
Foot trimming is optional but helpful. You can lightly trim the hair around the bottom of the foot pads so the dog has better traction and tracks less mud. Keep it tidy and natural. Do not hollow out the foot or over-sculpt it.
Check ears weekly, but do not over-clean healthy ears. A normal ear should not smell bad, look red, or have heavy debris. If you see irritation, discharge, odor, head shaking, or scratching, that is a vet conversation, not a grooming project.
Mini Aussie Grooming FAQs
Do Mini Aussies need professional grooming?
No. Most families can maintain a Mini Aussie at home with brushing, baths as needed, nail trims, and light ear or foot cleanup. A professional groomer can help if you are not comfortable trimming.
How often should I brush my Mini Aussie?
Plan on brushing once or twice a week for normal maintenance. During seasonal coat blows, brushing every few days makes a major difference.
Should I shave my Mini Aussie in summer?
No. The double coat helps regulate temperature and protects the skin. Shaving can damage coat texture and does not actually solve shedding.
How do you trim Mini Aussie ears?
Trim lightly around the edge of the ear and blend excess wispy hair. The ear should still look natural. Use the video in this post as a visual guide.
Where do Mini Aussies mat the most?
Behind the ears, under the collar, under the front legs, through the britches, and around feathering. These areas need the most consistent brushing.
How often should I bathe a Mini Aussie?
Every 6–8 weeks works for many dogs, or as needed when dirty. During shedding season, a bath can help loosen dead undercoat before brushing.
What brush is best?
A slicker brush for regular maintenance, an undercoat rake for seasonal shedding, and a comb for checking behind the ears and feathering.
Do Mini Aussies smell?
A healthy Mini Aussie should not have a strong odor. Persistent smell can point to skin, ear, dental, or diet issues that should be addressed.
Helpful Blue Buckaroo Resources
A well-groomed Mini Aussie should still look like a Mini Aussie.
Proper grooming protects the coat, keeps your dog comfortable, and preserves the natural beauty of the breed. Keep it clean. Keep it healthy. Keep it Aussie.
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