From Skinification to Furification: The Pet Wellness Boom

Key Takeaways:

Pet wellness is beauty’s fast-growing emotional frontier.Fragrance, tech, and longevity rituals are extending to animals.Regulation and premiumization are professionalizing the pet beauty industry.

Beauty innovation has firmly focused on improving human skin. But as the global beauty and wellness market becomes increasingly saturated, a quieter, more emotionally driven frontier is emerging: pets. As the birthrate declines and more millennials and Gen Zs identify themselves as DINKs (Dual Income, No Kids), people’s pets are increasingly becoming their primary emotional and financial dependents.

From skincare and supplements to fragrance and AI diagnostics, pet wellness is fast becoming beauty’s next growth engine. Brands are beginning to treat animals not as an afterthought but as equal participants in the self-care economy. Which makes this author question, am I a bad dog owner for not giving my cavapoo a signature scent?

The global pet perfume market alone is expected to reach $2.7 billion by 2034, signaling rising demand for sensorial and wellness-driven pet products that extend beyond functional grooming. This shift is underpinned by the fact that 75% of US millennials consider pets part of their family, and over half are willing to reduce personal spending to prioritize their pet’s quality of life.

The surge in pet wellness and beauty innovation has roots in China’s rapidly evolving pet economy, where cultural and demographic shifts have transformed animals from utilitarian companions to family members and lifestyle consumers. China’s pet market has expanded into a multibillion-dollar sector, driven by products ranging from smart health devices to luxury accessories. Expressions of emotional care and identity are prioritized, with projected values expected to rise as pet ownership grows alongside declining marriage and birth rates.

Furry Fragrances

While OUAI and Kiehl’s launched scented pet grooming lines that mirror their human hero products, luxury pet skincare startup DOG is pet-forward wellness. Founded by veterinarian Dr. Lisa Chimes, DOG has raised millions to bring skinification into pet routines, offering everything from three different scented colognes ($20 USD each) to supplements such as omega-3 drops ($39 AUD, $26.07 USD). Built around targeted grooming sets for concerns such as coat care (from $125 USD), detangling ($108 USD), and skin sensitivity ($110 USD), the brand launched after Dr. Chimes faced years of being unable to find dog-grooming products that were natural, gentle, and family-safe. DOG by Dr. Lisa is sold DTC through Chewy.com, Petco, David Jones, and Harrods.

Sunny Side Up (SSUP) is a Korean-born brand redefining what pet care looks like when beauty, technology, and lifestyle collide. Founded by former K-beauty executive Avril Han, SSUP was built on a radical idea: If humans benefit from clinically backed skincare, why shouldn’t animals? With fragrance formulations that calm anxious dogs or attract cats using catnip-based notes ($19.99), the brand blurs the line between pet wellness and fine fragrance. Its Gen Z aesthetic and experiential pop-ups have transformed pet care into a desirability-driven category.

DedCool extended its cult Taunt scent into pet-safe shampoos and fragrances. The Pet Bundle (£123, $165.50), reflects the broader calibration of what fragrance now represents in contemporary life. As consumers increasingly seek cohesion between personal ritual and their domestic environments, DedCool positions scent as a lifestyle infrastructure. “We believe in the power of scent, and that it should be extended to all touchpoints across your life—not just yourself, your home, your laundry, etc., but even your furry friends,” Carina Chaz, founder and CEO of DedCool, said in a statement to BeautyMatter. This framing elevates pet fragrances beyond grooming into a form of emotional continuity, allowing consumers to embed their signature scent into every layer of daily life, including their animals. DedCool aligns pet care with the logic of modern wellness culture; now consumers can match their Jack Russell Terriers with their laundry detergent with a Pet Fragrance costing £23 ($30.94) and the matching Pet Shampoo (£32, $43.06, or the refill pouch £62, $83.48). 

DedCool’s pet line also highlights the accelerating premiumization of the pet sector and the growing overlap between human and animal beauty consumption. The brand confirms that crossover purchasing behavior is already shaping demand. “We are seeing rapid growth in terms of the percentage of customers that are coming to us and purchasing into multiple categories beyond just traditional fragrance,” said Chaz. “So that their signature DedCool scent can show up in their lives across a variety of mediums (pet care included!).”

DedCool understands how pets are being incorporated into consumers’ core identity rituals. The pet products aren’t a novelty or niche. “The pet industry is growing fast,” said Chaz. “We’ll continue seeing an uptick in premium pet offerings.”

Luxury fashion house Dolce & Gabbana (D&G) stepped into the pet wellness arena with Fefé ($108), its first fragrance mist formulated specifically for dogs, inspired by co-founder Domenico Dolce’s own canine companion. Designed with a vet-friendly, alcohol-free formula and certified under Safe Pet Cosmetics standards, the scent blends ylang-ylang, musk, and sandalwood into a warm, delicate profile that offers both odor control and an elevated sensory experience for pets and owners alike. The perfume is housed in a lacquered bottle adorned with a 24-carat, gold-plated paw motif, reflecting D&G’s signature opulence while signaling a growing trend of luxury brands extending lifestyle categories into pet care. Fefé exemplifies how premium fragrance houses are reimagining sensory routines for four-legged family members amid a booming global pet market.

Tech Meets Wagging Tails

Pet wellness is not limited to fragrance and shampoo. Biohacking wellness brand HigherDOSE officially positioned its longevity philosophy to go beyond humans with the launch of its infrared pulsed electromagnetic field therapy (PEMF) Pet Bed (small/medium $599 or medium/large $749), marking a significant step in the evolution of premium pet wellness. Known for bringing infrared and PEMF technologies into mainstream wellness conversations, the brand applied those same therapeutic frameworks to animals, positioning the beds as active participants in the longevity economy. The Pet Bed fuses PEMF therapy with infrared heat to support circulation, recovery, relaxation, and cellular repair, offering six veterinary-trusted frequencies and customizable heat settings.

HigherDOSE’s move was rooted in changing consumer behavior. “Pet parents are now investing in their animals the same way they invest in themselves,” said a HigherDOSE representative in a statement to BeautyMatter. Post-pandemic, pets had become “emotional anchors,” driving demand for science-backed products that support calm, comfort, and healthy aging. Importantly, HigherDOSE brought human-grade safety standards into a largely unregulated category, engineering the Pet Bed with low-electromagnetic field (EMF) output, medical-grade materials, veterinarian review, and third-party EMF testing.

Pet care and technology come in the form of smart collars, with products like the Fi Series 3+ AI-powered dog collar leading the way in real-time health and behavioral tracking. More than a GPS tracker, the collar uses AI to monitor activity, rest patterns, eating, drinking, and behaviors like barking or scratching, offering owners insights into their dog’s well-being via a connected app and wearable integrations like the Apple Watch. With enhanced satellite-based GPS and long battery life, this tech aims to give pet parents peace of mind about safety, fitness, and behavioral trends in one comprehensive device.