Canine Standards Atlas

The Atlas/Grooming/Professional Dog Grooming Diplomas

VoluntaryUK

Professional Dog Grooming Diplomas

iPET Network · regulated by Ofqual

Ofqual-regulated dog-grooming qualifications, placing grooming inside the UK’s recognised framework of vocational standards.

01 What It Is

iPET Network is an awarding organisation whose dog-grooming qualifications are regulated in the UK by Ofqual, the body that oversees recognised vocational and academic qualifications, with parallel regulation in Wales and Northern Ireland. That regulation places its grooming diplomas within the national framework of recognised qualifications, rather than leaving them as a private certificate of attendance.

02 What It Covers

Its grooming qualifications, such as the diploma in dog grooming and salon management, cover the welfare and safety side of the trade as much as the styling: canine anatomy, health checking, safe handling, risk assessment, safe use of tools and canine first aid, alongside bathing, clipping and finishing. iPET Network was the first awarding organisation to offer a regulated canine first-aid qualification.

03 How It Is Checked

As a regulated awarding organisation, iPET Network sets the qualification and its assessment, delivered through approved training centres and subject to the oversight that regulation brings. There is no statutory licence to groom a dog in the UK, so the qualification is voluntary; its standing comes from being a regulated credential rather than an in-house certificate.

04 Why It Matters

Anyone can set up as a dog groomer in the UK without training, yet grooming means sharp tools, restraint and close handling of animals that may be anxious or unwell. A regulated qualification gives an owner, an employer or an insurer a recognised signal that a groomer has been assessed against a defined standard that takes the dog’s safety, not just its haircut, seriously.

Primary sources