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why do dogs lick their feet

Dogs usually lick their own feet either because something is bothering their skin or because the licking feels soothing and has become a habit.

Main reasons dogs lick their feet

  • Allergies (very common)
    Environmental allergies (pollen, dust, grass, mold) and food sensitivities often make paws itchy, so dogs lick or chew at them to get relief.

Over time, this can cause redness, staining of the fur, and thickened skin between the toes.

  • Injury or foreign object
    A small cut, cracked pad, torn nail, or a tiny thorn/foxtail stuck in the paw can make a dog focus on that foot.

Dogs can’t use hands, so licking is their way of “first aid” and exploring what hurts.

  • Infection (yeast or bacteria)
    Constant moisture plus irritation can lead to yeast or bacterial infections between the toes or on the pads.

These infections often bring a musty or “corn chip” smell, redness, brown discharge, or scabs around the paw.

  • Stress, boredom, or anxiety
    Repetitive licking can turn into a coping behavior when a dog is anxious, under‑stimulated, or left alone a lot.

It can become almost “automatic,” similar to nail‑biting in humans, and may continue even after the original trigger is gone.

  • Habit or comfort behavior
    Licking releases feel‑good chemicals (endorphins), so some dogs learn that paw‑licking is calming and do it as a nightly ritual or when resting.

If nothing is physically wrong but the dog has licked for months, it may have become a self‑soothing habit.

When paw licking is a problem

  • The skin looks red, swollen, warm, or the fur is stained dark from saliva.
  • There is limping, flinching when you touch the paw, or a bad smell, pus, or open sores.
  • The dog licks obsessively, wakes from sleep to lick, or seems anxious and can’t easily be distracted from the behavior.

What you can do at home (first steps)

  • Gently check between toes, pads, and nails for cuts, burrs, thorns, ice, or anything stuck; remove what you can safely see and clean with a mild pet‑safe rinse.
  • Rinse or wipe paws after walks (especially in pollen season or after walking on salt/chemicals) and dry them well to reduce irritation and moisture.
  • Increase mental and physical activity (walks, sniffing games, training sessions) to reduce boredom‑driven licking.

When to call the vet

  • Licking is frequent or intense, or you see signs of infection (redness, swelling, smell, discharge) or pain.
  • The behavior has been going on for weeks, is getting worse, or your dog is losing hair or breaking the skin from licking.

A vet can check for allergies, infections, or injuries and may use medications, allergy management, or behavior strategies to break the cycle and keep the paws healthy.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.