SYMPTOM
Crusty or scabby skin
Areas of dried, flaky crusting on the skin surface, sometimes with yellowish or brownish scabs that may lift to reveal moist or reddened skin beneath.
Bacterial Skin Infection
Crusting is one of the most common manifestations of pyoderma, forming as pustules rupture and their contents dry on the skin surface. The crusts in bacterial pyoderma often have a characteristic yellowish or honey-coloured appearance and may be surrounded by circular rims of peeling skin (epidermal collarettes). Removal of the crusts may reveal moist, reddened, and sometimes ulcerated skin beneath.
Allergic Dermatitis
Allergic skin conditions produce crusting through a combination of self-trauma from scratching and secondary bacterial infection. The distribution of crusts may follow allergic patterns — concentrated on the face, paws, ears, ventral abdomen, and flexural surfaces in atopic dermatitis, or more generalised in flea allergy. The crusts are often accompanied by redness, thickened skin, and persistent itching.
Parasitic Infestation
Mite infestations such as sarcoptic mange produce intense itching and characteristic crusting, particularly along the ear margins, elbows, hocks, and ventral chest. Demodectic mange can produce crusting in conjunction with hair loss and folliculitis. The crusting from parasitic causes reflects a combination of the parasites' activity, the host's inflammatory response, and secondary bacterial infection.
Autoimmune Skin Disease
Immune-mediated conditions such as pemphigus foliaceus produce characteristic crusting, often concentrated on the face, ear pinnae, nasal planum, and footpads. The crusts in autoimmune disease may be thicker and more adherent than those of simple bacterial infection and may resist standard antibiotic therapy. The distribution pattern often provides important diagnostic clues.
Dermatophytosis (Ringworm)
Fungal infections of the skin can produce crusty, scaly lesions that may form characteristic circular patterns with raised, crusted margins and clearing centres. The crusts in ringworm are typically dry and grey-white, and the associated hair loss may show broken, stubbed hairs at the margins of the lesions.
Why timing matters
Early observation
Early crusting may appear as small, isolated patches of dried material on the skin surface, sometimes mistaken for dirt, dandruff, or dried mud. The crusts may lift easily to reveal slightly reddened skin beneath, or may be more firmly adherent. Early crusting is often most noticeable on areas with thinner hair coverage, such as the belly, inner thighs, or ear margins.
Later presentation
Extensive crusting can cover large areas of the body, creating a rough, scabby texture to the coat. The skin beneath may become thickened, darkened, and chronically inflamed. Heavy crusting can mat the hair, trap moisture and bacteria, and create an environment that perpetuates infection and inflammation. The dog may be significantly uncomfortable, and the skin odour may become noticeable as bacterial numbers increase beneath the crusted surface.
The trajectory of crusty skin changes depends on the underlying cause and whether it is addressed. Bacterial pyoderma crusts may wax and wane with the activity of the infection and any underlying allergic trigger. Parasitic causes tend to spread progressively across the body as mite populations grow. Autoimmune causes may fluctuate with the activity of the immune-mediated process. Whether the crusting is localised or spreading, responding to topical care or resistant, and associated with itching or pain all provide context about the underlying cause.
Conditions commonly associated
Pyoderma in Dogs
Crusty or scabby skin frequently develops as pyoderma progresses, with pustules rupturing and forming dried exudate over affected areas.
Atopic Dermatitis in Dogs
Atopic dermatitis often progresses through cycles of inflammation and self-trauma, with chronic scratching and licking leading to crusty lesions and scab formation over affected areas.
Food Allergy in Dogs
Food allergies in dogs frequently manifest as persistent skin inflammation, and repeated scratching or chewing at affected areas may result in crusty, scabbed lesions over time.
Flea Allergy Dermatitis
Secondary crusting and scabbing often develop from self-trauma and may indicate secondary bacterial infection.
Dermatophytosis (Ringworm)
Dermatophytosis typically causes scaling and crusting of the skin, particularly at the edges of lesions where the fungal infection is most active.
Demodectic Mange
As demodectic mange progresses and secondary infection develops, the skin may become crusty and scabby, particularly in areas of deep follicular damage.
Sarcoptic Mange
Thick yellowish crusts form as the condition progresses, particularly at sites of intense mite activity and secondary infection.
Sebaceous Adenitis
Crusty, scaly skin is characteristic of sebaceous adenitis due to loss of normal skin oils and abnormal keratinisation.
Pyoderma
As pustules rupture and dry, they form characteristic crusts and scabs, sometimes with a honey-coloured appearance typical of bacterial skin infection.
When to explore further
Crusting that spreads progressively across the body, involves multiple areas simultaneously, or fails to improve with basic grooming and cleaning may suggest an active underlying process rather than a simple superficial irritation.
Crusty lesions concentrated on the face, ear tips, nasal bridge, and footpads may suggest an immune-mediated condition that requires different investigation and management than straightforward bacterial skin infection.
Crusting accompanied by intense itching, particularly if the itching preceded the crusting, may suggest an allergic or parasitic driver where the crusts represent secondary infection or self-trauma rather than the primary problem.
Crusts that are thick, adherent, and recur despite appropriate topical care may indicate a deeper skin process or an ongoing trigger that is maintaining the cycle of skin damage and crusting.
Crusty skin changes in a young dog that are spreading progressively, particularly if accompanied by hair loss in a patchy distribution, may suggest demodicosis or dermatophytosis as underlying causes.
Noting the distribution of crusts across the body, their colour and consistency, whether they are itchy, and how the skin appears after gentle removal of the crusts can help characterise the underlying process. Photographing the affected areas at regular intervals provides a visual record of progression or improvement. Observing whether the crusting responds to gentle cleaning and moisturising, or whether it recurs rapidly after removal, provides additional context about the activity of the underlying process.
Last reviewed: 24 April 2026 · Dr Alastair Greenway MRCVS