Royalty-Free Music for Pet Grooming Videos
Choose tracks for salon promos, before and after reels, local ads, and client-friendly service content

Pet grooming videos work best when the music feels calm, friendly, and clean. A before/after clip, bath recap, de-shedding reel, or salon walkthrough should make the service feel trustworthy without making the pet look stressed or the edit feel too loud.
The tricky part is that grooming videos often sit between casual content and business marketing. A local salon may post the same clip on Instagram, add it to a booking page, use it in an ad, or send it to a client. This page helps you choose music that fits that workflow.
Choose music that makes the grooming result feel calm
Pet grooming content often shows a big change in a short edit. The music should support that change without making the video feel frantic.
For before/after videos, start with a track that has a clear but gentle lift. A light beat can help the cut from “before” to “after” feel satisfying. Avoid tracks that feel too intense, dramatic, or jokey. A nervous dog, a wet cat, or a close-up of brushing needs a calm edit.
For bath clips, nail trims, brushing, blow-drying, and salon walkthroughs, choose steady background music. The goal is to make the service feel careful and friendly. A local customer should see the video and think, “That place looks patient and professional.”
For groomers posting short-form video, pick tracks that leave room for captions. Text like “first puppy trim,” “summer cut,” or “ready for pickup” needs space. A crowded track can fight the message.
Match the track to the type of grooming video
A single pet salon may need different music for different posts.
A before/after reel needs a track with a clean change or soft lift. The music should make the final reveal feel polished without turning the pet into a joke.
A calm service video needs gentle pacing. Use this for nervous pets, senior dogs, cats, first visits, or spa-style clips. Soft piano, light acoustic guitar, and mellow lo-fi can help the edit feel slower and more caring.
A local promo needs a more confident track. A video showing the storefront, groomer, wash station, tools, and finished pets can use friendly pop or upbeat acoustic music. Keep it approachable. A pet grooming business sells trust before it sells style.
A client-delivery video needs extra care. If a videographer creates content for a grooming salon, the finished video needs music that the client can publish. The raw music file should stay out of the handoff.
Check the license before you post, advertise, or reuse the video
A grooming video can move quickly from organic post to commercial use. A salon owner may post a transformation reel, then reuse it on a booking page. A marketer may turn the same clip into a paid local ad. A freelancer may deliver the finished video to the grooming business.
The Audiodrome’s license allows commercial and non-commercial video, social content and social advertising, monetized online use, and client projects when the music stays embedded in the finished project.
Keep the receipt, license terms, track name, and final export together. That makes it easier to answer a platform claim or client question later.
Best fit: royalty-free music for repeat salon content
Royalty-free music is the better fit when a grooming business posts regularly, advertises locally, or reuses clips across Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, YouTube Shorts, and a booking website.
In-app music may be fine for a quick casual post, but it can create extra checks for ads, client delivery, and cross-platform uploads. A track cleared inside one app is not proof for use on a website, a paid ad, or a client-owned account.

