Why ticks are dangerous

UK ticks can transmit:

How to remove a tick — step by step

  1. Get ready: wear gloves and use a tick hook (O’Tom or Tick Twister) or fine-pointed tweezers.
  2. Grip close to the skin: never grab the engorged body of the tick.
  3. Twist gently anticlockwise: the rotational movement releases the mouthparts cleanly.
  4. Disinfect the area: chlorhexidine or saline on the bite site.
  5. Keep the tick in alcohol: useful if identification or testing is needed later.
  6. Wash your hands: ticks bite humans too.

Mistakes that make things worse

MistakeWhy it is dangerous
Smearing vaseline or oil before removingThe tick regurgitates, increasing disease transmission
Crushing or squeezing the bodySame effect — injects the tick’s gut contents into your dog
Burning it with a lighter or matchDangerous for your dog and counterproductive
Pulling straight up with forceThe mouthparts can stay embedded and cause infection

What to do after removal

Prevention — the year-round basics

UK tick season used to be April-October, but milder winters mean ticks are active almost year-round across much of the south and west. Most vets now recommend continuous cover.

Check your dog after every walk in a tick zone

Always go over your dog after walks in woodland, long grass or moorland (Scottish Highlands, New Forest, South Downs, Lake District). Tick hotspots on the body: between the toes, around the ears, groin, armpits and neck. A two-minute check can prevent a lifelong disease.

How CanAI helps

Log every tick removal and the date in CanAI’s health tracker — handy if symptoms appear weeks later. The AI chat can talk you through removal and red-flag symptoms in real time.