Dog Ear Infection Treatment: A Vet-Informed 2026 Guide

Veterinarian examining a dog's ear with an otoscope — dog ear infection treatment starts with a vet diagnosis

Short answer: Effective dog ear infection treatment starts with a veterinary diagnosis. Your vet examines the ear and looks at a sample of the discharge under a microscope (cytology) to identify whether yeast, bacteria, or both are overgrowing, then treats it with a professional ear cleaning plus prescription medicated ear drops — usually a combination of an antibiotic, an antifungal, and an anti-inflammatory. Mild, early cases can be supported at home with a vet-approved ear cleaner, but painful ears, heavy discharge, or a head tilt need a vet promptly. Never pour hydrogen peroxide, rubbing alcohol, or tea tree oil into a dog's ear.

Veterinarian examining a dog's ear with an otoscope — dog ear infection treatment starts with a vet diagnosis
A vet exam plus ear cytology is the foundation of any successful ear infection treatment.

An ear infection — clinically, otitis externa — is one of the most common reasons dogs visit the vet, affecting roughly 7.3% of dogs each year in a large UK primary-care study of more than 22,000 dogs (O'Neill et al., BMC Veterinary Research, 2021). The good news: most cases clear quickly once they're treated correctly. The catch is that "correctly" almost always means matching the medication to the specific organism your vet finds — which is why the home remedies that dominate search results so often fail. This guide walks through exactly how vets treat ear infections in 2026, what it costs, how long recovery takes, and where safe at-home care fits in. For the broader picture of canine ear anatomy and maintenance, see our complete dog ear health guide.

How a vet diagnoses a dog ear infection

You can't tell what's driving an ear infection just by looking or smelling — and that matters, because the treatment for a yeast infection is different from the treatment for a bacterial one. A veterinary exam typically includes:

  • Otoscopic exam — looking down the ear canal to assess redness, swelling, discharge, and, critically, whether the eardrum (tympanic membrane) is intact.
  • Ear cytology — a swab of the discharge is stained and examined under the microscope. This is described in the veterinary literature as the single most informative test for ear infections, because it reveals whether the culprit is Malassezia yeast, bacteria such as Staphylococcus, or rod-shaped bacteria like Pseudomonas that hint at a more stubborn infection (Paterson & Matyskiewicz, Canadian Veterinary Journal, 2018).
  • Culture and sensitivity — reserved for severe, recurring, or rod-dominant infections to pinpoint the right antibiotic.

This is also the moment your vet confirms the eardrum is intact — a safety check that decides which medications and cleaners can be used at all. Learn the warning signs to catch early in our guide to dog ear infection symptoms.

The standard treatment pathway (what your vet actually does)

For a typical uncomplicated infection, treatment follows a clear sequence:

  1. Professional ear cleaning. The vet flushes wax, debris, and discharge out of the canal. This isn't cosmetic — removing that material lets medication reach the ear lining and helps break down the biofilm that shields bacteria. Cleaning the canal first is described as "critical" to treatment success.
  2. Prescription medicated ear drops. The mainstay of treatment. These are combination products that pair an antibiotic + an antifungal + a glucocorticoid (anti-inflammatory). Common examples your vet may prescribe include Claro, Osurnia, Mometamax, and Otomax. Some are long-acting single doses applied in the clinic; others you apply at home. In a placebo-controlled trial, a florfenicol/terbinafine/betamethasone gel achieved treatment success in about 65% of dogs versus 43% on placebo.
  3. Oral medication (selected cases). Oral antibiotics or antifungals, and sometimes a short course of steroids, are added for severe, chronic, or middle-ear infections. Routine oral antibiotics are not recommended for simple outer-ear infections.
  4. Advanced care for end-stage ears. Chronically infected, scarred ear canals that no longer respond may ultimately need surgery (total ear canal ablation). This is a last resort after other options are exhausted.

Why you can't buy the "best" drops yourself: the most effective medicated ear drops are prescription-only for a reason — the wrong drug in the wrong ear (or in an ear with a ruptured eardrum) can worsen the infection or damage hearing. For a plain-English breakdown of prescription versus over-the-counter options, see our companion guide to the best dog ear infection treatment.

Is it an emergency? A simple triage guide

Not every ear infection needs a same-day visit, but some signs shouldn't wait. Use this to decide how fast to act — when in doubt, call your vet.

See a vet now

Emergency signs

  • Head tilt, stumbling, or loss of balance
  • Darting eyes (nystagmus) or facial droop
  • Sudden hearing loss
  • Bloody or pus-like discharge, intense pain
Vet within 1–2 days

Clear infection

  • Persistent scratching & head shaking
  • Strong odor, brown/yellow discharge
  • Redness or swelling in the canal
  • Pawing at one ear repeatedly
Support at home

Mild & early

  • Slightly waxy or yeasty-smelling ears
  • Occasional light scratching
  • No pain, no discharge, eardrum known intact
  • Prevention between vet visits

The emergency signs on the left can indicate a middle- or inner-ear infection or a ruptured eardrum. Middle-ear involvement (otitis media) develops in up to half of chronic cases, which is exactly why these signs need veterinary assessment — prescription treatment and sometimes imaging, never home remedies.

Diagram of a dog's L-shaped ear canal and inflammation — how canine ear infections develop
The canine ear canal is L-shaped, which traps moisture and debris and makes infections hard to flush at home.

What does dog ear infection treatment cost?

Costs vary widely by region and severity, so treat these as ballpark estimates rather than quotes. As a general picture from US veterinary-cost and pet-insurance sources:

Scenario Typical US estimate What's included
Uncomplicated infection $150–$500 Exam, ear cytology, medicated drops
Chronic / severe case $500–$1,000 Sedated deep cleaning, culture, oral meds, rechecks
End-stage surgery (TECA) $3,500–$4,400/ear Salvage surgery for irreversibly diseased canals

The takeaway: catching an infection early and finishing treatment properly is far cheaper than letting it become chronic. The single biggest driver of expensive, recurring cases is stopping treatment too soon.

Recovery timeline: what to expect

Most uncomplicated ear infections improve within days and resolve over one to two weeks — but "looks better" and "is actually cured" are not the same thing.

  • 2–3Days 2–3: Pain and head shaking usually start to ease as the anti-inflammatory takes effect. The ear may still smell and discharge.
  • 7Day 7: Redness, odor, and discharge should be noticeably reduced. Keep applying medication exactly as prescribed — do not stop because it "looks fine."
  • 14Day 10–14: Many cases finish their course here. A recheck cytology confirms the yeast or bacteria are actually gone, not just quieter.
  • The recheck matters most: stopping early — before the follow-up swab — is the leading cause of "recurring" infections. Chronic cases can take weeks to months and ongoing maintenance.

Why does my dog keep getting ear infections?

If your dog has had this more than once, the ear is usually the symptom, not the root problem. In a study of 100 dogs with ear infections, allergic skin disease was the single most common underlying cause (found in 43 of 100 dogs) — ahead of grass seeds, ear mites, and everything else — and 63% of those cases were chronic or recurrent (Saridomichelakis et al., Veterinary Dermatology, 2007). Environmental allergies (atopic dermatitis) and food sensitivities inflame the skin lining the ear canal, which then lets yeast and bacteria overgrow again and again.

This is why "clean the ear and move on" doesn't break the cycle. Recurring infections warrant a conversation with your vet about an allergy work-up — and long-term skin-barrier and immune support. Because the yeast behind so many recurring ears is the same organism that overgrows elsewhere on the body, recurring ear trouble often traces back to a broader dog yeast infection picture. Omega-3 fatty acids (EPA and DHA) are the best-evidenced nutritional support here: a double-blind, placebo-controlled canine trial found they improved itch and skin scores in allergic dogs (Mueller et al., 2004).

Ear infection, ear mites, allergies, or normal wax?

These get confused constantly, and the treatments differ. This table helps you describe what you're seeing to your vet — it's not a substitute for a diagnosis.

Clue Ear infection Ear mites Allergy flare Normal wax
Discharge Brown/yellow, often smelly Dark, dry, "coffee grounds" Variable, often both ears Light tan, no odor
Smell Yeasty or foul Mild Mild unless infected None
Itch level Moderate–high Intense High, plus paws/skin None
Most common in Floppy-eared, allergic dogs Puppies, multi-pet homes Allergy-prone dogs All dogs
Next step Vet cytology Vet (mite meds) Vet allergy work-up Routine cleaning

7 mistakes to avoid

  • Pouring in hydrogen peroxide, rubbing alcohol, or vinegar. These sting inflamed tissue and leave moisture behind that feeds yeast.
  • Using tea tree oil. Concentrated tea tree oil is toxic to dogs — a 443-case veterinary review documented tremors, weakness, and ataxia (Khan et al., JAVMA, 2014).
  • Digging with cotton swabs. Q-tips push debris deeper into the L-shaped canal and can damage the eardrum.
  • Stopping medication early. The infection quiets before it's gone; quitting before the recheck is the top cause of relapse.
  • Reusing old prescription drops. Last year's leftover drops may be the wrong drug for this infection — and dangerous if the eardrum is now compromised.
  • Putting anything in a possibly ruptured ear. If there's a head tilt, balance loss, or bloody discharge, stop and see a vet — many products are ototoxic through a perforated eardrum.
  • Ignoring the "why." Treating each flare without addressing the underlying allergy guarantees the next one.

Safe home care and prevention that actually helps

Once a vet has ruled out an active infection and confirmed the eardrum is intact, a consistent hygiene and skin-support routine is your best defense against the next flare. This is where at-home products belong — supporting healthy ears and reducing the triggers, not treating diagnosed disease.

Routine cleaning with a quality otic cleaner

A good dog ear cleaner does more than a saline rinse. Pure Majesty Pets' otic solution is pH-balanced to a dog's ear (5.0–5.5), chlorhexidine-free so it won't sting, and uses salicylic acid (0.2%) to break down and lift excess wax and debris from the canal. It adds phytosphingosine — a ceramide precursor associated with skin-barrier support in veterinary dermatology — plus aloe, panthenol (B5), and allantoin to soothe, and natural cyclodextrin to capture odor at the source rather than masking it. The point of difference is barrier support, not just flushing.

Feature Pure Majesty ear cleaner Basic saline / wipes
Dissolves deep ear wax (salicylic acid) Yes Barely
pH-matched to the ear (5.0–5.5) Yes Varies
Barrier support (phytosphingosine) Yes No
Odor capture (cyclodextrin) Yes No
Chlorhexidine-free, non-stinging Yes Varies

For technique, follow our step-by-step guide to how to clean your dog's ears at home — clean 2–3 times a week for prone dogs, and always dry the ears after swimming or baths.

Support the skin from the inside

Because recurring ears so often trace back to allergy and yeast, many owners pair external hygiene with internal skin and gut support. Pure Majesty's dog yeast infection treatment drops are a 19-ingredient oral formula (about 292 mg of active support per mL) built around the strongest-evidenced nutrient here — omega-3 salmon oil — alongside caprylic acid, oregano-derived carvacrol, quercetin, and a Saccharomyces boulardii postbiotic that works the gut-skin axis. Used consistently, it's a support for skin comfort and normal yeast balance in prone dogs — not a treatment for a diagnosed infection, which still needs your vet.

Build a healthy-ear routine

Clean gently, dry thoroughly, support the skin: our dog ear cleaner and yeast balance drops, part of the dog ear & eye care range.

Frequently asked questions

How do vets treat a dog ear infection? +
Vets diagnose the infection with an exam and ear cytology, then clean the canal and prescribe medicated ear drops that combine an antibiotic, an antifungal, and an anti-inflammatory. Severe or chronic cases may add oral medication. The specific drug depends on whether yeast, bacteria, or both are found.
Can I treat my dog's ear infection at home without a vet? +
Only mild, early, yeast-type ears in a dog with a known-intact eardrum are reasonable to support at home with a vet-approved cleaner. A painful ear, discharge, a head tilt, or no improvement in a few days needs a vet — many effective medications are prescription-only, and the wrong product can worsen the ear.
What is the fastest way to clear a dog ear infection? +
The fastest route is an accurate diagnosis followed by the correct prescription drops — guessing with home remedies usually prolongs it. Pain often eases within 2–3 days of proper treatment, with resolution over 1–2 weeks, confirmed by a recheck.
Why does my dog keep getting ear infections? +
Recurring infections usually mean an unaddressed underlying cause — most often an allergy that inflames the ear canal and lets yeast or bacteria overgrow. Breaking the cycle means treating each flare properly and managing the allergy, plus routine cleaning and skin support between episodes.
What should I never put in my dog's ear? +
Avoid hydrogen peroxide, rubbing alcohol, undiluted vinegar, and tea tree oil (which is toxic to dogs). Don't use cotton swabs deep in the canal, and never instill anything if the eardrum may be ruptured — see your vet first.

Veterinary disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional veterinary advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Ear infections require veterinary examination. Always consult your veterinarian before starting any product, especially if your dog is pregnant, nursing, on medication, or may have a ruptured eardrum.

  • O'Neill DG, et al. Frequency and predisposing factors for canine otitis externa in the UK. BMC Veterinary Research, 2021. PMC8422687.
  • Paterson S, Matyskiewicz W. Canine otitis externa — treatment and complications. Canadian Veterinary Journal, 2018. PMC6294027.
  • Saridomichelakis MN, et al. Aetiology of canine otitis externa: a retrospective study of 100 cases. Veterinary Dermatology, 2007. PMID 17845622.
  • Khan SA, McLean MK, Slater MR. Concentrated tea tree oil toxicosis in dogs and cats: 443 cases. JAVMA, 2014. PMID 24344857.
  • Mueller RS, et al. Effect of omega-3 fatty acids on canine atopic dermatitis. J Small Anim Pract, 2004. PMID 15206474.