01 A cargo area that stays composed—no matter the paws 02 What a pet cargo liner needs to handle (beyond “just coverage”) 03 Meet “MudLock”: heavy-duty quilting…
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What do car detailers use to remove pet hair?
Car detailers typically rely on a mix of mechanical tools and static attraction to pull pet hair out of carpet, seat fabric, and tight seams. The most common go-to items are rubber hair removal tools (like rubber brushes and squeegees), electrostatic gloves, pumice-style blocks made for automotive upholstery, and high-suction vacuums paired with crevice attachments.
For stubborn, embedded hair, they’ll also add compressed air or a tornador-style air tool to lift hair from the fibers before vacuuming.

Pro tools detailers reach for (and why they work)
Rubber brushes and rubber squeegees are a staple because rubber grips hair and creates friction against fabric. A few firm passes can gather hair into clumps that are easy to pick up or vacuum.
Electrostatic pet hair removal gloves help attract and collect loose hair quickly, especially on seats, headliners, and around stitching where larger tools can’t fit. They’re also useful between deeper cleanings. For a closer look at how an electrostatic glove works and how to use it effectively, see this guide .
Pumice-style pet hair stones (automotive-safe versions) can pull deeply embedded hair from carpeted areas. Detailers use them with controlled pressure because aggressive scrubbing can fuzz delicate upholstery.
High-powered vacuums + crevice tools finish the job by removing what’s been lifted and clumped. A vacuum alone often can’t dislodge hair that’s woven into fibers, so it’s usually step two, not step one.
Fit details to confirm
Before you commit to a tool, match it to where the hair collects and how you clean. Seat fabric, carpet pile, and tight seams respond differently, so it’s worth confirming the workflow you’ll actually repeat.
If you’re considering the electrostatic option, review the live details here: Electrostatic Pet Hair Removal Glove | “Swooper” by Owleys .
A simple detailer-style workflow
Start by vacuuming loose debris. Next, use a rubber brush, squeegee, or electrostatic glove to lift and gather hair from fabric and carpet. Blow out seams and hard-to-reach tracks with compressed air if needed, then vacuum again to remove the hair you’ve loosened.
“Pet hair on fleece blankets used to be a pain but this helps lift a lot of it before laundry day!”
For the full product context, see the main Owleys guide.





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