Metopets Rubber Curry Brush Review – Solid Wet/Dry Grooming Pick

Metopets Rubber Curry Brush for Short Haired Dogs, Soft Curry Comb with Removable Screen, Silicone Pet Brush, Use Wet as Bath Scrubber or Dry for Grooming Loose Hair
Metopets
- Multipurpose – Massaging, relaxing, exfoliating and bathing, all in one multi-functional brush for dogs and pets.
- Gentle Massage - Soft rubber bristles on the brush that allow you to relax pet while bathing or grooming. Your pet will ask for more.
- 4 Point Bristles – 4 point bristles are friendly to all pets and coat types, stimulates the circulation and nourishes the skin or coat.
- Used Dry or Wet – Perfect for dog massaging and washing. Can also be used to remove fur or lint from clothing, furniture and carpet.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Removable screen makes post-grooming cleanup genuinely fast — just flush and air-dry
- Works wet and dry without switching tools, which saves drawer space
- Soft rubber bristles feel comfortable on short-haired cats during massage sessions
- Four-point bristle design distributes pressure evenly across the back and flanks
- Doubles as a lint and fur remover on furniture and clothing
- Affordable price point compared to single-function grooming tools
Cons
- Marketed primarily for dogs — some cat owners might hesitate based on packaging
- Bristle firmness sits in the medium range; very sensitive or senior cats may find it ticklish
- Long-haired breeds will need a different tool — this one skips over dense undercoats
- Handle could use a rubberised grip zone for wet, slippery hands
Quick Verdict
The Metopets rubber curry brush surprised me. I picked it up expecting a basic dog-grooming tool that would gather dust in my closet alongside three other brushes that promised more than they delivered. Two months later it's still in rotation — not just on my short-haired tabby, Milo, but on my neighbour's arthritic Beagle during weekend sits. The removable screen is the real win here: cleanup takes seconds instead of the ten-minute picking-out session I usually dread. It won't replace a slicker brush for long-haired breeds, and the packaging is firmly in dog-territory, but if you have a short-haired cat or a small-to-medium dog that tolerates grooming, this one earns its shelf space. I'd rate it 4 out of 5 stars — docked points for a slippery wet grip and a handle that could use more contour.
What Is the Metopets Rubber Curry Brush?
Let's be upfront: this brush comes wrapped in branding that screams "dog owner, this is for you." The title leads with short-haired dogs, the packaging leans heavily into canine imagery, and the instructions use dog-specific language. So why is a cat-focused review site covering it? Because rubber curry brushes work remarkably well on short-haired cats, and this one happens to do the job without a premium price tag attached.

The brush itself is a curved paddle shape with a flat face packed with soft rubber bristles arranged in a four-point pattern. The idea behind that bristle geometry is even pressure distribution — your hand presses on the head, and the points spread the contact across the coat rather than concentrating force in one spot. A removable screen sits behind the bristle face; when you're done grooming, you pull the screen out, flush the cavity, and reassemble. No fur-wedging, no snagging, no ten-minute cleanup after a five-minute grooming session.
Key Features
- Four-point rubber bristle pattern distributes pressure evenly across the coat surface
- Removable screen enables fast, thorough cleaning under running water
- Safe for wet use as a bath scrubber or dry use for loose fur removal
- Soft rubber bristles provide gentle skin massage while grooming
- Doubles as a lint and pet-hair remover on clothing and upholstery
- Suitable for short-haired cats, small dogs, and most coat types under 2 inches
Hands-On Review
I first tried the Metopets curry brush on a rainy Saturday afternoon when Milo was already in a grumpy mood — the kind of mood where even a gentle pat on the head earns you a slow-blink of contempt. I expected him to bolt. Instead, he leaned into it. The rubber bristles are softer than I anticipated; they flex slightly on contact rather than raking the coat. Within a couple of passes down his back, the brush was full of loose fur, and Milo was still sitting there, which is itself a ringing endorsement.

What surprised me was how well it worked on the neck and flank areas — spots where Milo usually flinches when I use a slicker brush. The flexible bristle tips seem to absorb the pressure rather than poking the skin. I used it dry first, then followed up with a damp hand to see how it performed as a massage tool. The rubber held its grip on my wet palm, which is more than I can say for the plastic-handled brush I bought from a pet store last spring.
Three weeks in, bath day arrived. I lathered Milo up — a minor miracle in itself — and used the brush to work shampoo down to the skin along his spine and shoulders. The rubber bristles didn't shed strands, and the curved head reached the base of his tail without awkward wrist angles. After rinsing, I pulled the screen, flushed it under the tap, and reassembled. Total cleanup: under two minutes. That alone makes the brush worth keeping.

By the six-week mark I'd also used it on my neighbour's Beagle, Rosie, who has a short double coat that sheds seasonally like a fur tornado. The curry brush handled surface fur efficiently but clearly struggled with the denser underlayer — that's not a flaw unique to this product; most curry brushes are optimised for topcoat work. If Rosie were my dog full-time I'd pair this with a de-shedding tool for the undercoat, but as a weekly topcoat maintenance brush it performs well.
Who Should Buy It?
The Metopets rubber curry brush is a strong fit if you tick any of these boxes:
- Short-haired cat owner — especially if your cat tolerates grooming but hates stiff-bristled tools
- Small-to-medium dog owner with a short, smooth coat that sheds moderately year-round
- Multi-pet household where one brush needs to handle both cats and dogs without skin irritation
- Pet owner who bathes at home and wants a scrubber that doubles as a grooming tool
- Anyone fed up with brush cleanup — the removable screen changes the maintenance equation entirely
Skip this brush if you have a long-haired breed — cat or dog — with a dense undercoat. The rubber bristles can't penetrate far enough to reach the loose underlayer where mats and tangles form. You need a slicker brush, a greyhound comb, or a de-shedding tool for those coats. And if your cat or dog actively dislikes being touched with anything more than a soft cloth, this rubber tool might still register as too much stimulation — test on a paw or flank first before committing to a full session.
Alternatives Worth Considering
If the Metopets curry brush isn't quite the right shape or firmness for your pet, these alternatives cover overlapping ground:
- Furminator de-shedding tool — the go-to for reaching deep undercoats on long-haired breeds, though it requires more technique and isn't ideal for sensitive-skinned pets
- Christophersen Pet Rubber Curry Brush — similar rubber-bristle design with a slightly different handle contour; available at a comparable price point
- DouBEKI silicone pet brush — a budget-friendly rubber curry alternative with a wider head; good for large-surface grooming on calm short-haired pets
FAQ
Yes — short-haired cats respond well to it, especially during shedding season. Long-haired cats with thick undercoats may not get enough contact, so a metal comb or slicker brush is better suited for those coats.
Final Verdict
The Metopets rubber curry brush is not flashy. It doesn't come with a fancy case or a celebrity endorsement, and the packaging is resolutely dog-forward in a way that might make cat owners scroll past. But after two months of regular use across two species and three different coat conditions, I can say it does exactly what it promises — and does it without drama. The removable screen alone justifies the purchase over brushes where fur removal takes longer than the grooming itself. Is it the right brush for every pet? No. But for short-haired cats and small dogs who need regular surface-level de-shedding and a gentle bath-time scrub, this one delivers honest value at an honest price. I'd buy it again.