A dog wearing a blue vest or harness may look like any other dog, but that simple color often carries an important message that many people overlook.
Blue gear is commonly used for service dogs or service dogs in training, meaning they may be helping someone with vision loss, mobility challenges, seizures, diabetes, PTSD, or other medical conditions that require constant focus.
But blue is only one part of a much bigger system, and misunderstanding the other colors can accidentally put both the dog and its handler at risk.
Yellow gear often means a dog needs extra space because it may be anxious, recovering, or still in training, while red usually signals a working dog that should never be distracted, and some organizations also use green, orange, or purple for special training or therapy roles.
Although these colors are not officially standardized everywhere, they have become widely recognized as helpful visual signals, and the safest approach is always to avoid petting, calling, or distracting a working dog unless the handler clearly gives permission.
Respecting these simple color cues helps protect years of training, keeps handlers safe, and reminds us that behind every working dog is a partnership built on trust, responsibility, and life-changing support.