
Agouti "wild type" coloration and piebald spotting are common. “Sable” reds with black-tipped guard hairs and black noses occur, but the liver-nosed “copper” phase seen in other lines of Siberian Huskies is unknown in pure Seppalas.

There are many varied shades of grey, brownish grey, and blue-grey. Others are very dark, black, or charcoal grey with dark faces and white only on the feet and tail tip. Many Seppalas are pure white or buff and white. The tail is held high in a sickle curve over the back when alert, never "snapped" flat to the back or curling down the flank. Their ears are taller, set close together and strongly erect, the "stop" of the head less well-defined than that of Siberian Huskies. Pure-strain Seppalas have dense, smooth coats of medium length with an undercoat nearly as long as the guard hairs.


Seppalas of today differ markedly from many other Siberian Husky bloodlines in physical appearance, being in general less flashily marked, longer in leg and body length, and lighter in weight and physical build than most Siberian Husky show dog lines.
