Know what the vet visit should cost
before you're standing at the counter.

Fair-price ranges for the most common vet procedures, computed transparently: a typical general-practice price for your pet, adjusted for clinic type and your region. Free, no sign-up, no vet referrals — the estimate is the product.

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Estimate

Vet cost calculator

Transparent math: a typical general-practice price for your pet, adjusted for clinic type and your region. See exactly how this is computed →

Fair range $120 – $350 per procedure

A quote inside this range is ordinary. Above it isn't automatically overcharging — but every dollar above should map to a line you can question (diagnostics, meds, hospitalization). Well below the range: ask what's included, since the cheapest way to a low number is leaving things out.

Vet procedures, priced

Every guide shows the fair range for your pet, the lines clinics add to bills (and when they're legitimate), and the questions that keep an estimate honest.

1 · Transparent

Math you can check

Every estimate shows its work: a typical price, the clinic-type multiplier, your region. No black box. Read the methodology.

2 · Independent

Nothing to sell you

We don't take referral fees from clinics or gate estimates behind lead forms — incentives shape numbers, so we removed the incentives.

3 · Grounded

Built to be refined

Estimates come from published sources; we're also gathering anonymous reader-submitted bills to sharpen each range against what clinics actually charge.

Anatomy of a vet bill

A surgery estimate breaks into the same parts every time. Padding hides in the total; it can't hide once you separate the lines.

A vet surgery bill separated into exam, procedure, anesthesia and diagnostics, and medications, with the question to ask eachEstimate — dental cleaning, medium dogPROCEDURE$350–500the cleaning +anesthesiaAsk: base pricebefore extractions?DIAGNOSTICS$115–380bloodwork,dental x-raysAsk: needed now,or can it wait?EXTRACTIONS$0–900per tooth,found duringAsk: call me withthe count firstMEDS + TOTAL+ take-home meds≈ $500–900without extractionsAsk for it itemized,line by line

Decode your own bill →

Reading a vet estimate: the 60-second version

  • Ask for an itemized estimate. Exam, diagnostics, procedure, anesthesia, meds, and hospitalization on separate lines. A single number can't be evaluated.
  • Separate "must do now" from "could do." Ask which line items are essential today and which can wait or be spaced out — especially diagnostics on a stable pet.
  • Question add-ons against their trigger. Bloodwork, dental x-rays, IV fluids, biopsy — each has a legitimate reason, listed on every guide here.
  • Understand the clinic tier. An ER charges 1.5–2× a general practice for the same care. For non-emergencies, a GP vet or nonprofit clinic is far cheaper.
  • A second opinion costs an exam fee. On anything over a few hundred dollars, it's the highest-paid hour of your month.