
Rising Veterinary Medicine Costs Present Challenges to Practices, According to AAHA
Date: April 28, 2025
The market may hit $41.4 billion this year. The American Pet Products Association reports spending on veterinary care and products. The numbers seem strong at first glance. A closer look shows that practices face hard money challenges. Rising hiring costs, economic doubt, and tariffs on imports cause these woes.
Navigating a Tight Labor Market
Leslie Boudreau works at an AAHA-accredited hospital in Huntington Beach, California. She finds hiring vets a serious issue now. DVMs control the market. Although the American Veterinary Medical Association says there are enough veterinarians, many work in government, the military, or corporate roles rather than private practice.
The cost to hire vets has jumped. New hires often leave when their contracts end to grab better bonuses. This "bouncing" leaves practices short-staffed. Local colleagues and national groups now seek vets for part-time and full-time roles. Some practices even cut operating hours or close on certain days because of staff shortages.
Rising Operational Costs
Other costs also rise. Tariffs now make supplies such as gauze and syringes more expensive. Insurance grows costlier too. Many practices now need extra coverage against cyberattacks.
Karen E. Felsted works at PantheraT Veterinary Management Consulting in Dallas, Texas. She points to shaky economic times, fewer patient visits, and staffing gaps that strain practice budgets. She says, "It is very difficult to plan for the future when the future is so unpredictable." Fewer visits may come as customers worry about money.
Strategies for Financial Resilience
Practices now try fresh ideas to guard their finances. Boudreau says her hospital is shopping for lower prices. They join buying groups to boost buying power. They also limit some medication stocks to cut costs. Some products even move to an online store, despite lower profit margins.
They change how credit card payments work. The hospital will add a convenience fee for credit card transactions. In 2023, credit card fees went over half a million dollars.
Felsted advises all practices to be careful with money. She suggests they boost client service, build and check emergency funds, cut extra spending, and talk with banks about lines of credit.
Communicating with Pet Owners
It is also key to talk to pet owners about payment choices amid rising costs. Felsted warns that sharing financing plans can help keep clients. Still, practices must care for long-term trust.
"Focus on finding a medically appropriate solution that fits their budget," she says. Too high fees could harm client trust.
Boudreau sums it up: "Economics of rising costs and decreased profits are hitting everybody pretty hard right now." Vet practices must use their resources wisely and creatively.
This article highlights ongoing financial concerns in the veterinary community. Many factors worsen money issues. Smart and careful decisions are now more crucial than ever in these tough economic times.
For further insights and updates on veterinary practice management and financial strategies, stay tuned to AAHA's publications.
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