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Although the regulator says the changes should impose only limited administrative costs, VetSurgeon.org estimates that implementation may still run to several thousand pounds for some practices.
Under the reforms, practices will need to:
In total, the CMA package introduces more than a dozen new operational requirements for veterinary practices.
Practices will also have to pay a new levy to the RCVS to fund its expanded role running the price comparison service, estimated at £450-£550 annually, after a £150-£250 setup charge.
Once the Order is made — currently expected in September 2026 — most of the transparency measures will need to be implemented within three months by larger veterinary groups and six months by smaller practices.
More operational changes, such as written estimates, itemised billing and the new prescription rules, follow later, with smaller practices typically given up to 12 months to comply.
The final stage will see practices submitting data to the RCVS for its upgraded Find a Vet comparison platform once the system has been built.
Prescription fees will be capped at £21 for the first medicine prescribed in a consultation and £12.50 for each additional medicine, with both figures rising annually in line with CPI, and practices will need to assess the impact on their business model.
I don't see what the CMA would gain by saying the costs would be minimal. The government is normally in favour of corporate investment, so the fact that their report confirms they are overcharging shows how bad it is. Don't forget the reason the CMA is investigating in the first place is because the public were so concerned about the increasing prices.
The bottom line is the corporate groups were unable to provide sufficient evidence to justify the price increases. Therefore, the CMA has decided to put these regulations in place. If everything was above board, surely the corporates groups would have been able to provide this evidence? The vet profession has brought this on themselves by not regulating the corporate groups properly from the start. I kept saying the prices were ridiculous and it would erode public trust. This is the consequences.