SPVS has released its 2025 veterinary fees survey results, drawing on responses from 148 UK practices.

For small animal work, the survey shows consultation fees up 4.5% and neutering fees up 8%.

Vaccine fees increased by 9–16%, which SPVS suggests may reflect wider use of Lepto 4 vaccines replacing Lepto 2.

Prescription fees rose 3% to £19.25 (excluding VAT), which SPVS notes remains well above the CMA’s proposed capped rate of £13.33.

The largest shifts in small animal charging were in some surgery and diagnostics. SPVS highlights examples including pyometra treatment, x-rays and ultrasound, which it reports have increased by around 20%.

The picture was different in large animal practice, where SPVS says all visit charges decreased.

Large animal prescription fees, however, rose to £24.48, an increase of nearly 20% on last year.

In equine work, consultation charges increased by 10% and many visit charges fell, according to the survey. The biggest single increase SPVS flagged was blood sampling and interpretation of results, up 42%.

Commenting on the findings, SPVS said there were “no real surprises” this year, with mostly moderate increases and a smaller number of larger uplifts.

SPVS also took the opportunity to emphasise how it believes potential CMA remedies on medicines pricing could affect practice economics, because many veterinary businesses rely on cross-subsidy. 

That, it said, could cause a “waterbed effect” where other fees have to rise to maintain viability.

SPVS said it has been meeting with the CMA to slow any changes so that fee increases can be introduced gradually and to minimise potential risks to animal welfare, and plans to run in-person roadshows after the final remedies are published.

https://spvs.org.uk/cma-spvs-response 

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