Does this vet actually care about the…
Does this vet actually care about the animals, or are they primarily interested in making as much money as possible from people who are just trying to do the best for their pets?
A healthy business typically operates with around a 30% markup, the difference between their costs and the price they charge customers. That’s considered solid and respectable.
This vet, however, is applying a 700% or higher markup on their products. You can often buy the exact same medications (with identical ingredients) for humans at a fraction of the price. This suggests they’re far more interested in extracting money from pet owners who love their animals than in genuinely caring for the pets themselves.
Of course businesses need to make money, that’s not the issue. But this level of pricing crosses into pure greed. They know pet owners feel they have no choice but to pay up to help their animals. It’s disgusting, and it’s hard to understand how people can sleep at night knowing animals may suffer or die because their owners simply can’t afford these inflated prices.
What makes it worse is that clinics like this market themselves as places that truly care about animals, using that image to attract customers. Nothing could be further from the truth.
It’s easy to see what’s really happening. If your pet needs a medication, there’s a very good chance the same drug (same active ingredients) is available for humans or through reputable online pet pharmacies, often at one-quarter to one-third of what Vetrica charges.
There is no justification for this. A business like this could still make a healthy profit while charging fair, reasonable prices that allow pet owners to actually care for their animals. Vetrica clearly has no interest in doing so.
We all know many vets operate this way. What we need are more veterinary practices willing to break this cycle of greed and truly put the welfare of the animals first.
The skyrocketing cost of pet insurance is also directly linked to practices like these charging what amounts to daylight robbery.
Vetrica should consider changing their sign from “WHERE PETS COME FIRST” to “MONEY COMES FIRST.”
I genuinely hope the owners are proud of what they’re doing.
