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Emergency vets in Austin, TX

12 hospitals listed · All Texas emergency vets →

About this market

The emergency vet landscape in Austin, TX

Austin is a large Texas metro with a steady flow of pet households tied to its job growth, outdoor lifestyle, and high vehicle use. When something goes wrong, pet owners often need care fast—after-hours injuries from cars or falls, sudden vomiting or breathing trouble, or complications that start as “wait and see” but turn into an emergency. Many cases also arrive after a primary vet visit or urgent care referral, when an animal needs monitoring, imaging, or overnight treatment.

The emergency vet landscape in Austin reflects that demand, with 12 emergency vet hospitals operating in the city. Most are independent facilities, alongside a smaller presence of VEG emergency hospitals and one MedVet location. This mix matters for how care is delivered day to day: independents make up the majority of options for round-the-clock coverage, while network hospitals help provide additional capacity and standardized resources. In practice, the range of hospital types influences what clients encounter—choices vary by equipment, staffing models, and referral patterns.

On this listing page, you’ll see entries that align with Austin’s documented hospital mix: 9 independent emergency vet hospitals, 2 VEG hospitals, and 1 MedVet site. Use the information here to match your situation to an available facility, especially when symptoms are sudden or worsening. If your pet is actively struggling to breathe, bleeding heavily, or showing neurologic signs, treat it as urgent and contact an emergency hospital right away to confirm they can accept your case.

Networks & chains in Austin

  • Independent
    9 locations
  • VEG
    2 locations
  • MedVet
    1 location

Before you head to an ER vet in Austin

Two minutes of preparation can save 20 minutes of avoidable delay.

  • Call first. Confirm a vet is on-site and the case fits the hospital’s scope.
  • Take a photo. If the pet ate something, photograph the packaging or substance.
  • Bring records. A list of medications, recent test results, and your primary vet’s contact info.
  • Be ready for a deposit. Most ER hospitals require payment up front; carry a credit card with sufficient room.
  • If unstable, ask for triage by phone. Some hospitals can advise on what to do during the drive.