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Emergency Veterinary

1st Pet Veterinary Centers - Chandler

1233 W Warner Rd, Chandler, AZ 85224, United States

3.9 (1,030 reviews)
Brand Independent
Property type Veterinarian ·  · 1233 W Warner Rd

About this hospital

1st Pet Veterinary Centers - Chandler is open after hours

Public sources list 1st Pet Veterinary Centers - Chandler as an emergency veterinary option in Mesa, AZ, with 24-hour availability and a call-in number at (480) 732-0018. This directory entry places the hospital at 1233 W Warner Rd, Chandler. If your pet needs urgent help outside regular clinic hours, this is the kind of facility people look for in the Mesa area—call first to confirm the current intake process.

Mesa emergency vet context

In Mesa, emergency veterinary searches often rise around common after-hours problems: sudden vomiting or diarrhea, trouble breathing, suspected toxin exposure, injuries from falls or bites, and uncontrolled bleeding. Even when a home clinic is closed, pet owners still need a place that can triage quickly and stabilize a patient. A 24-hour emergency hospital can help fill that gap, but the exact services available can depend on staffing and the case type—so it’s wise to check what they are able to take.

Independent-practice considerations

1st Pet Veterinary Centers - Chandler is listed as an independent operation. With independents, the experience can feel more locally driven, and the range of services may be more variable from case to case depending on who is on duty. Unlike a chain with standardized systems across locations, an independent emergency hospital may handle referrals and follow-ups differently. That trade-off isn’t automatically good or bad—just a reason to call ahead and ask how they manage your specific emergency.

Emergency-focused operating model

An emergency veterinary model is designed around urgent intake rather than routine appointments. Even when a hospital is open 24 hours, the pace can vary by severity, with triage typically used to prioritize life-threatening issues first. For you, the practical question is timing: call when you see warning signs, then come in when instructed. If the situation is unstable—like breathing trouble or heavy bleeding—expect to move quickly, even if it means arriving without full paperwork.

What the reviewer base can help with

This listing shows a public rating of 3.9 across 1,030 reviews. That number matters because it lets you compare many firsthand experiences rather than relying on a small sample. For emergency decisions, review volume can be useful for finding patterns in availability, communication, or wait times, but you’ll still want to read recent entries and look for details that match your type of concern. For specifics, call the hospital directly.

Pre-visit checklist and practical notes

Before you travel, call (480) 732-0018 to confirm intake and what to bring. Gather any prior medical records you have, including vaccination status and a list of current medications or known exposures. If you can, prepare for payment-related needs so you’re not trying to sort logistics while your pet is being triaged. If you have a video or photo of symptoms, take it before you head out—quick context can help the intake process.

Location

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Contact & Links

Editor’s note

Useful when an independently-operated emergency hospital fits the case better than a chain and the hospital's typical hours align with the situation. Confirm by phone for time-sensitive cases.

Common questions

Should I call ahead before bringing my pet?

Yes — calling first lets the team confirm a veterinarian is on-site, that the case fits the hospital's scope, and that walk-ins are being accepted at that hour. A 60-second call can avoid a wasted drive.

What other emergency vets are in Mesa?

Our directory lists additional emergency veterinary hospitals serving Mesa. Use the "Other emergency vets" link in the sidebar to see the full city listing.

Listing reviewed: May 2026