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Specialty + Emergency

Animal Emergency and Specialty Center

6425 S Virginia St, Reno, NV 89511, United States

3.5 (504 reviews)
Brand Independent
Property type Emergency veterinarian service ·  · 6425 S Virginia St

About this hospital

Animal Emergency and Specialty Center in Reno, NV

Animal Emergency and Specialty Center is an independent specialty + emergency hospital in Reno, NV, with documented hours of open 24 hours and a phone number for reaching the team at (775) 851-3600. If your pet is having an urgent problem and you’re looking for a facility that can handle emergencies while also supporting specialty needs, this location at 6425 S Virginia St is one of the options to consider. Check details by calling first.

Reno emergency vet context

In Reno, pets and wildlife encounters can create year-round emergency demand: sudden injuries, breathing problems, gastrointestinal emergencies, and worsening chronic issues that turn urgent. Many owners search for an emergency hospital when primary care can’t see them quickly or when symptoms escalate after hours. A specialty + emergency setup can help when an incident needs more than routine stabilization, or when ongoing specialty evaluation is part of the next step. Calling ahead helps clarify whether the right services are available for your specific situation.

Independent-practice considerations

An independently-operated emergency hospital can feel different from a chain. In practice, it may rely more on locally-rooted decision-making and the specific capacity of the staff on a given shift. That can mean the scope of what’s handled on-site may vary more depending on who’s available. Chain facilities sometimes follow more standardized internal pathways, but they also operate within larger systems. Either model can work well; the main trade-off is how consistent services may be shift-to-shift.

Specialty + emergency referral flow

As a specialty + emergency hospital, this type of clinic often handles two tracks: immediate emergency stabilization and specialty referral evaluation. A primary-care veterinarian may send a patient after initial assessment if the case needs specialty diagnostics, focused treatment, or ongoing specialty management. During an emergency visit, the flow usually starts with triage, then stabilization, and then decisions about whether specialty workup or referral-style follow-up is needed. If your pet was referred, bring the referral notes so the visit can move faster.

What the review volume can tell you

The public rating shown for this hospital is 3.5, based on 504 reviews. A higher review count can give travelers and locals more voices to read through, which helps you form a balanced picture rather than relying on a handful of comments. This directory listing doesn’t include the review text itself, so it can’t interpret patterns for you. Still, the number of reviews makes it easier to compare experiences.

Before visiting: practical checklist

Before you travel, consider calling Animal Emergency and Specialty Center at (775) 851-3600 to confirm they’re able to handle your pet’s specific issue and to ask what information they want on arrival. Bring any medical records, discharge papers, prior lab results, and a list of medications your pet takes. If possible, be ready for payment at the time services are provided, and ask about estimate options when you call. If symptoms are severe, don’t delay travel.

Location

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Contact & Links

From the Journal

Animal Emergency and Specialty Center: A Practical Visit Guide
Vet Guides

Animal Emergency and Specialty Center: A Practical Visit Guide

Animal Emergency and Specialty Center in Reno, NV is a 24-hour emergency and specialty veterinary hospital. Learn what to bring, how triage works, and how to prepare for aftercare.

Read article →
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 Reno?

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

Listing reviewed: May 2026