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Emergency Veterinary

Animal Emergency Center of Sandy Springs

228 Sandy Springs Pl NE, Sandy Springs, GA 30328, United States

4.5 (259 reviews)
Brand Independent
Property type Emergency veterinarian service ·  · 228 Sandy Springs Pl NE

About this hospital

Animal Emergency Center of Sandy Springs

Animal Emergency Center of Sandy Springs is an Emergency Veterinary facility in Atlanta, GA, with published hours showing it is open 24 hours. If you’re searching for an emergency option in the Sandy Springs area, this is one of the places owners call when symptoms can’t wait. Use the phone number listed for quick guidance on next steps before you head over. Call (404) 252-7881 to confirm arrival instructions and triage flow.

Atlanta emergency vet context

In Atlanta, emergency veterinary care tends to be in steady demand because traffic, weather, and busy schedules all increase the chance of after-hours injuries and sudden illness. Owners often look for an emergency clinic when a pet is vomiting repeatedly, struggling to breathe, bleeding, having seizures, or showing signs of severe pain. In a metro area, time and access matter: you may want to call first, then drive based on what the hospital tells you about triage priority and arrival timing.

Independent-practice angle

Animal Emergency Center of Sandy Springs is listed as an independent operation, not part of a larger chain. In practice, that can mean the team’s day-to-day approach is shaped more by local case patterns and hospital workflow than by corporate-wide protocols. Scope can vary depending on staffing and what services are available on-site. Some independents may coordinate referrals differently than chains. When you call, ask what diagnostics and treatments can be done immediately versus what may need follow-up elsewhere.

Emergency-focused operating model

Emergency Veterinary facilities typically run on triage first, with the most urgent pets seen sooner. Even with published 24-hour availability, the order of care may shift based on breathing, bleeding, altered consciousness, or other time-sensitive signs. If you’re deciding between “call first” or “drive now,” consider calling to describe symptoms and how your pet is responding. Be ready to arrive with specifics on onset time, medications, and any known exposures, since those details support faster triage.

Reception signal

This listing shows a public rating of 4.5 across 259 reviews. For emergency settings, a rating in this range often suggests most guests experience consistent front-desk handling, clearer communication than they expected, and a service experience that many families felt matched what they needed at the time. Rating scores can’t tell you clinical outcomes, but they can help you gauge whether the intake process is organized and whether expectations are set reasonably for urgent visits.

Reviewer pattern

With 259 public reviews, readers have more than a small snapshot to work from. A larger review count can help you spot patterns that show up across many visits, including repeat themes around communication, waiting flow, and how staff explain next steps. For your decision, focus on what matters most for you in an emergency—how quickly you can be checked in, how information is shared, and whether the experience feels understandable under stress.

Pre-visit checklist

Before you travel, call the hospital and ask how they want you to arrive and what to report at intake. Bring any relevant records you have, including vaccination history, current medications, and a short timeline of symptoms. If possible, prepare for payment planning at the time of service, since emergency care may begin before paperwork is complete. If your pet’s condition changes during the drive, update the hospital when you can.

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 Atlanta?

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

Listing reviewed: May 2026