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Specialty + Emergency

CVETS - Columbia Veterinary Emergency Trauma and Specialty

1321 Oakcrest Dr, Columbia, SC 29223, United States

4.4 (1,508 reviews)
Brand Independent
Property type Emergency veterinarian service ·  · 1321 Oakcrest Dr

About this hospital

CVETS - Columbia Veterinary Emergency Trauma and Specialty: 24-hour specialty + emergency help

CVETS - Columbia Veterinary Emergency Trauma and Specialty is open 24 hours, with phone access at (803) 995-8913, serving pet owners in Columbia, SC. As a Specialty + Emergency hospital, it’s built for urgent situations that may require more focused care than a general clinic can provide. If you’re searching after hours in Columbia, this type of facility is often the next step when time, stabilization, and specialty expertise matter.

Columbia emergency vet context

In Columbia, SC, emergency demand can come from everyday neighborhood life as well as travel routes: accidents, sudden breathing trouble, significant bleeding, toxin exposure, and acute trauma are common reasons people start looking for urgent care after clinic hours. Specialty + emergency sites can be especially relevant when a case may need advanced diagnostics or targeted treatment plans beyond routine emergency triage. When your pet’s symptoms are escalating, searching for a 24-hour option helps reduce delays.

Independent-practice angle

CVETS is listed as an independent hospital, which often means its emergency operations are managed locally rather than through a chain structure. For you, that can translate into a range of care that depends on the hospital’s on-duty team and available specialists, including how they handle transfers and referrals internally. Chain models may offer more standardized processes, while independent practices may show more variability day to day. Either way, call ahead for the specifics of your pet’s needs.

Specialty referral in an emergency setting

CVETS is a specialty + emergency hospital, so some cases may start as true emergencies and then shift into specialty work. Primary-care veterinarians may refer patients here when they suspect conditions that need specialized diagnostics, treatment plans, or ongoing specialty monitoring. Compared with a walk-in emergency, this visit flow can include more deliberate triage, faster escalation to specialty services when appropriate, and a clearer pathway from stabilization to the next diagnostic or treatment step. The hospital’s staff can explain what referral typically means in your situation.

Reception signal from public ratings

CVETS has a public rating of 4.4 across 1,508 reviews. In this range, many pet owners generally look for consistency in front-desk handling, communication during stressful moments, and whether the care experience seems to match expectations given the urgency. Ratings can reflect a mix of experiences—timing, case complexity, and communication style—so it helps to treat the number as a broad signal rather than a guarantee about your specific visit.

What the review volume can help with

With 1,508 public reviews, there is enough volume for travelers and local pet owners to compare themes across many different situations. That scale can make it easier to spot patterns in how people describe access, communication, and overall experience, rather than relying on one or two accounts. Review volume can also include cases of different severity, which is useful context when you’re trying to anticipate how an emergency visit may feel from start to finish.

Before visiting: practical checklist

Before you head to CVETS, call (803) 995-8913 to confirm they’re able to see your pet right now and ask what information to bring. Bring any relevant records, medication lists, and dates of symptoms or known exposures, if available. If you have a payment method or plan, be ready to provide it during intake—emergency visits often move quickly once triage starts. If possible, write down your pet’s weight to help with dosing questions.

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 Columbia?

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

Listing reviewed: May 2026