🐾 24/7 Emergency Veterinary Directory — Find urgent care for your pet
Specialty + Emergency

East End Veterinary Center

67 Commerce Dr, Riverhead, NY 11901, United States

4.4 (896 reviews)
Brand Independent
Property type Veterinarian ·  · 67 Commerce Dr

About this hospital

East End Veterinary Center

East End Veterinary Center is an independent specialty + emergency hospital in Long Island, NY, located at 67 Commerce Dr, Riverhead. It is documented as open 24 hours, and the public phone number is (631) 369-4513. If you are looking for after-hours help for a sudden illness or injury, this is the kind of facility that can handle urgent cases while also supporting specialty-level needs. Use the phone number to confirm what services are available when you call.

Long Island emergency vet context

On Long Island, emergency veterinary needs often spike when regular clinics are closed—nights, weekends, and holidays. Families typically search for an urgent option when a pet has breathing trouble, trauma, heavy bleeding, possible poisoning, or severe vomiting/diarrhea. Because Long Island is served by many neighborhoods, people may be traveling from surrounding areas when timing matters. A specialty + emergency hospital can be an important next step when the issue may be more complex than a routine urgent visit.

Independent-practice angle

As an independent operation, East End Veterinary Center is not part of a chain with the same standardized, system-wide processes and referral pathways. In practice, that can mean the staff approach is more locally shaped, and the range of cases handled may vary depending on who is on duty that night. Trade-offs can include differences in how quickly certain specialty services are coordinated. Chain hospitals may have broader internal routing; independent hospitals may rely more on direct coordination case by case.

Specialty referral and how it changes the visit

This listing is categorized as specialty + emergency, which typically means it can receive patients with urgent problems while also handling referrals that may require specialist-level evaluation. Primary-care vets often send cases here when the initial exam suggests a higher complexity issue, or when the pet’s condition needs urgent diagnostics and a focused treatment plan. Compared with a walk-in emergency clinic, the workflow may place more emphasis on specialty assessment, targeted testing, and timely next steps based on the suspected condition.

Reception signal

The hospital shows a public rating of 4.4 across 896 reviews. For pet owners, a rating in this range often points to generally consistent front-desk and communication, along with a steady level of perceived value for the services provided. It can also suggest that many clients felt the process made sense during a stressful situation, though experiences can still vary by case type, timing, and what was needed for stabilization.

Reviewer pattern

With 896 public reviews, there is enough volume for a reader to compare opinions across different times and situations. That matters for emergency care research, where outcomes depend on the pet’s condition and the timeline of symptoms. Review volume can help you see more patterns than you would with only a small number of ratings. Still, it’s smart to read for themes that fit your pet’s likely issue.

Before visiting: practical checklist

Before you drive in, call East End Veterinary Center at (631) 369-4513 to confirm it can see your pet and to ask about any intake steps. Bring any medical records you have, including vaccine history, a current medication list, and notes on when symptoms started. Be prepared for payment questions at arrival and plan for a short wait in busy emergency hours. If your pet is unstable, follow the hospital’s guidance on what to do while you’re on the way.

Location

Open in Map →

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 Long Island?

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

Listing reviewed: May 2026