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

The Schwarzman Animal Medical Center

510 E 62nd St, New York, NY 10065, United States

3.8 (1,701 reviews)
Brand Independent
Property type Veterinarian ·  · 510 E 62nd St

About this hospital

The Schwarzman Animal Medical Center

The Schwarzman Animal Medical Center is listed as an emergency veterinary hospital open around the clock, reachable at (212) 838-8100. This independent emergency facility is in New York, NY at 510 E 62nd St, New York. If you are looking in the city for urgent help, this listing reflects an operating model designed for after-hours emergencies. For details that affect your decision, call the hospital directly and ask what they can handle at the time you plan to arrive.

New York emergency vet context

In New York City, emergency veterinary demand can be steady and time-sensitive, because household pets and working animals face everyday risks in busy neighborhoods. Searches often spike when there’s sudden illness (vomiting, breathing trouble, seizures) or injuries (falls, bites, bleeding) where waiting for a regular clinic isn’t realistic. An emergency veterinary hospital in the city can also matter when you’re traveling, since you may need urgent evaluation without relying on daytime appointments. Still, case acceptance can vary by situation.

Independent-practice angle

With an independent emergency hospital, the day-to-day decisions are typically made locally rather than through a chain’s centralized system. That can mean the scope of services and the way care is coordinated may feel more variable from one shift to the next, depending on staffing and what cases arrive. It may also affect referrals and follow-up planning, since there may not be the same chain-wide pathways. For many owners, the key difference is practical: you’re calling one hospital and asking exactly how they’ll manage your pet’s specific emergency.

Emergency-focused operating model

Emergency veterinary care is built around quick triage—sorting patients by urgency—so the highest-risk cases can be addressed first. Even when a hospital operates nonstop, the experience can still involve waiting while staff stabilize others. When you call, be ready to describe symptoms, onset time, and any known medical history. If your pet has trouble breathing, severe bleeding, or a collapse, plan to go in as directed by the team. If you’re unsure, calling ahead can help you decide whether to arrive immediately.

Reviewer pattern

This listing shows a public rating of 3.8 across 1,701 reviews. That volume can help visitors compare patterns they notice over time, including consistency in communication, waiting expectations, and how experiences line up with emergency needs. It also means you’re not limited to a small sample of opinions. Without reading the text, the rating alone can’t tell you what any one person’s outcome was, but it provides a measurable snapshot.

Before visiting

Before you travel, call The Schwarzman Animal Medical Center at (212) 838-8100 to confirm they’re able to see your pet and to ask what information they want upfront. Bring any medical records you have, including medication lists or discharge papers from recent visits. If your pet is on prescriptions, pack the bottles or names of the drugs. Finally, plan for payment at the time of service and ask about estimate ranges when you call, since emergency costs can vary with diagnostics and treatment needs.

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 New York?

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

Listing reviewed: May 2026