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Veterinary Emergency Group

3204 Rte 59, Naperville, IL 60564, United States

4.8 (446 reviews)
Brand Veterinary Emergency Group
Property type Emergency veterinarian service ·  · 3204 Rte 59

About this hospital

Veterinary Emergency Group in Aurora, IL

Veterinary Emergency Group lists itself as an open 24/7 emergency service, with a published phone number of (630) 503-7415. If you’re in Aurora, IL and searching for urgent veterinary help after hours, this is the kind of facility that can take calls and provide emergency intake without waiting for regular clinic hours. The public information also lists the site at 3204 Rte 59, Naperville, so it’s worth double-checking directions before you go.

Aurora emergency vet context

In a city like Aurora, emergency visits often come from day-to-day risks that can happen at any time: sudden illness, injuries from outdoor activity, breathing trouble, vomiting that won’t stop, or complications that escalate over hours. People searching at night or on weekends are typically trying to avoid delays when a pet’s condition is worsening. A 24/7 emergency hospital helps cover that gap when primary care clinics are closed, including situations where you’re deciding whether to drive now.

The Veterinary Emergency Group network here

As a Veterinary Emergency Group-affiliated location, this hospital is likely set up to follow consistent intake and triage workflows across the brand network. In practical terms, that usually means a structured approach to receiving patients, collecting the basics quickly, and routing cases based on urgency. For an Aurora pet owner, choosing a network emergency location may help reduce uncertainty about what to expect during intake compared with an unfamiliar non-network facility. For specifics on referral or transfer patterns, call ahead.

24/7 or after-hours intake

Being listed as 24/7 emergency means the hospital is designed for round-the-clock intake rather than only certain daytime shifts. Operationally, that often translates into staff coverage that can manage emergencies at night, including phone triage and in-person assessment when you arrive. Walk-ins may be accepted depending on current conditions; call-ahead can still help, especially if your pet is actively deteriorating. If you arrive at 3am, follow the hospital’s published entry instructions and be ready to discuss the timeline.

Reception signal from the public rating

Veterinary Emergency Group shows a public rating of 4.8 across 446 reviews. A rating in this range often suggests steady experiences around front-desk handling, clear communication during stressful moments, and a sense that care and process were understandable for many clients. That said, ratings can’t show details like case severity or how long you waited. If you’re concerned about your specific situation, use the phone number listed and ask what to bring and what to expect on arrival.

Reviewer base and how to read it

With 446 public reviews, you have more than a small sample size to lean on when forming a first impression. That volume can make it easier to see patterns across different pets, different nights, and different kinds of emergencies. It also means there may be a mix of experiences depending on patient needs and timing. Since you don’t have the full review text here, consider reading multiple entries yourself rather than relying on a single rating summary.

Before visiting: practical checklist

Before you head out, call Veterinary Emergency Group at (630) 503-7415 if you can—this can help confirm the best way to arrive and whether you should wait in the car. Gather any medical records you have, including medication lists and vaccination history, even if they’re incomplete. If your pet’s issue started earlier, write down the timeline of symptoms and what you’ve already tried at home. Be ready to discuss payment options when you arrive.

Location

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Contact & Links

Editor’s note

Useful when the case fits the Veterinary Emergency Group network's documented scope at this location and after-hours availability matters. Confirm by phone for time-sensitive cases.

Common questions

Is Veterinary Emergency Group open 24 hours?

Veterinary Emergency Group lists 24/7 emergency hours in our directory. As with any after-hours animal hospital, call before traveling — staffing or intake capacity can change without notice.

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.

Is Veterinary Emergency Group part of a network?

Yes — this location operates as part of the Veterinary Emergency Group veterinary network. Service mix and referral protocols typically follow Veterinary Emergency Group's standards across locations.

What other emergency vets are in Aurora?

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

Listing reviewed: May 2026