🐾 24/7 Emergency Veterinary Directory — Find urgent care for your pet
24/7 Emergency Listed 24/7 · call to confirm

Veterinary Emergency Group

2101 S Brentwood Blvd, Brentwood, MO 63144, United States

4.6 (1,200 reviews)
Brand Veterinary Emergency Group
Property type Emergency veterinarian service ·  · 2101 S Brentwood Blvd

About this hospital

Veterinary Emergency Group, 24/7 Emergency

Veterinary Emergency Group is listed as an open 24/7 emergency facility in St. Louis, MO, with the address 2101 S Brentwood Blvd in Brentwood. If you’re searching after hours, this kind of setup is designed for urgent, time-sensitive situations when regular clinics are closed. The directory also shows a published phone number, (314) 970-2545, for contacting the hospital and starting the intake process.

St. Louis emergency vet context

In a metro area like St. Louis, emergency visits often cluster around evenings, late nights, and weekends—when symptoms can worsen quickly and waiting until morning feels risky. Pet owners may look for a 24/7 emergency clinic for problems like breathing trouble, severe vomiting or diarrhea, injuries from falls or accidents, toxin exposure, or sudden illness in older pets. Searching for an emergency option usually means choosing a place that can receive patients consistently around the clock.

The Veterinary Emergency Group network here

Veterinary Emergency Group operates as a network, which typically means sites follow shared brand guidelines for how emergencies are handled, from intake flow to recordkeeping expectations. In practical terms, a St. Louis pet owner choosing this network location may expect a structured triage approach and referral-style workflows when a case needs specialized next steps. If you’re comparing against a non-network emergency hospital, the difference is often the consistency of process and communication rather than a single unique service.

24/7 and after-hours intake

“24/7 emergency” means the hospital is set up to accept cases at any hour, including late night and early morning. For many emergency facilities, that generally includes a round-the-clock intake workflow and on-site coverage so patients don’t have to wait for business hours. If you arrive at around 3am, plan on checking in and being triaged promptly; calling ahead can help you share what’s going on and confirm what to bring before you get there.

Guest and patient reception

This listing shows a public rating of 4.6 across 1200 reviews. Ratings in this range often suggest patients and owners experienced reasonably consistent front-desk processes and communication throughout visits, though the rating number alone can’t tell you how every individual case was handled. For emergency care, that consistency can matter—especially when you’re trying to understand next steps quickly.

Reviewer base and what it tells you

A large number of public reviews, like 1200, can give travelers and locals more material to compare. It can help you see patterns in how people describe their experiences across different times and case types, rather than relying on just a handful of opinions. Still, reviews are individual accounts. The most reliable way to confirm current intake availability and process details is to call the hospital directly.

Before visiting: practical notes

Before you head in, consider calling Veterinary Emergency Group at (314) 970-2545 to confirm intake instructions and any documents they want in advance. If you have prior records, medication lists, or discharge papers from recent visits, bring them along so staff can reference history quickly. Also, be ready to discuss payment options at arrival, since emergency visits often move faster than routine appointments.

Location

Open in Map →

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 St. Louis?

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

Listing reviewed: May 2026