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Veterinary Emergency Group

11286 NE Evergreen Pkwy, Hillsboro, OR 97006, United States

4.6 (441 reviews)
Brand Veterinary Emergency Group
Property type Emergency veterinarian service ·  · 11286 NE Evergreen Pkwy

About this hospital

Veterinary Emergency Group, Portland 24/7

Veterinary Emergency Group is listed as an open-24-hours emergency hospital in Portland, OR, at 11286 NE Evergreen Pkwy, Hillsboro. If you’re searching for after-hours help, this type of facility is set up for urgent cases that can’t wait for regular clinic hours. A 24/7 emergency service means you’ll be making decisions based on what’s happening right now, with phone intake and triage guiding next steps.

Portland emergency vet context

In Portland, emergency vet searches often happen when an injury or sudden illness shows up outside normal business hours. That can look like breathing trouble, severe bleeding, toxin exposure, accidents, or a pet that won’t eat and seems to be worsening quickly. Demand in a metro area tends to be uneven, with peaks after work hours and on weekends. A 24/7 emergency hospital is the option designed to take those calls and stabilize patients when a primary clinic isn’t available.

The Veterinary Emergency Group network here

Veterinary Emergency Group is a named emergency network, and locations under that brand typically follow consistent intake and referral patterns. In practice, that can mean standardized triage workflows and clear guidance on when a case can stay onsite versus when transfer may be appropriate for follow-up needs. For a Portland pet owner choosing this network location, the advantage is predictability in how emergencies are handled—especially around the first steps. For the specifics of what they can manage, call the hospital and ask.

After-hours intake at a 24/7 emergency hospital

“Open 24 hours” usually means the hospital is set up for round-the-clock intake, with staff available to assess urgency and begin initial stabilization. Some emergencies can be handled after you call first, while others may require you to head in right away depending on symptoms. If you arrive at 3am, plan on checking in and sharing what happened as clearly as you can, including timing and any medications given. Phone intake can help them prepare before you arrive.

Reception signal from the published rating

Veterinary Emergency Group has a public rating of 4.6 across 441 reviews. For pet owners, a rating in this range often reflects steady day-to-day experiences—especially around how front-desk staff communicate, how efficiently intake moves, and whether families feel their questions were addressed in the moment. Review volume matters too: 441 reviews can indicate consistency over time rather than a small snapshot. Still, call to confirm what to expect for your specific situation.

Reviewer pattern and what the review volume helps with

With 441 public reviews, it’s possible for visitors to compare patterns across many perspectives, including different times of day and different types of emergencies. That makes it easier to build a more balanced picture than relying on just a few recent comments. It also helps you separate general experience themes from one-off events. While you still shouldn’t treat reviews as medical guidance, the large number can be useful when you’re choosing where to go.

Before visiting: practical pre-visit checklist

Before you travel, call (503) 751-2082 so they can triage your case and tell you the best way to check in. Bring any records you have, including vaccination history and a list of medications or known exposures. If you have them, pack recent photos or notes about symptom timing and behavior changes. If you’re short on time, write down key facts quickly—what happened, when it started, and what you’ve tried—then update staff at intake.

Location

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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 Portland?

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

Listing reviewed: May 2026