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Emergency Veterinary

Yale New Haven Hospital Emergency Room

20 York St, New Haven, CT 06510, United States

2.1 (339 reviews)
Brand Independent
Property type Emergency Veterinary

About This Hospital

Emergency room ·  · 20 York St

About this hospital

Yale New Haven Hospital Emergency Room

Emergency room listing notes point you to 20 York St in New Haven, CT for Yale New Haven Hospital Emergency Room. This is categorized as Emergency Veterinary, so it’s aimed at urgent situations where you need quicker intake and triage than a standard appointment. The public rating shown here is 2.1 across 339 reviews, which can help you gauge consistency of the experience. If you’re deciding whether to go, calling ahead is a practical first step.

New Haven emergency vet context

In New Haven, CT, emergency veterinary facilities often see same-day demand from across the city when routine care can’t wait. Pet owners may search for urgent help after accidents, sudden illness, or worsening symptoms that keep progressing over hours. In many areas of a larger city, drives to emergency care can vary based on traffic and time of day, so having a plan before symptoms escalate helps. This kind of hospital commonly functions as a central stop for urgent evaluation when time matters.

Independent-practice angle

This listing is marked as Independent, which generally means it may operate with fewer “chain” processes than large brand networks. In practice, that can translate to more locally set workflows and decision-making, with the scope of services depending on staffing and the moment. The trade-off isn’t automatically negative or positive; it mainly affects what “handoff” options exist and how consistent the experience feels from one location to the next. For emergency visits, ask directly what to expect for intake, treatment availability, and follow-up.

Emergency-focused operating model

An emergency-focused hospital that is not 24/7 typically follows set operating hours and focuses on triage during those windows. A common pattern is to assess stability on arrival, prioritize the most urgent cases, and then move to diagnostics and treatment as resources allow. For pet owners, the key decision is timing: call the facility to ask whether they can receive your pet based on symptoms and current status. If your pet seems critical, ask whether coming in right away is the safest next step.

Reviewer base and how to use it

With 339 public reviews, this listing provides a larger pool of opinions than many single-location pages. That can be helpful for travelers and out-of-towners who want to compare experiences across different visits and times. Still, review counts do not replace real-time guidance. When symptoms are urgent, call the hospital for current intake instructions and ask what they can accommodate today. Using the rating as a starting signal can reduce guesswork, but don’t use it to override medical urgency.

Before visiting: practical checklist

Before you travel, calling ahead can clarify whether they are able to see your pet and what to bring for intake. If you have it, bring written medical records, vaccination history, and any medication list, plus notes on when symptoms started and what you’ve observed. If there is a payment policy you’re unsure about, ask what forms are accepted before you arrive. For emergencies, keep your phone available and be ready to share details quickly at the triage desk.

Location

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Contact & Links

From the Journal

Yale New Haven Hospital ER (York Street) — What to Confirm Before You Arrive
Vet Guides

Yale New Haven Hospital ER (York Street) — What to Confirm Before You Arrive

When seconds matter, confirm Yale New Haven Hospital’s emergency details for triage—York Street Level 1, 24-hour access, and the right phone/address to call.

Read article →
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 Haven?

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

Listing reviewed: May 2026