St Albans has 9 dog and cat vets. Compare clinics by reviews, opening hours, and published prices.
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St Albans, Hertfordshire
4.6 / 5
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About Dog & Cat Vets in St Albans
Companion animals are the primary focus of veterinary care in St Albans.
With all clinics dedicated to treating dogs and cats, St Albans is well-equipped for companion animal care. Services include vaccinations, routine check-ups, and non-urgent treatments. Clinics like Marshalswick Veterinary Surgery and Medivet Redbourn Priory, involved in veterinary nurse training, provide advanced care and education, enhancing the overall quality of care available. Pet owners can rely on these clinics for comprehensive care throughout their pets' lives. [Link to the town’s dog and cat vets page]
Top Rated Dog & Cat Vets in St Albans
Top-ranked veterinary practices based on quality, service, and customer reviews
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9 clinicsANIMALISM is a St Albans veterinary practice that reviewers frequently describe as independent. Its website lists a broad mix of routine care and more advanced work, including CT scans, dental X-rays, laparoscopic spay, and TPLO surgery. The practice also says the team will discuss treatment options and provide estimates, with listed prices excluding prescribed medications.
Medivet St Albans is part of the Medivet group. The practice offers routine appointments, including 15-minute consultations, alongside on-site diagnostics such as an in-house laboratory and X-rays, and it sees cats, dogs, rabbits and other small mammals. Recent feedback is very positive, with owners often praising clear communication, gentle handling for nervous pets, and prompt follow-up when problems are found.
Medivet Redbourn Priory is part of the Medivet group. The clinic offers routine preventative care such as vaccinations, parasite care, microchipping and neutering, alongside diagnostics including on-site ultrasound and treatment for urgent cases. It also has a 24-hour out-of-hours arrangement through Medivet 24 Hour Watford, and recent feedback highlights kind handling, clear communication and a reassuring approach with nervous pets.
- •A calm, pet-friendly environment, with a quiet waiting area, treats, toys and even calming scents helping nervous dogs settle more easily. - Friendly, empathetic staff and appointments that feel relaxed rather than rushed, with owners saying they feel listened to and given options. - A modern, clean and spacious clinic that several people describe as unusually welcoming for a vet visit.
- •Owners often describe the staff as calm, kind and professional, with pets being put at ease quickly during consultations. - Communication stands out as a strength, including clear explanations from Anat and a reassuring manner during appointments. - Several reviews highlight compassion in difficult moments, especially around euthanasia, with owners valuing the time, privacy and empathy shown.
More Dog & Cat Vets in St Albans
Additional veterinary clinics serving the area
- •Owners often describe the team as kind, caring and genuinely invested in their pets’ wellbeing, from reception through to the vets and nurses. - Trust in the advice given is a recurring theme, with several reviewers saying they feel respected and not pushed towards unnecessary or expensive procedures. - Reviews include examples of effective treatment, especially for a long-running eye issue that improved after prescribed ointment, and short-notice help for households with multiple animals.
Vets4Pets St Albans is part of the Vets4Pets group and says it opened in March 2015. The clinic offers routine care alongside surgery and diagnostics, and is listed as a Veterinary Nurse Training facility. Its on-site facilities include a full operating theatre, digital X-ray, an in-house laboratory, separate dog and cat hospital wards, and an isolation unit.
Village Vet St. Albans is part of the Linnaeus-owned Village Vet group. It offers routine appointments alongside urgent and out-of-hours support, with reviews also describing overnight stays, online booking, and regular communication when pets are admitted.
- •Several low-star reviews focus on a single booster-related incident involving a dachshund, with repeated posts from connected reviewers alleging the dog became paralysed after the appointment and was later euthanised. - Other negative feedback centres on communication and diagnostic concerns, including one long-term client who says arthritis noted in earlier records was not clearly communicated, and that a later eye problem was initially downplayed before another vet suspected a tumour. - One older review describes a cat being treated for a urinary or kidney issue before later imaging elsewhere found a foreign object, and criticises the practice for inconsistent care between different vets.



