DATA-BACKED GUIDE · UPDATED JULY 2026
How much does dog anal gland expression cost in the UK?
Anal gland expression is one of those small, unglamorous jobs that keeps a lot of dogs comfortable. It sounds minor, yet the price can swing quite a bit depending on who does it and whether your dog needs sedating first. The real prices below show what owners across the UK are actually being charged.
The quick version
- A quick expression by a vet nurse is usually cheaper than a full appointment with the vet.
- Vet fees climbed 63% between 2016 and 2023, so the price is higher than many owners remember.
- Impacted or infected glands cost more, because they may need flushing, antibiotics or sedation.
- From September 2026 every practice must display a price list, which makes this job easy to compare.
What people actually paid
Why the price varies so much
The biggest factor is who does the job. Many practices let a trained nurse express the glands for a lower fee than a vet consultation, while some fold it into a general check-up. Location matters too, as city clinics tend to charge more than rural ones. The state of the glands makes a real difference: a routine empty is cheap, but glands that have become impacted, abscessed or infected need extra work and often medication. There is an ownership angle as well. The Competition and Markets Authority found in 2026 that corporate-owned practices were on average 18.3% dearer than independents, and small recurring jobs like this are exactly where that gap shows up.
How to pay less
- Ask whether a nurse can do it rather than booking a full vet consult.
- Tack it on to a visit you were already making, such as a booster, so you are not paying a second consult fee.
- Ask your groomer, as some offer expression at a lower price than a clinic.
- If your dog needs it often, ask the vet to show you the warning signs so you only go in when it is genuinely blocked.
Common questions
Can a groomer express anal glands instead of a vet?
Many groomers offer external expression and it is usually cheaper than a clinic. A groomer works from the outside only, though, so if a gland is impacted or the dog is in pain, a vet needs to do it internally and check for infection.
Is anal gland expression covered by pet insurance?
Routine expression is treated as maintenance and is not usually covered. If a vet diagnoses a genuine problem, such as recurrent impaction or an abscess, the related treatment may be claimable depending on your pet insurance policy.
How often should a dog have its anal glands done?
Most dogs never need it. Those that do might go every few weeks to a few months. Frequent trips add up, so it is worth asking the vet whether diet or fibre could reduce how often it happens.