DATA-BACKED GUIDE · UPDATED JULY 2026
Emergency animal hospital costs in the UK: what overnight care and monitoring include
When a pet is admitted to an emergency animal hospital overnight, the bill covers far more than a bed for the night. It buys continuous monitoring, medication, fluids and a team on hand through the small hours. Understanding what you are paying for makes the figure less of a shock, so compare what real owners paid in the real prices below.
The quick version
- An overnight stay covers monitoring, IV fluids, medication, oxygen and staff time, not just a kennel.
- Out-of-hours and emergency care carries premium staffing costs that daytime treatment does not.
- The bill grows with the level of intervention, from simple observation to intensive care.
- Pet insurance and a clear written estimate are your best defences against a surprise total.
What people actually paid
The gap: advertised vs actually paid (medians)
People reported paying 81% more than the advertised list price for overnight hospitalisation.
List prices are advertised prices; paid figures are what people reported, often for different cases and from a small sample so far. Treat the gap as a signal, not a quote.
Real prices, in people's own words
- £320“the estimate was way off and it's actually £320 a day”
- £350“had a drip overnight and the bill is £350”
- £849“they had paid the £849 bill”
- £1,300“So far this has cost 1.3k!”
- £1,500“£1500 for what?”
- £1,800“The emergency vet where he stayed overnight was the biggest part of the bill, around £1,800.”
Genuine amounts posted publicly. We publish the price and the quote, never the person.
Why the price varies so much
The size of an emergency hospital bill tracks how sick your pet is and how much care they need. A stable animal in for observation costs far less than one on a drip needing hourly checks, oxygen and repeated tests. Overnight care is inherently expensive because a full team stays awake to watch your pet, and that out-of-hours staffing is the biggest single driver. Who provides the care matters too, as an out-of-hours vet or dedicated emergency hospital prices differently from a daytime practice, and the Competition and Markets Authority found in 2026 that corporate-owned providers charged 18.3% more than independents on average, part of a 63% rise in vet prices between 2016 and 2023.
How to pay less
- Ask for a written estimate on admission and request updates before costs escalate.
- Check whether your pet insurance covers emergency and out-of-hours hospitalisation.
- Ask if your pet can be transferred to your day practice once stable to avoid extra overnight fees.
- Discuss which tests and treatments are essential now versus what can wait until morning.
Common questions
What does an overnight stay at an emergency animal hospital actually include?
It typically covers continuous monitoring, IV fluids, medication, oxygen if needed and the time of the nurses and vets watching your pet through the night. You are paying for round-the-clock care, which is why it costs more than a daytime visit.
Why is out-of-hours care so much more expensive?
Keeping a fully staffed team awake overnight is costly, and an out-of-hours vet or emergency hospital builds that into its fees. The premium reflects the staffing and readiness required to treat a critically ill pet at 3am, not just the treatment itself.
Can I move my pet to my normal vet to reduce the cost?
Often yes, once your pet is stable enough to transfer. Moving to your daytime practice can avoid another night of emergency fees. Always ask the emergency team whether a transfer is safe before arranging it, as your pet's condition comes first.