DATA-BACKED GUIDE · UPDATED JULY 2026
How Much Is a Vet Wellness Exam, and What's Included?
The wellness exam is the annual once-over your vet does even when nothing is wrong. It is also the office visit fee that shows up on almost every bill, so it pays to know what you are actually getting for it. Sometimes it is just the vet's time and hands-on check, and sometimes it quietly includes bloodwork or a fecal test that pushes the total up.
The quick version
- The wellness exam is essentially the office visit fee, meaning the vet's time and a physical check.
- It usually does not include lab work, vaccines, or tests unless you add them.
- Add-ons like bloodwork, fecal tests, and a heartworm test are where the bill grows.
- Prices run higher at corporate hospitals and in high-cost cities.
- Older pets are often steered toward more add-on testing, which is reasonable but still optional.
What people actually paid
The gap: advertised vs actually paid (medians)
People reported paying 47% more than the advertised list price for wellness exam.
List prices are advertised prices; paid figures are what people reported, often for different cases. Treat the gap as a signal, not a quote.
Real prices, in people's own words
- $25“Trucksville Dog & Cat Hospital — Office Visit $25”
- $39“Exam39.25”
- $49“I'm currently paying $49 for exam fees which is so expensive considering they're weighing my dog and listening to his heartbeat”
- $65“Exam $65.00”
- $75“Liberty Veterinary Clinic — Exam.Wellness.Office Visit $75”
- $101“VCA Mueller Pet Medical Center and Pet Inn — Medical Condition Exam/Consultation $101 (1-5 invoices)”
Genuine amounts posted publicly. We publish the price and the quote, never the person.
Why the price varies so much
What counts as a wellness exam is not standardized, so two clinics can quote very different numbers for what sounds like the same thing. One may mean just the vet looking your pet over, another may bundle in a fecal test, bloodwork, and a heartworm check. Ownership and location move the base fee, with corporate hospitals and expensive metros charging more. Age matters too, since senior pets get more testing recommended, which is often worth it but is still a choice you can question line by line.
How to pay less
- Ask for an itemized estimate before the visit so you can see the exam separate from the add-ons.
- Decline or defer optional lab work you are unsure about, and ask what is truly necessary this year.
- Combine the annual exam with any due vaccines so you pay the visit fee once.
- Look into wellness plans if your pet is young and healthy, but do the math against what you would actually use.
- For a healthy adult pet, ask whether an every-other-year deep workup is reasonable rather than annual.
- Use a low-cost clinic for routine shots and save the full hospital for the real annual exam.
Common questions
What actually happens during a wellness exam?
The vet checks weight, listens to the heart and lungs, feels the abdomen, and looks at eyes, ears, teeth, and skin, while asking about eating, drinking, and behavior. It is a hands-on head-to-tail check meant to catch problems early. Anything beyond that, like blood or stool testing, is an add-on.
Is the wellness exam the same as the office visit fee?
Mostly, yes. For a routine annual, the wellness exam is the office visit. If you come in for a specific problem, that same base fee is usually called an office visit or consultation instead.
How often does my pet need one?
Once a year for healthy adults is the common recommendation, moving to twice a year for seniors or pets with chronic conditions. Puppies and kittens come in more often during their first year.
Can I skip the exam and just get vaccines?
Many hospitals require a current exam before they will give vaccines, which is part of why the fee feels mandatory. Vaccine-only clinics skip it, but they are not a substitute for a real annual checkup that catches early illness.
Why is bloodwork pushed at the annual visit?
Baseline bloodwork can catch kidney, liver, or thyroid issues before symptoms show, and it is genuinely useful for older pets. For a young healthy pet it is more optional. Ask what the vet is looking for and decide from there.