White Black and Brown cat lying on pink and white textile.

Finding a Vet During the Holidays

Published on December 16, 2025

Last updated:

The holidays are magical, until your dog starts limping on Christmas Eve or your cat stops eating the day before New Year’s. Vet clinics often run on reduced hours, emergency hospitals get slammed, and your regular veterinarian may be closed. The good news: with a little planning (and the right search tactics), you can still find safe, reliable care for your pet, even at the busiest time of year.

Below are five tips pet parents can use to find a vet during the holidays, plus a quick checklist to keep on your phone.

Small dog in light studio wearing medical uniform.

Quick holiday vet checklist (save this now)

Before you need it, gather:

  • Your pet’s medical records (vaccines, diagnoses, current meds)
  • A clear photo of your pet’s ID/microchip number (if available)
  • Your closest 24/7 emergency hospital and directions
  • Pet poison control number (store it in your contacts)
  • Pet insurance that helps cover diagnosis, treatment, and any medications your pet may need.

Strategy 1: Call your primary vet’s voicemail and website first

Even if your vet is closed, most clinics update:

  • Their holiday hours
  • An after-hours phone line
  • The emergency hospital they partner with

A list of urgent-care clinics they trust

Tip: Reach out to your local vet to confirm their holiday hours and closure dates. If your pet needs routine care or refills, try to book an appointment before the holiday rush.

Strategy 2: Use “urgent care” and “same-day vet” searches

When it’s a holiday weekend, “vet near me” may show clinics that are closed. Instead, search with intent-based phrases like:

  • pet urgent care open today
  • same-day vet appointment
  • emergency vet 24/7
  • walk-in vet clinic
  • after-hours vet

Then confirm hours on the clinic’s site and call. Holiday hours can change fast.

Strategy 3: Check reviews

When you’re stressed, it’s easy to pick the first option with a high star rating. Instead, skim reviews for specifics:

  • How they handle wait times 
  • Whether pet parents mention clear pricing and treatment explanations
  • Comments about compassionate staff and clean facilities
  • Patterns of complaints like “pushed unnecessary tests” or “no follow-up”

If a clinic has almost no online presence, no address, or feels “too new to be true,” move on, especially during the holidays when pet-related scams spike.

Strategy 4: Ask your local community

Neighborhood groups can be incredibly helpful for fast recommendations. Post in:

  • Local Facebook groups
  • City subreddits
  • Pet parent community pages

Then verify:

  • The clinic is real (address + licensed vets listed)
  • They’re open today
  • They can see your pet’s species (some clinics limit services)

Strategy 5: Use telehealth for guidance then escalate if needed

Telehealth can’t replace hands-on exams, but it can help you:

  • Decide if symptoms are urgent
  • Get safe at-home care guidance
  • Identify red flags that require an ER visit
  • Understand what to bring and what questions to ask

If your pet has trouble breathing, repeated vomiting, collapse, uncontrolled bleeding, bloated abdomen, seizures, or can’t urinate, skip telehealth and go straight to emergency care.

Holiday red flags: when to go to the emergency vet immediately

Seek emergency care right away if your pet has:

  • Difficulty breathing, blue/pale gums
  • Suspected toxin exposure (chocolate, grapes/raisins, xylitol, THC, lilies, antifreeze)
  • Repeated vomiting/diarrhea or blood in vomit/stool
  • Collapse, seizures, extreme weakness
  • Swollen/bloated abdomen (especially in large-breed dogs)
  • Straining to urinate or no urine output
  • Major trauma (hit by car, falls, bite wounds)

What to bring to the vet or ER (so you don’t waste time)

Pack (or screenshot) these:

  • Your pet’s medical history and vaccines
  • Current medications and dosages
  • A list of symptoms & timeline
  • Photos/video of symptoms (coughing, limping, breathing pattern)
  • A sample (vomit, stool) if the clinic requests it
  • Your ID and payment method
  • Pet Insurance

FAQ: Finding a vet during the holidays

How do I find an emergency vet that’s actually open?

Confirm on the clinic’s official website and call to verify. Holiday hours can differ from what Google shows.

Is a pet urgent care the same as an emergency vet?

Not always. Urgent care can handle mild-to-moderate issues and may have limited overnight staffing. Emergency hospitals typically handle critical cases 24/7.

How can I reduce holiday pet emergencies?

Prevent access to holiday foods (especially chocolate and xylitol), secure trash, keep decorations out of reach, and reduce stress if you’re hosting.

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