New UK vet pricing rules: What pet owners need to know

Published: 30 March 2026

Vet practices across the UK will be legally required to publish clear price lists, cap prescription fees and provide written cost estimates before treatment – following aย landmark ruling by the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA).

The reforms follow the most extensive review of UK veterinary services in a generation, which received over 56,000 responses from the public and profession. The CMA found that pet owners have been consistently left without the information they need to make confident decisions – leading to weaker competition and higher prices across the sector.

 

What’s changing?

The new measures are legally binding and will begin coming into force by September 2026. Practices that are part of larger corporate groups can expect to see changes before Christmas this year. The key reforms are:

  • Practices must publish a comprehensive price list online covering consultations, common procedures, diagnostics, prescriptions and cremation options
  • Written cost estimates are required before any treatment expected to cost ยฃ500 or more, plus an itemised bill on completion
  • Written prescription fees are capped at ยฃ21 for the first medicine and ยฃ12.50 for any additional medicines
  • Practices that are part of a corporate group must make that clearly visible – on signage, on-site and online
  • A new price comparison service will be launched via the RCVS, with data shared to third-party comparison sites
  • Practices must have written policies in place to protect vets’ clinical independence from commercial pressure

British Pet Insurance welcomes the findings and remains committed to supporting pet owners, veterinary professionals and partners as the industry evolves.

 

“These reforms are a big step forward for pet owners. More transparency and competition are key to helping people get the vet care they need for their pets, without the shock of unexpected costs.”

โ€” Andy Pearce, CEO, British Pet Insurance

What it means for UK pet owners

In practical terms, you’ll be able to compare practices more easily, understand what you’re being charged before you commit, and exercise your right to obtain a written prescription and buy medication elsewhere – which could save some pet owners ยฃ200 a year or more on repeat prescriptions.

It’s also worth knowing that the CMA is backing an overhaul of the Veterinary Services Act – which, if passed, would make veterinary businesses accountable to an independent regulator for the first time. The current legislation is over 60 years old.

 

What these reforms won’t change

While the changes will improve transparency, they won’t reduce the underlying cost of veterinary care. Modern treatments – specialist surgery, advanced diagnostics, cancer therapies โ€” are genuinely expensive to deliver, and that won’t change overnight. If anything, clearer pricing may bring the full cost of care into sharper focus for pet owners who haven’t had to think about it before.

Unexpected vet bills can still run to thousands of pounds, even with all the right information in front of you. That’s where insurance continues to matter – not as a replacement for transparency, but as a safety net for the moments when things go wrong regardless.

 

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Get a quote online or call our team on 01444 708840.

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