How to Set Your Prices Without Pricing Yourself Out of Business
The Dangers of Pricing Too Low
1. Burnout and Staff Turnover
2. Risk of Financial Instability
3. Compromised Quality of Care
4. Reduced Profit Margins
5. Inability to Properly Handle Your Practice’s Debt Load
How to Set Prices for your Veterinary Services
1. Understand Your Costs
- Fixed costs such as rent, utilities, insurance, and employee salaries
- Variable costs such as medical supplies, medications, and diagnostic equipment
- Your desired profit margin (average veterinary practice profit margins run between 10%-25% depending on the size and type of the practice – small animal hospitals are generally in the 10%-15% range, while specialty and emergency practices are generally in the 15%-25% range)
- Your practice’s current debt load
2. Research the Market
3. Value Your Expertise
4. Consider Offering Tiered Pricing Options
5. Monitor and Adjust Regularly
6. Be Transparent
Important Things to Consider
- While many veterinary clinics feel that offering lower prices offers them the ability to help more animals – the opposite is generally true. If a veterinary clinic is offering prices that are not sufficient enough to sustain the practice, it is only a matter of time until the practice becomes insolvent and can no longer help any animals at all. Setting prices a bit higher offers a veterinary practice the ability to remain viable and continue helping animals. Another benefit of setting higher prices is having the ability to offer pro bono or discounted rates in extenuating circumstances, resulting in your clinic being able to help even more animals!
- An in-depth business plan that includes detailed financial projections offers the ability to ensure the viability of your practice is realized. It is important to remember to review your business plan on a routine basis (at least quarterly) to make sure your clinic remains on course.
- A good way to minimize your clinic’s debt load is to set aside a percentage of profits each month to be able to use towards things such as future investments, clinic upgrades, or unexpected costs/repairs. Everything comes with a cost and a successful business must always be prepared for the unexpected. Having rainy day funds available can help alleviate the stress of unavoidable and unexpected expenses.
Triage: Where Medicine Meets Mayhem (and You’re the Traffic Controller)
Triage: Where Medicine Meets Mayhem (and You're the Traffic Controller)Working in vet med means you wear a lot of hats - diagnostician, counselor, detective, animal whisperer. But one of the most underrated (and most stressful) roles? Triage Officer of Chaos. Whether...
Bloat in the Building: What Every Veterinary Team Member Should Know About GDV
Bloat in the Building: What Every Veterinary Team Member Should Know About GDVWhen a GDV case hits the clinic, the whole atmosphere changes. The clock ticks louder and the pace quickens. Everyone - from reception to recovery - has a role to play. Gastric...
Fourth of July: Celebrating our Vet Med Dependence
Fourth of July: Celebrating our Vet Med DependenceThis Independence Day, let's be honest: We're not exactly off the grid grilling hot dogs in flag shorts. Some of us are working. Some of us are on call. Some of us are pretending to enjoy fireworks while...
Vet Med Affirmations: Because You Deserve to Hear it
Vet Med Affirmations: Because You Deserve to Hear itWorking in vet med is not for the faint of heart; it's for the fierce, the compassionate, the caffeine-fueled warriors who do it all while dodging claws, cleaning "surprises," and explaining again why heartworm...
Wag Interrupted: The Tale of the Summer Tail Flop
Wag Interrupted: The Tale of the Summer Tail FlopIf your summer schedule is filling up with dogs who suddenly "won't wag their tail," you're not imagining it - swimmer's tail season is officially upon us. Every year, as the weather warms up and the lakes and...
Things We Say to Pets That Would Get us Fired if Said to Humans
Things We Say to Pets That Would Get us Fired if Said to HumansLet's be honest: working in vet med means having entire conversations with patients who can't talk back (well...except for that one Dachshund, and we don't talk about him anymore). Over time, we develop a...