Updated May 2026 · sourced from Invoca, CallRail, ServiceTitan, Statistics Canada
Veterinary practices have higher call volume per booked visit than almost any other trade — and pet owners' calls don't wait. A missed sick-pet call goes to the emergency clinic.
Vet clinics get hammered by call volume: appointment booking, prescription refills, food orders, boarding inquiries, and (the costly ones) sick-pet calls. The CVMA Small Animal Fee Guide shows exam fees of $80-$150 — but per Practice Life, lifetime value is $5K-$10K over the pet's life.
Most vet clinics close at 6pm and on Sundays. Per healthcare appointment data, ~40% of appointment calls arrive outside business hours. For vets that's all walking out the door to 24-hour emergency clinics.
The cost compounds because pet owners are sticky. A new client lost to a missed call isn't just one $120 visit — it's 7+ years of preventive care, vaccinations, dental cleanings, possibly senior care, and the occasional $1,500 surgery. Capture the call, capture the relationship.
Defaults are loaded from industry data and you can adjust them below.
Even with a receptionist, you're missing calls. Watch the leakage shift.
Industry defaults loaded for the trade you picked above. Adjust to match your reality.
Safigo Reception picks up when you can't. 24/7. In 11 languages. Booked into your calendar with a text summary.
See pricing for veterinary businesses →$500/mo CAD · live in 2 days · 60-day ROI guarantee
This is the only missed-call calculator in the AI-receptionist category that hyperlinks every default to its primary source. Every number is editable — adjust the sliders to match your specific business.
All figures verified by independent web research 2026-05-03. Per-trade calls-per-week defaults remain directional — no published primary research exists; adjust the slider to your actual call volume. Last updated: 2026-05-03.
A vet clinic with 40 calls/week, $500 mix-weighted visit (exam + treatment + follow-up blended), and 60% conversion typically leaks $90K-$160K per year. The big leak is evenings and weekends when sick-pet calls go to emergency clinics instead of your practice.
It should never give clinical advice — and Safigo Reception doesn't. The agent recognizes urgency phrases ('not eating,' 'lethargic,' 'vomiting,' 'injured'), tags the booking, sends you an immediate SMS, and tells the caller a vet will call back within X minutes (you set the threshold). For routine bookings (annual exam, vaccines, prescription refills) it just books straight into your calendar.
Yes. The agent captures pet name, medication, last refill date, and pharmacy preference, then sends the request to your front desk via SMS. You approve or deny — the refill workflow stays under licensed-vet control.
Captured with date range, pet details, and any special requirements (medications, food, behavioural notes). For boarding specifically, the agent can confirm availability against your calendar if you give us the boarding-block schedule during onboarding.
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