Veterinary clinics in Arad
4 veterinary clinics listed in the county of Arad, with address, phone and opening hours where available. Data sourced from OpenStreetMap, refreshed weekly.
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See also pharmacies in Arad or other medical categories: hospitals · clinics · vet clinics · pet shops.
Browse the full guide: Vet clinics and pet shops in Romania →
Choosing a veterinary clinic for your pet
A good vet relationship is built around routine care, not emergencies. The clinic that knows your pet — vaccination history, weight curve, allergies, previous procedures — will give better advice when something goes wrong. If you are still picking one, look for a practice that matches your animal's species and life stage, has reasonable hours for your schedule, and is willing to see you for non-urgent questions on the phone.
Routine vs. urgent care
Most visits are scheduled: vaccinations, deworming, neutering, dental check-ups, annual wellness consults, ear or skin issues. Urgent visits are a different matter. Phone the clinic immediately — or seek out a 24/7 emergency vet — if your pet shows any of the following: laboured breathing or open-mouth breathing in a cat, suspected poisoning (chocolate, raisins, antifreeze, human medicines, plants, rodenticide), sudden inability to urinate (especially in male cats), seizures, repeated vomiting with abdominal distension, a swollen belly that came on quickly, heavy bleeding, suspected fractures, eye injuries, collapse, or a bitch in difficult labour. After working hours and on weekends, the nearest emergency-capable clinic may not be your usual one — having a backup pre-saved is worth the five minutes it takes today.
Vaccination basics — talk to your vet
Romania's standard pet vaccinations include rabies (legally required for dogs, cats and ferrets travelling within the EU) and core combinations against distemper, parvovirus and hepatitis in dogs, or panleukopenia and respiratory viruses in cats. Schedules differ by age, species, lifestyle (indoor vs. outdoor, kennels, travel) and local risks. Don't try to time boosters from a website — the right answer is a conversation with the vet who has seen the animal. Bring the pet's passport (carnet de sănătate) to every visit so it stays up to date.
Species-specialist vets
General small-animal vets handle dogs and cats well. For rabbits, ferrets, parrots, reptiles, rodents and other exotics, look for a clinic that explicitly lists exotic / NAC consults — anaesthesia, dosing and many common diseases differ enough that a generalist may decline to treat. For livestock and equine medicine, choose a large-animal practice. Phoning ahead before any visit, especially for unusual species, prevents wasted trips.
Information for orientation only — does not replace professional medical or veterinary advice. In a medical emergency in Romania, call 112.