Council Veterinary Hospital is a general practice veterinary clinic in Oklahoma City that handles routine wellness exams, vaccinations, dental work, and surgery for dogs and cats, with after-hours emergency services available. It sits in the full-service tier of the city's veterinary market, neither a low-cost clinic nor a specialty-only referral center, and serves pet owners who want continuity of care and access to urgent treatment without transferring to a separate emergency facility.
Council Veterinary Hospital offers preventive care, diagnostic imaging, surgical procedures, and dental cleaning. A wellness exam runs approximately $60 to $75 depending on the patient's age and complexity. Vaccination packages (core vaccines for dogs or cats) typically cost $80 to $120 per visit, though multipack discounts may apply. Dental cleaning under anesthesia ranges from $400 to $800 based on the degree of scaling and extraction needed; confirm current pricing, as surgical costs fluctuate with anesthesia protocol and tooth extraction count. The hospital does not advertise a published wellness plan on its main materials, so inquire directly about discounted preventive packages if you visit frequently.
The city has several tiers of veterinary providers. Low-cost clinics like Banfield at Petco (multiple OKC locations) offer basic vaccines and exams at $45 to $55 per visit but operate on a high-volume model with limited surgical capacity and no after-hours emergency care. Specialty hospitals such as Oklahoma Veterinary Specialty Services handle internal medicine, orthopedics, and cardiology but require a referral and do not offer routine exams. Council sits between these two: it delivers comprehensive general practice with in-house surgery and full diagnostics, plus emergency access, at mid-market pricing. Choose Council if your pet needs surgery, urgent after-hours care, or consistent long-term management. Choose Banfield if cost per visit is the primary concern and your pet needs only vaccines and basic exams. Choose a specialty hospital only when your regular vet refers you for advanced treatment.
Council works well for owners of dogs and cats seeking one clinic for routine care, dental work, and minor surgery without referral delays. It also suits pet owners in northwest or central Oklahoma City who value same-clinic emergency access over driving across the city during a crisis. The hospital is less ideal for owners of exotic pets (rabbits, birds, reptiles), which require specialized veterinarians not typically available at general practices. It is also not the choice if you are shopping purely on price; discount chains will undercut it on routine visits.
Expect to complete a patient history form with your pet's medical background, vaccination records, and current health concerns. The veterinarian will perform a physical exam, listen to your chief complaint, and recommend any diagnostics (bloodwork, X-rays) or preventive services relevant to your pet's age and condition. If your pet is new to the hospital and has no prior records, bring vaccination documentation or previous clinic contacts so the vet can request records. Plan to spend 30 to 45 minutes for a first appointment.
Council Veterinary Hospital operates Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Saturday 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.; it is closed Sundays. Emergency services are available after regular hours and on Sundays, though you may incur an emergency surcharge (confirm the fee when you call). Parking is available on-site. The clinic is located in northwest Oklahoma City; confirm the exact address and directions before your first visit, as GPS routing can be inaccurate in some neighborhoods.
Council Veterinary Hospital fills a genuine gap in Oklahoma City's veterinary landscape by combining general practice depth, in-house surgical capability, and emergency access in a single location, eliminating the need to juggle multiple clinics for routine and urgent care.
