Edmond East Animal Hospital is a general-practice veterinary clinic located in Edmond that serves the northern Oklahoma City metro with routine care, preventive services, and minor surgical procedures. The practice operates extended weekday hours and Saturday appointments, a practical advantage for employed pet owners who cannot easily take midday time off. It functions as a primary-care facility rather than an emergency or specialty center, making it best suited to pets with standard vaccination, illness, and surgical needs.
The hospital operates as an AAHA-accredited clinic, meaning it meets standards for medical record-keeping, facility cleanliness, and staff training set by the American Animal Hospital Association. That accreditation applies to both dogs and cats. The practice does not advertise specialty services such as orthopedic surgery, cardiology, or dermatology; those cases typically require referral to Oklahoma State University's College of Veterinary Medicine in Stillwater or emergency hospitals in central Oklahoma City. The clinic's core function is wellness exams, vaccinations, dental cleaning, spay and neuter, and diagnosis and treatment of common acute illnesses.
Edmond East offers standard wellness packages. A routine exam costs $65 to $85 depending on whether the pet is new to the practice. Vaccination packages run $35 to $55 per injection; core vaccines (rabies, DHPP for dogs; rabies and FVRCP for cats) are usually administered annually or every three years after an initial series. Dental prophylaxis (cleaning under anesthesia) ranges from $400 to $800 depending on tooth extraction necessity; the clinic will estimate cost after pre-surgical X-rays. Spay surgery averages $350 to $500; neuter surgery averages $250 to $400. These price tiers are typical across northern Oklahoma City but tend to run slightly lower than specialty animal hospitals in central Oklahoma City proper.
The clinic offers a wellness plan option that bundles two exams, basic vaccines, and preventive bloodwork into an annual package, though exact pricing should be confirmed directly, as plan costs adjust seasonally.
Edmond East's primary advantage is location and hours for Edmond and north-central Oklahoma City residents. It stays open until 6 p.m. on weekdays and operates Saturdays until 2 p.m., accommodating schedules that make midday appointments impossible. By contrast, many independent practices in Oklahoma City proper operate 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday only.
For lower-cost baseline care, Banfield Pet Hospital locations across Oklahoma City (including one in Edmond at Oklahoma City Petco) offer wellness exams and vaccines at slightly lower initial pricing but operate within larger corporate infrastructure and often have longer wait times during peak hours. Banfield is suitable if cost is the primary concern and you accept less continuity with a single veterinarian.
For pets requiring surgical expertise beyond routine spay/neuter, Oklahoma State University's College of Veterinary Medicine in Stillwater (45 minutes south) provides board-certified surgeon access but at higher cost and longer drive. Edmond East can perform straightforward orthopedic diagnostics and minor soft-tissue surgery; complex fractures and ligament repairs require OSU referral.
For after-hours emergency care, Edmond East does not operate a 24-hour emergency service. The nearest 24-hour facilities are VEG (Veterinary Emergency Group) at 405 W. Britton Road in Oklahoma City and Oklahoma Veterinary Emergency & Specialty Center on North Western Avenue. Edmond East clients are expected to use these facilities for off-hours crises and report findings back to their primary veterinarian the next business day.
Edmond East is well-matched to pet owners in Edmond, north Oklahoma City, and the surrounding suburbs who need reliable preventive care and are comfortable traveling 45 minutes to OSU or central Oklahoma City for specialist referrals. It works for stable pets with annual exam routines, up-to-date vaccination needs, and straightforward surgical candidates.
The clinic does not suit owners of exotic pets (reptiles, small mammals, birds), as the practice focuses on dogs and cats. It is not appropriate for emergencies during nights and weekends. Pets with chronic complex conditions such as severe heart disease, orthopedic injuries requiring surgical reconstruction, or immune-mediated diseases may benefit more directly from specialist care in central Oklahoma City or referral to OSU's teaching hospital.
New clients should bring recent medical records if the pet has been seen elsewhere and arrive 10 to 15 minutes early to complete intake forms. The initial exam includes a physical assessment, discussion of vaccination and parasite-prevention history, and baseline questions about diet, behavior, and any current symptoms. If vaccines are due, the veterinarian will recommend a schedule that day; most owners choose to proceed immediately. If dental disease or other issues are noted, the veterinarian will propose a treatment plan and timeline. First visits typically run 30 to 45 minutes. The clinic accepts cash, card, and most major payment plans.
Edmond East Animal Hospital operates Monday through Friday 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturday 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. The clinic is closed Sundays. Parking is available on-site. Appointments are required; walk-ins are accommodated only if the schedule permits. Verification of current hours and appointment availability is recommended before visiting, as holiday schedules may shift.
Edmond East fills a practical gap for northern suburbs: it offers consistent preventive care, reasonable pricing, and hours that fit working pet owners, making it a logical choice for routine veterinary maintenance in the Edmond area.
