Volunteers For Animal Welfare (VAW) operates a surgical clinic focused on spay and neuter procedures, priced significantly below full-service veterinary hospitals and positioned to serve cost-conscious pet owners and rescue organizations across Oklahoma City.
VAW's Spot Clinic is a nonprofit-run surgical facility rather than a general practice. It handles spays, neuters, and related minor surgical services at a fraction of typical private veterinary costs. The clinic operates on a high-volume, streamlined model: no wellness exams, dental work, or complex diagnostics on-site. It exists to reduce the barrier to sterilization for people who might otherwise skip the procedure due to price.
Spay surgery costs $65 to $75 depending on the animal's weight and sex; neuter surgery runs $45 to $55. These prices are verified to change infrequently but you should confirm current rates by calling ahead, as any nonprofit clinic may adjust fees seasonally or based on material costs. The clinic also handles minor procedures like dewclaw removal and ear crop correction. Pre-surgical bloodwork is available but optional and costs extra.
No anesthesia-free surgery is performed; the clinic uses general anesthesia with monitoring. Pets are typically held overnight post-op and released the following day with discharge instructions and a small amount of pain medication.
A private veterinary practice like Edmond Animal Hospital or a full-service clinic in central Oklahoma City charges $200 to $400 for a spay and $150 to $250 for a neuter, often bundled with a pre-operative exam, bloodwork, and extended pain management. Those clinics offer broader services and shorter waits but serve a different financial profile.
VAW's clinic is the right choice if cost is the primary driver and the owner has a healthy, young pet with no known complications. Choose a full-service practice if your animal has pre-existing conditions, requires a pre-op exam to rule out risk factors, or if you want your regular veterinarian performing the surgery. Rescue organizations and TNR (trap-neuter-return) programs in the Oklahoma City area rely heavily on VAW pricing.
The Spot Clinic works well for owners of healthy young animals, people managing multiple pets, and rescue groups operating on tight budgets. Senior animals, obese pets, or those with cardiac or other health concerns are better served at a hospital where pre-operative evaluation is standard and complications can be addressed immediately.
Call ahead to schedule. Bring proof of rabies vaccination (required). Drop off your pet in the early morning; the clinic will take a brief history but does not perform a full wellness exam. Surgery happens the same day. Pain medication is sent home; instructions include activity restriction, incision checks, and suture removal timing (usually 10 to 14 days).
The clinic operates by appointment only and does not accept walk-ins. Hours and exact location should be confirmed directly with VAW, as nonprofit facilities sometimes adjust schedules based on volunteer availability and donations. Parking is available on-site. The clinic is not an emergency facility; if your pet has complications post-op, contact your regular veterinarian or an emergency hospital.
VAW's Spot Clinic fills a specific gap in Oklahoma City's veterinary market: it eliminates cost as a barrier to responsible pet ownership while maintaining safety standards. For owners balancing necessity with budget, it remains the most direct option in the metro area.
