Vets in Columbus

120 vets competing in Columbus. Here's what the data shows.

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Total Vets

120

Have a website

82%

Market Overview

Columbus has 120 veterinary practices operating within city limits, serving a population of just over 905,000 residents. That works out to roughly one vet for every 7,500 people โ€” a density that puts this market in a moderate competition zone. It's not as saturated as cities with a vet on every block, but there's enough supply that new practices need a clear reason to exist.

Here's the number that matters most: 82% of Columbus vets have a website. That means 22 practices are operating without one. In a market where pet owners start their search online โ€” checking reviews, comparing services, looking at hours โ€” those 22 businesses are invisible to a huge chunk of potential clients. The gap isn't just about having a website; it's about what's on it. Practices like GoodVets and Vetcare Animal Wellness have invested in their digital presence, which gives them a measurable edge.

The market includes a mix of general practices, specialty services like Ohio Vet Dental Service, and niche operators like Dogs Only Medical Center. Competition is real but manageable โ€” the key is differentiation.

What Customers in Columbus Care About

Proximity to East Side neighborhoods

Columbus is geographically spread out, and pet owners want a vet close to home โ€” especially for emergencies or senior pets needing frequent visits.

Experience with specific breeds

With Dogs Only Medical Center operating in the market, Columbus pet owners clearly value breed-specific or species-specific expertise over one-size-fits-all care.

Dental and specialty services

Ohio Vet Dental Service exists for a reason โ€” pet dental care is a growing concern, and owners want to know their vet can handle it without a referral.

New Albany accessibility

GoodVets New Albany shows that the northeast corridor is underserved enough to support a dedicated practice โ€” residents there want quality care without driving into central Columbus.

Online presence and reviews

With 18% of local vets lacking a website, Columbus pet owners have learned to rely heavily on Google reviews and social media to evaluate practices before calling.

Vets operating in Columbus

A sample of real vets in this area. Want ratings, reviews, and exactly where you rank against them? Run a free report on your business.

BusinessType
Fu VinceVeterinarian
Vetcare Animal WellnessVeterinarian
GoodVets New AlbanyVeterinarian
GoodVetsVeterinarian
Ohio Vet Dental ServiceVeterinarian
Dogs Only Medical CenterVeterinarian
Nancy A Rich DVMVeterinarian
Worman John L DVMVeterinarian
Cynthia White DVMVeterinarian
Whitehall Animal HospitalVeterinarian
Johnson Brenda AVeterinarian
SOS of OhioVeterinarian

Business listings from OpenStreetMap contributors (ODbL).

Tips for Vets Owners in Columbus

1

Claim the digital gap before it closes

Right now, 22 Columbus vet practices have no website. If you're one of them, building even a basic site with hours, services, and online booking puts you ahead of nearly one-fifth of your competitors. If you already have one, audit it โ€” is it mobile-friendly, and does it show up when someone searches 'vet near me' in your zip code?

2

Target underserved corridors

GoodVets planted a flag in New Albany because that area had room to grow. Look at neighborhoods like Grove City, Hilliard, or the Far East Side โ€” areas where population is climbing but vet density hasn't caught up yet. Being the first quality practice in a growing suburb beats fighting for clients in a saturated central corridor.

3

Specialize visibly

The market already has a dental-only practice and a dogs-only clinic, and both are listed as known businesses. Columbus pet owners are searching for specific expertise, not just 'a vet.' If you offer exotic animal care, senior pet wellness, or surgical specialties, make that the headline โ€” not a bullet point buried on your services page.

Competition Snapshot

Columbus has 120 vet practices competing for roughly 905,000 residents โ€” that's moderate density, not a bloodbath, but enough to matter. The market is split between general practices fighting on convenience and specialty operators like Ohio Vet Dental Service and Dogs Only Medical Center who've carved out defensible niches. The biggest gap is digital: 18% of practices still don't have a website, which means nearly one in five competitors is essentially invisible to the majority of pet owners who search online first. Standing out here requires either geographic advantage in an underserved neighborhood or a clearly defined specialty โ€” general-practice vets without either will struggle to grow.

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