DVM productivity · revenue per vet

Revenue Per Veterinarian Calculator

Calculate revenue per DVM, daily production, and appointments for your veterinary clinic.

Revenue per veterinarian is the core productivity metric for clinic valuation and staffing decisions. This calculator breaks down annual and daily production per DVM.

  • Revenue Per Vet = Annual Revenue ÷ Full-Time Veterinarians
  • Median general practice: $450K–$750K per DVM
  • Top performers exceed $650K per DVM annually

Built for clinic owners evaluating DVM hiring, associate productivity targets, and expansion planning.

Source: BizMetricsHQ 240+ veterinary clinics (2025–2026). Methodology

Productivity Inputs

Revenue Per Veterinarian

$600,000/yr

Typical vs benchmark · $50,000 vs median

Daily Production Per Vet

$2,400/day

Revenue Per Appointment

$120

Total Appointments Per Year

10,000

Productivity Benchmarks

  • Revenue Per Vet

    $450K – $750K/yr

  • Appointments Per Day

    16 – 24

  • Revenue Per Appointment

    $95 – $165

  • Daily Production

    $1,800 – $3,200

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good revenue per veterinarian?

The median general veterinary clinic generates $450K–$750K per full-time DVM annually. Solo practices often run $500K–$650K; multi-vet clinics with strong support staff can exceed $700K per DVM.

How many appointments should a veterinarian see per day?

General practice DVMs typically see 16–24 appointments per day, mixing wellness visits, sick exams, and procedures. Emergency veterinarians may see fewer appointments but higher revenue per visit.

How do you improve revenue per veterinarian?

Four levers: optimize scheduling (reduce gaps), improve treatment plan acceptance, add high-margin services (dentistry, diagnostics), and ensure adequate technician support so DVMs focus on billable procedures.

What revenue per vet do buyers expect?

Buyers typically expect $500K+ per DVM for general clinics at acquisition. Below $400K per vet signals staffing inefficiency, low pricing, or weak client retention that may reduce valuation multiples.