Comment by mindracer

2 years ago

A few years ago my cat needed his teeth cleaned my local vet charged me £125. The same vet, now owned by CVS, is now going to charge £250

Here in the Bay Area I've been quoted $800 to clean a dog's teeth.

  • Lucky! Our ancient Maltese has a heart murmur and was referred to, I kid you not, a canine cardiologist. The estimate started at $10K and went up from there.

    The affected teeth got loose. We pulled them. The dog is happy and healthy. I would have liked for a professional to have done that for us in a more controlled and methodical manner, but there's no way I could justify spending at least ten thousand freaking dollars on a 13 year old dog who was at significant risk of dying on the table.

  • That sounds like a "we're not in the teeth cleaning business; go away!" price.

    I love my dog and spend pretty freely on him, but no way is he getting an $800 teeth cleaning. At that point, you might as well locate your practice on the airport and cater only to people who fly their dog in on a private jet.

    • Please. Those folks have a canine dental hygienist on staff. They don't go to walk in clinics.

$250 for a cleaning in the US is still a loss leader.

The actual cost to the clinic of a dental cleaning is ridiculous for how often it needs to be done.

That was €10 here in Portugal.

  • How long does the process take? What is the overhead (space / equipment / other costs)? And therefore, how much is the provider earning per hour?

    • About 20 minutes, some disposable gloves, a disposable toothbrush head impregnated with toothpaste. So about €25 an hour. Commercial rents for small spaces are dirt cheap here - probably about €600/mo. That’s probably the driving factor in the U.K. - commercial property is eyewateringly expensive.

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