Income & Employment Guides UK — Maximise Your Earnings
How Much Do Vets Earn in the UK? — 2026 Salary Guide
Complete guide to veterinary surgeon salaries in the UK for 2026. New graduate to partner pay, small animal vs farm vs equine, locum rates, specialist vets, pension, and career progression.
Veterinary medicine is a challenging profession requiring a 5-year degree. Salaries have improved significantly due to staff shortages. Here’s the complete breakdown of what vets earn.
Vet Salary by Experience (2025/26)
By Career Level
| Level |
Salary Range |
| New graduate (Year 1) |
£32,000-£40,000 |
| Graduate (Years 2-3) |
£36,000-£46,000 |
| Experienced vet (3-5 years) |
£42,000-£52,000 |
| Senior vet (5-10 years) |
£48,000-£62,000 |
| Very senior/lead vet |
£55,000-£75,000 |
| Clinical director |
£60,000-£85,000 |
| Practice owner/partner |
£65,000-£150,000+ |
Graduate Starting Salaries by Employer
| Employer Type |
Starting Salary |
| Independent small animal practice |
£32,000-£38,000 |
| Corporate group (IVC, CVS, Pets at Home) |
£35,000-£42,000 |
| Mixed practice |
£32,000-£38,000 |
| Farm/large animal |
£30,000-£36,000 |
| Equine practice |
£28,000-£35,000 |
| Charity practice (PDSA, Blue Cross) |
£32,000-£38,000 |
| Referral hospital |
£36,000-£44,000 |
Pay by Veterinary Sector
Small Animal Practice
| Level |
Salary |
| New graduate |
£34,000-£40,000 |
| Experienced (3-5 years) |
£44,000-£54,000 |
| Senior vet |
£52,000-£65,000 |
| Clinical director |
£60,000-£80,000 |
| Partner/owner |
£70,000-£120,000+ |
Farm/Large Animal
| Level |
Salary |
| New graduate |
£30,000-£36,000 |
| Experienced |
£38,000-£48,000 |
| Senior/TB tester |
£45,000-£58,000 |
| Partner (farm practice) |
£55,000-£90,000 |
Farm vets often receive additional benefits like housing, vehicles, and TB testing income.
Equine Practice
| Level |
Salary |
| New graduate |
£28,000-£35,000 |
| Experienced |
£35,000-£48,000 |
| Senior equine vet |
£45,000-£60,000 |
| Stud/racing specialist |
£50,000-£80,000 |
| Partner |
£60,000-£100,000+ |
Equine starting salaries are lower, but top specialists (especially in racing) earn well.
Mixed Practice
| Level |
Salary |
| New graduate |
£32,000-£38,000 |
| Experienced |
£40,000-£50,000 |
| Senior |
£48,000-£62,000 |
| Partner |
£60,000-£100,000 |
Specialist Veterinary Surgeons
Vets with RCVS certificates or diplomas command higher salaries:
By Specialism
| Specialism |
Salary Range |
| Certificate holder (general) |
£50,000-£70,000 |
| Diploma holder (RCVS Specialist) |
£65,000-£100,000+ |
| Surgery (orthopaedics, soft tissue) |
£60,000-£110,000 |
| Internal medicine |
£60,000-£100,000 |
| Oncology |
£65,000-£100,000 |
| Neurology |
£70,000-£110,000 |
| Cardiology |
£65,000-£100,000 |
| Dermatology |
£60,000-£90,000 |
| Ophthalmology |
£65,000-£100,000 |
| Anaesthesia |
£55,000-£85,000 |
| Diagnostic imaging |
£55,000-£90,000 |
| Emergency and critical care |
£55,000-£85,000 |
| Exotics |
£50,000-£75,000 |
Referral Hospital Pay
| Level |
Salary |
| Rotating intern |
£28,000-£34,000 |
| Resident (training for diploma) |
£32,000-£42,000 |
| Staff clinician |
£50,000-£70,000 |
| Specialist clinician |
£65,000-£100,000 |
| Head of department |
£80,000-£120,000 |
| Hospital director |
£90,000-£140,000 |
Locum Vet Rates
| Level |
Daily Rate |
Annualised Equivalent |
| New graduate |
£300-£400 |
£70,000-£90,000 |
| Experienced |
£400-£550 |
£90,000-£125,000 |
| Senior/sole charge |
£500-£650 |
£115,000-£150,000 |
| Specialist/certificate |
£550-£750 |
£125,000-£170,000 |
| Emergency/OOH |
£500-£800 |
Variable |
Locum rates don’t include pension, leave, CPD, or insurance costs.
Corporate vs Independent
Corporate Groups (IVC, CVS, Medivet, Linnaeus)
| Factor |
Details |
| Starting salary |
Often higher (£35,000-£42,000) |
| Career progression |
Structured, with regional/national roles |
| Benefits |
Often better (CPD, pension, insurance) |
| Workload |
Can be higher |
| Clinical freedom |
May be more restricted |
Independent Practices
| Factor |
Details |
| Starting salary |
Often slightly lower |
| Partnership potential |
Possible to buy into practice |
| Flexibility |
Often more |
| Benefits |
Variable |
| Long-term earning |
Partnership can be very lucrative |
Regional Pay Differences
| Region |
New Graduate |
Senior Vet |
| Central London |
£38,000-£45,000 |
£58,000-£75,000 |
| Greater London |
£36,000-£42,000 |
£52,000-£68,000 |
| South East |
£34,000-£40,000 |
£50,000-£65,000 |
| South West |
£32,000-£38,000 |
£48,000-£62,000 |
| Midlands |
£32,000-£38,000 |
£46,000-£60,000 |
| North West |
£32,000-£38,000 |
£46,000-£60,000 |
| Yorkshire |
£31,000-£37,000 |
£45,000-£58,000 |
| North East |
£30,000-£36,000 |
£44,000-£56,000 |
| Scotland |
£32,000-£38,000 |
£46,000-£60,000 |
| Wales |
£30,000-£36,000 |
£44,000-£56,000 |
| Northern Ireland |
£30,000-£35,000 |
£42,000-£54,000 |
Other Veterinary Careers
Non-Clinical Roles
| Role |
Salary Range |
| Government vet (APHA) |
£38,000-£65,000 |
| Official Veterinarian (OV, meat inspection) |
£45,000-£65,000 |
| Pharmaceutical industry (clinical) |
£50,000-£90,000 |
| Pharmaceutical (commercial/marketing) |
£55,000-£120,000 |
| Pet insurance (claims vet) |
£45,000-£65,000 |
| Academic/university |
£45,000-£85,000 |
| Charity sector (senior roles) |
£50,000-£75,000 |
| Regulatory (VMD) |
£45,000-£70,000 |
Veterinary Nurses
| Level |
Salary |
| Student veterinary nurse |
£18,000-£22,000 |
| Newly qualified RVN |
£23,000-£27,000 |
| Experienced RVN |
£26,000-£32,000 |
| Senior/Head RVN |
£30,000-£38,000 |
| Practice manager (RVN) |
£32,000-£45,000 |
| Certificate holder (RVN) |
£30,000-£40,000 |
Training and Qualifications
Path to Qualification
| Stage |
Duration |
Cost |
| Veterinary degree (BVetMed, BVMS, etc.) |
5 years |
~£9,250/year (£46,250 total) |
| Professional Development Phase (PDP) |
1 year |
Employer-funded |
| RCVS registration |
Ongoing |
~£400/year |
| Certificate (if pursuing) |
2-4 years part-time |
£10,000-£20,000 |
| Diploma/residency |
3-4 years |
Often salaried training |
CPD Requirements
| Requirement |
Details |
| RCVS CPD requirement |
35 hours/year minimum |
| Employer funding |
Usually provided |
| Certificate study |
Often supported by employers |
Pension and Benefits
Typical Benefits Package
| Benefit |
Typical Offering |
| Pension |
3-6% employer contribution |
| CPD allowance |
£1,500-£3,000/year |
| RCVS fees |
Often paid |
| Professional indemnity |
Included |
| VDS membership |
Often paid |
| Health insurance |
Sometimes |
| Annual leave |
25-30 days |
| Out-of-hours arrangement |
Varies (co-op, in-house, none) |
Corporate vs Independent Benefits
| Benefit |
Corporate |
Independent |
| Pension |
4-6% |
3-5% |
| CPD |
Often good |
Variable |
| Career progression |
Structured |
Partnership potential |
| Work-life balance |
Variable |
Variable |
Career Progression
| Stage |
Years Post-Grad |
Role |
Salary |
| New graduate |
0-1 |
Vet |
£32,000-£40,000 |
| Building experience |
1-3 |
Vet |
£38,000-£48,000 |
| Competent |
3-5 |
Senior Vet |
£46,000-£56,000 |
| Experienced |
5-10 |
Senior/Lead Vet |
£52,000-£68,000 |
| Leadership |
8-15 |
Clinical Director |
£60,000-£85,000 |
| Ownership |
10+ |
Partner/Owner |
£70,000-£150,000+ |
| Specialist route |
6-10 |
Diploma-holder |
£70,000-£110,000 |
Summary
| Level |
Salary Range |
| New graduate |
£32,000-£40,000 |
| Experienced vet (3-5 years) |
£42,000-£54,000 |
| Senior vet |
£50,000-£68,000 |
| Clinical director |
£60,000-£85,000 |
| Partner/owner |
£70,000-£150,000+ |
| Specialist (diploma) |
£65,000-£110,000 |
| Locum (daily) |
£400-£650/day |
| Veterinary nurse (RVN) |
£23,000-£38,000 |