#1

A little girls hamster was only standing in the corner of its cage. It would not eat. Would not drink. It just stood there. The mom loaded up the hamster and the little girl. Off to the Vet they go. Once there the Vet observed the hamster in its cage. It just stood in the corner. Upon taking the hamster out of the cage the hamster ran around. Ate food and drank water. Everyone was perplexed. The Vet asked if anything had happened to the hamster recently. The little girl told him the hamster had gotten out and ran under the refrigerator. After examining the hamster the Vet said “Found the problem”. The hamster had a magnet in its mouth pouch. So every time it stood in the corner of its cage it became “stuck” to the cage bars and couldn’t move.
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#3

It’s hard to gauge what your visit to the vet might cost because there are lots of variables to consider. From your country, city, and the specific clinic you visit, to the nature of the problem, the time of day, and the need for any medications or treatment.
According to Forbes’ analysis of cost data from Banfield Pet Hospital, the overall average cost of a vet visit is around $61. However, this number can rise significantly if your pet needs additional healthcare services.
#4

He threw up a ton of plastic wrap and lived another decade.
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As per Forbes’ analysis, the average cost of a basic vaccination will set you back between $25 and $50 at the vet. However, treating a serious illness, such as cancer or an ingested foreign object, can cost thousands of dollars.
A basic exam at the vet clinic can cost between $50 and $250, including a physical exam, health assessment, and consultation. Meanwhile, diagnostic tests like X-rays, bloodwork, or urinalysis typically range between $100 and $300.
An emergency room exam might cost around $125, hospitalization might set you back roughly $700+, while advanced surgery or specialty care can cost upward of $4,000.
“As a concerned pet parent, your pet’s health is a top priority, but at the same time, these expenses can burn your savings. Having pet insurance is an effective way to ease that burden,” Forbes suggests.
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#9

This was 10pm.
I call the ER, they say to bring her in because a foxtail in the nose, throat or trachea is really dangerous. So we go to the hospital, they sedate her a bit and dig in her nose for the darn thing but it’s not there. After a couple hours they tell me to take her home and come in the morning for surgery because it must’ve gone into the respiratory system.
So I do that. By the time I get home it’s like 2am. A few hours later we go back to the hospital and she goes into surgery. I’m a mess all morning wondering how much damage a single foxtail could do. At like 2pm I get a call from the surgeon: The foxtail isn’t there. It just isn’t.
I ask: What now?
He says: Nothing.
I say: So what do we do?
He says: Nothing.
I say: But where is it?
He says: She probably swallowed it. She’ll poo it.
And that’s the story of one of the most expensive nights of my life.
Once you’ve read through these pet parent stories, we’d like to turn the discussion over to you, dear Pandas.
What has been the silliest, most expensive reason that you went to the vet? What’s the biggest fake emergency your beloved animals had that made you panic?
Tell us all about it in the comments down below. Meanwhile, tell your pets we said ‘hi!’
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#13

He started throwing up every 5-10 minutes like clockwork, screaming the entire time. My husband was at work so I got my sister in law, who is a vet tech and was equally convinced spider plants aren't poisonous, to drive us to the emergency vet.
We got him in, they gave him fluids and an anti-nauseant injection. They take all his vitals and bring him into the back so everyone can admire how huge he was (he was only part Maine coon but hit 27lbs and had a big old noggin). Vet brings me into her office and pulls out this MASSIVE book. Finds what she looking for and looks at me and goes, "The spider plant. You said it was big?"
I confirm - it was free and it was huge. The vet nodded, closed her book and explained that while spider plants are non-toxic, at certain sizes they tend to accumulate hallucinogenic compounds.
So, that's how I paid $700 to find out my cat was tripping balls and needed some gravol.
Disclaimer: It was an emergency vet in Vancouver, BC at just past midnight. Hence the $$$.
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ETA: $150.
#17

I thought maybe it was acne or something (she was a growing kitten)
My husband took her to the vet. $400 to be told she got bit by a spider and was fine.
It cleared up a few days later but a few weeks later? It happened again, vet and all.
He told us to keep her away from spiders? But I don't even know where rewas finding them 😭.
#18

Vet tells me to just keep taking her on long walks, it'll happen. We leave the vet and that dog stops on the sidewalk right in front and drops the most massive dump I've ever seen from an animal smaller than a cow. I swear I can see her belly shrinking as she just poops and poops. It's more than my bag can handle so I run back inside to see if they have like a scooper or something I can borrow. Lady behind the desk pops up with a roll of paper towels and tells me that it's not a problem, she'll come clean it up. I try to argue with her but she just heads out there.
She sees the pile and just stops and looks at me. I know!
Still, though, she insists she'll just go get the scooper and I can go.
Total bill was ~~$900~~ $400 that day, and more than half of it fell out of my dog's bum as we left.
#19

$200 to be told my cow ate a bee, there was nothing to be done, and the wheeze and boogers would be gone in a couple days.
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