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>I have always had to pay bills before having the animal released back to me in two different practices.
> All payments to the practice must be made in full before leaving the surgery - regardless of the pet being insured - so nowt difference insofar as getting by the receptionist goes LOL.
> Sounds like you've been unlucky.
> Of course, this has all been EARNED by us -the trust. It's not offered to everyone.
> At our vets with an insured pet, you only pay the excess and they claim the rest from the insurance
> This is it thou, if the client can't pay, they don't get the animal released, what does the vet do with a poorly dog/cat etc
>I don't know how your vet works JG but here the client has to pay up front.
>Does the client not still need to sign a form to give consent to a GA?
>I have always had to pay bills before having the animal released back to me in two different practices
>Other than agreeing a payment in part basis beforehand, I'd guess there's little the vet could do other than release the animal, invoice the client and demand payment within say 30 days of date of invoice failing which outstanding amounts may then be sought through a debt agency, small claims court or similar .... but that's only guesswork of course!
>I wonder just how common it is for vets to be told at the end of a consult or well into an expensive treatment that the client can't pay?
> Surprisingly common
>I don't understand - do you mean that the client has to pay before anything's done?
>Other than agreeing a payment in part basis beforehand, I'd guess there's little the vet could do other than release the animal, invoice the client and demand payment within say 30 days of date of invoice failing which outstanding amounts may then be sought through a debt agency, small claims court or similar ....
> I can 100% bet without even seeing the books that the vet surgery that ithe one that is a lot more expensive that the other has a higher % of customers that have insurance...
>Still seems unlucky to me if you after all these years STILL have not got that privilege
> I don't see why they SHOULDN'T be allowed to make a decent salary? Why not?
> I also believe I have the trust, EARNED, from my current and previous vets - but I respect their practice policies, one of which is payment due on day of treatment :)
>but the fact is you're not buying an actual product, it's a service
>take the boiler repairman as an example. We're not talking a big business there
> We're not talking a big business there, but a one or two man small local business, indeed MUCH smaller than the vets -yet they still don't expect to be paid on the day.
> I have a credit card solely for vet bill use and I pay there and then. It's then down to me to pay the bill off the credit card, not make him wait.
>Many bills go unpaid that even the debt collectors cann't get payment for
> There is always the cheap way that gets results most of the time or the more thorough (and inevitably more expensive) way that means something more unusual is not missed
> the practice is excellent, they do a pet vac scheme where you take pup or dog and pay a one off fee of £90, that will then cover every vaccination for the dogs life
> when I joined he wouldn't do it for my older dog as he said as he was old I wouldn't get the benefit of the club, now that to me isn't a money grabber.
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