Jodie - AI Answering Service

Vet Clinics

What a veterinary front desk actually costs: software, staff, and missed calls

A practice-owner view of what a veterinary front desk really costs in Canada: practice management software pricing, the true cost of a receptionist seat the software cannot replace, and the lost-appointment math on calls that go unanswered.

Max Feller Max Feller Co-Founder 6 min read
A veterinary nurse at the clinic reception desk while a pet owner waits with their dog.

A veterinary front desk carries three real costs: the practice management software, the receptionist seat that software never replaces, and the appointments you lose when nobody picks up the phone. For a typical single-site practice that comes to a few hundred dollars a month in software, a full receptionist seat that costs well above the advertised wage, and a missed-call leak that quietly runs into thousands a year.

Most owners can quote the software price to the dollar and have never costed the other two. Those are the expensive ones.

Front-desk line itemTypical costWhat people forget
Practice management softwareA few hundred dollars a month, or a larger upfront licenceSetup, data migration, and training on top
Receptionist seatA full salary plus on-costs and coverageThe desk is empty at lunch, evenings, and weekends
Missed and after-hours callsThousands a year in lost appointmentsIt never shows up on any invoice

What practice management software costs

Practice management software, the PIMS, is the line everyone benchmarks first because it is the easiest to price. There are broadly two models, and they cost very differently over time.

Cloud systems are billed per vet or per user, per month. For a small to mid-size practice that usually lands somewhere around 130 to 380 dollars a month, scaling with how many seats and modules you turn on. On-premise systems flip that: a larger upfront licence, often several thousand dollars, plus a server, ongoing support, and backups.

Cost line Cloud (per month) On-premise (upfront + ongoing)
Software licence Per vet or per user fee Larger one-off licence
Server / hardware Included Several thousand dollars, replaced every 3 to 5 years
Support Usually bundled A monthly support contract
Backups Included A separate monthly cost
Setup and migration Setup and training fee Setup and training fee

The two numbers people miss are setup and data migration. Moving years of patient records off an old system is rarely free, and the training time while your team gets up to speed is a real cost even when the vendor does not invoice for it. "Free" tiers exist, but they cap seats, patients, or features fast, and they do nothing about the cost lines below. If you are still choosing a system, we walk through the main options in our guide to the best veterinary practice management software.

What a receptionist seat really costs

Here is where the real money sits, and where the advertised wage badly understates the bill. The headline salary is only the start of what a receptionist seat costs you.

  • Employer CPP and EI contributions, plus any benefits, on top of the wage.
  • Vacation cover, and sick coverage, so the desk is never unstaffed.
  • Recruiting and training every time someone leaves, which in a front-desk role is often.
  • The management time spent scheduling, supervising, and covering the desk yourself when you are short.

Add those up and a single full-time reception seat costs a practice well above the base salary, every year. And no practice management software replaces it. The PIMS holds the records and the schedule; it does not greet a client, calm a worried owner, or pick up the phone. That takes a person.

The catch is that even a fully staffed desk is not a desk that is always answering. It is empty at lunch, after the practice closes, on weekends, and any time both lines ring at once while someone is already on a call. Those are exactly the moments a new-client call comes in.

The cost you never see: missed and after-hours calls

This is the line item with no invoice, which is precisely why it is the one owners under-cost. Every front desk has a ceiling on how many calls it can answer, and the calls that hit a busy line or a closed practice do not wait. A worried owner with a sick pet calls the next practice on the list.

So run the math nobody runs. Say a new client and their pet is worth a first appointment plus the lifetime of repeat visits, vaccinations, and the occasional procedure. Now say only a handful of genuine new-client calls a week go unanswered, busy line, lunch, or after hours.

  • A few missed new-client calls a week
  • Even if only some of them would have booked
  • At the value of a first appointment, plus the lifetime value of a registered client
  • That is thousands of dollars a year walking to the practice down the road

You already paid to make that phone ring. Your marketing, your reviews, your Google listing all exist to generate that call. We cover the demand side in our guide to getting more clients for a veterinary practice, but the cheapest growth of all is simply not losing the calls you already paid to create.

Where automation pays back

Once you have the three costs on one page, the question changes. It stops being "software or staff" and becomes "where does each dollar of front-desk budget actually pay back".

A second receptionist seat buys you more answered calls during open hours, at the cost of another full salary plus all the on-costs above, and it still clocks out in the evening. An answering and booking layer sits across the gap the desk cannot cover, the busy moments, the lunch break, the nights and weekends, for a fraction of a second wage. It is not a replacement for a good front-of-house team. It is coverage for the hours that team cannot physically be on the phone.

That is the honest place an AI answering service like Jodie fits: catching the calls a busy or closed desk would otherwise drop, booking the appointment, and passing the details straight to your team. To see how that works for a practice, start with our overview of answering for veterinary practices.

Putting it together: the front-desk budget

For a typical single-site practice, the front-desk budget is software in the low hundreds of dollars a month, at least one reception seat costing well above its advertised wage once on-costs and coverage are included, and a missed-call leak that, left alone, is usually the biggest of the three.

The point is not the exact figures, which will move with your practice size, your software, and your local wages. The point is to put all three lines on the same page, because owners reliably price the first, under-price the second, and forget the third entirely. Run your own version this week: your real software cost, your true cost-per-seat, and your honest guess at missed new-client calls. Then decide where the next dollar of front-desk spend pays back hardest. When you are ready to choose the system that anchors it all, our guide to the best veterinary practice management software is the place to start.

Part of our guides for Vet Clinics See how Hey Jodie helps vet clinics answer every call.

Frequently asked questions

How much does veterinary practice management software cost?
Cloud practice management software is usually priced per vet or per user, per month, typically somewhere around 130 to 380 dollars a month for a small to mid-size practice. On-premise systems trade that monthly fee for a larger upfront licence (often several thousand dollars) plus a server, support, and backups. The headline price is rarely the whole bill once you add setup, data migration, and training.
What does a veterinary receptionist cost a practice?
More than the wage on the job posting. Once you add employer CPP and EI contributions, benefits, vacation and sick coverage, training, and the cost of replacing someone who leaves, a single full-time receptionist seat usually costs a practice well above the base wage. And that seat is still empty at lunch, in the evenings, and on weekends, which is exactly when a lot of new-client calls come in.
How much do missed calls cost a veterinary practice?
Run the math: calls you miss per day, times your answer-to-booking rate, times the value of a first appointment and the lifetime value of that client. A handful of missed new-client calls a week, at the value of a new patient over its lifetime, adds up to thousands of dollars a year. It is the biggest front-desk cost most owners never put on the books.
How much does it cost to set up a veterinary practice?
Build-out, equipment, and inventory dominate the start-up budget, but the cost owners most often underestimate is the recurring front-of-house one: software, the reception seat, and a way to answer the phone when the desk is busy or closed. Those are the lines that keep costing you every month after the doors open, so budget for them from day one.

More vet clinics guides