What is the best tech stack for a veterinary practice in 2027?
Direct Answer
The best tech stack for a veterinary practice in 2027 is built around a practice information management system (PIMS) as the spine — ezyVet or Digitail for cloud-modern practices, Cornerstone for larger hospitals that want the IDEXX ecosystem — wired directly to IDEXX VetLab in-house diagnostics, a client-communication layer like Weave or PetDesk for two-way texting and automated reminders/recall, and a home-delivery pharmacy such as Vetsource so prescriptions don't leak to Chewy.
Payments and pet financing (CareCredit, Scratchpay) sit on top so a $4,000 surgical estimate closes at the counter instead of walking out the door.
TL;DR
— The PIMS is the spine of the veterinary practice tech stack: it owns the patient record, the invoice, the schedule, and the reminder engine, so everything else is chosen by how cleanly it integrates with it. — In-house diagnostics and imaging must post results straight back into the patient chart; manual re-entry of IDEXX or Antech labs is where small practices quietly lose hours every day. — Client communication (two-way text, reminders, online booking, recall) drives compliance and revenue more than any other layer — missed dentals and overdue vaccines are pure lost margin. — Pharmacy/home delivery plus integrated payments and pet financing keep prescription revenue and high-ticket procedures inside the practice rather than leaking to Chewy or to "let me think about it." — Cloud-modern PIMS (ezyVet, Digitail, Shepherd, Provet Cloud) win on integrations and remote access; legacy incumbents (Cornerstone, AVImark) win on installed base and deep IDEXX/Covetrus ties.
Why the Veterinary Practice Tech Stack Works Differently
A veterinary practice is a hospital, a pharmacy, a retail store, and a recurring-care subscription business compressed into one building, and the tech stack has to serve all four at once. Four mechanics make it different from a generic small-business stack.
- The PIMS is the spine, not just one app among many. In most industries the CRM or the accounting system is the hub. In a veterinary practice the PIMS owns the patient and client record, the medical chart, the schedule, the invoice, the inventory deduction, and the reminder/recall engine — all in one. Every other tool is chosen by how cleanly it reads from and writes to the PIMS. A best-of-breed communication app that can't see the patient's vaccine due dates is nearly useless, so integration depth with the PIMS outranks standalone feature lists.
- In-house diagnostics and imaging have to flow into the chart automatically. Veterinary medicine runs on point-of-care results: a chemistry panel, CBC, urinalysis, or digital radiograph taken during the visit changes the treatment plan in the same appointment. If those results don't post directly into the patient record, a technician is re-keying values off an analyzer screen — error-prone and slow. The diagnostics layer (IDEXX VetLab analyzers, Antech reference labs, digital radiography and ultrasound) must be wired into the PIMS so results, billing, and the medical note all land in one place.
- Client communication and reminders drive compliance, and compliance is revenue. Unlike a human clinic, a veterinary practice depends on owners remembering to bring a pet in for an annual exam, a dental, a heartworm test, or a vaccine booster. The reminder/recall and two-way-text layer is where compliance — and therefore margin — is won or lost. A practice that texts the owner, lets them book online at 9pm, and auto-recalls overdue patients fills the schedule that a phone-only practice leaves empty.
- Pharmacy and payment capture decide where the money lands. Owners will fill a prescription somewhere; the only question is whether it's the practice's home-delivery pharmacy or Chewy. And a $3,000 dental-with-extractions estimate either closes at the counter with CareCredit or Scratchpay financing, or it becomes a "let me check with my spouse" that never returns. The pharmacy/home-delivery and integrated-payments/financing layers are not back-office plumbing — they are direct revenue-retention tools.
The Core Stack, Layer by Layer
Each layer below names the best-fit product for a typical companion-animal practice, an honest reason, a rough price, and one or two alternates. A solo practice can skip the imaging-PACS and BI layers entirely; a hospital group needs all of them.
Practice Information Management System (PIMS) — ezyVet (alternates: Digitail, Cornerstone). The system of record for patients, clients, scheduling, charting, invoicing, and reminders. ezyVet (owned by IDEXX) is the strongest cloud-native choice for growth-minded practices: browser-based, deep IDEXX diagnostics integration, strong workflow automation, and a real API.
Digitail and Shepherd are newer cloud-modern options with cleaner UX and aggressive pricing, good for startups and tech-forward owners. Cornerstone (IDEXX) and AVImark / ImproMed (Covetrus) remain the legacy incumbents — server-installed, enormous installed base, deep diagnostics ties, but heavier IT and dated interfaces.
Provet Cloud and Vetspire round out the cloud field for multi-site and specialty work. Expect roughly $300-$700/month for a cloud PIMS at a single-doctor practice, scaling with users and locations; legacy server licenses are often a larger up-front purchase plus support.
In-House Diagnostics — IDEXX VetLab suite (alternate: Antech / Heska). Point-of-care chemistry, hematology, and urinalysis analyzers with results that post straight into the chart. IDEXX VetLab Station plus the Catalyst One/Smart QC analyzers is the default for practices already on ezyVet or Cornerstone because the integration is native and results auto-attach to the patient.
Antech (Mars) is the main reference-lab and analyzer alternate, often paired with a competing PIMS. Analyzer cost is largely consumables and a reagent commitment rather than a flat SaaS fee, so price it per-test against your case volume.
Imaging / PACS — IDEXX or competitive digital radiography + cloud PACS (alternate: Sound/Antech imaging). Digital X-ray, dental radiography, and ultrasound with images stored in a PACS that links to the patient record. Most practices buy the DR plate/generator and a PACS that integrates with the PIMS; teleradiology read services attach here for after-hours interpretation.
A solo low-volume practice can defer this; a busy or surgical practice cannot.
Client Communication & Engagement — Weave (alternates: PetDesk, Vello). Two-way texting, automated appointment confirmations, reminders, recall campaigns, reviews, and a phone system in one. Weave combines VoIP phones with text and payments, which is why single-site practices like it — one vendor for phone, text, and card-on-file.
PetDesk is veterinary-purpose-built for reminders, a client mobile app, and recall, and integrates with most PIMS. Vello (Covetrus) and Vetstoria focus on the booking/communication slice. Budget roughly $300-$600/month depending on whether phones are bundled.
Online Booking & Scheduling — Vetstoria (alternate: PetDesk booking, PIMS-native). Real-time, rules-based online appointment booking that writes directly into the PIMS schedule so the front desk isn't double-entering. Vetstoria is the category leader for true two-way calendar sync; many communication suites (PetDesk, Vello) now bundle a booking widget.
If your PIMS (Digitail, Provet Cloud) has solid native booking, you may not need a separate tool.
Pharmacy & Home Delivery — Vetsource (alternate: Covetrus prescription management). A practice-branded online pharmacy with home delivery and autoship so prescription and food revenue stays in-house instead of leaking to Chewy. Vetsource is the most common standalone home-delivery platform and integrates with the major PIMS for one-click scripts and refill reminders.
Covetrus offers prescription management plus distribution, attractive if you already buy supplies through them. This layer pays for itself in retained pharmacy margin.
Payments & Pet Financing — Weave Payments + CareCredit + Scratchpay. Integrated card processing with card-on-file and text-to-pay, plus third-party financing that lets owners say yes to large estimates. Weave Payments (or a PIMS-native processor) handles day-to-day collection; CareCredit (Synchrony) is the dominant pet-financing option and Scratchpay is the friendlier-approval alternate.
Offering financing at the estimate is one of the highest-ROI changes a practice can make to close rate on surgery and dentistry.
Telehealth — TeleVet (alternate: Airvet). Video and asynchronous chat visits for triage, rechecks, and follow-ups, ideally launched from inside the patient record. TeleVet and Airvet are the established veterinary-specific options. Useful for multi-site groups and practices serving rural or anxious-pet clients; genuinely optional for a small practice that doesn't want a virtual-care line.
Reputation & Reviews — Birdeye or Weave (alternate: Google Business Profile direct). Automated review requests after visits and review monitoring across Google and Facebook. Weave and PetDesk both bundle review requests, so many practices never buy a standalone tool; Birdeye is the heavier option for groups managing many locations.
Accounting & Finance — QuickBooks Online (alternate: Xero). General ledger, payroll integration, and tax. QuickBooks Online is the near-universal small-business choice and most veterinary bookkeepers and CPAs expect it; the PIMS exports daily sales summaries into it. Inventory still lives in the PIMS, not QuickBooks.
Inventory — PIMS-native (alternate: dedicated inventory module). Drug, food, and supply tracking with reorder points and controlled-substance logging is best handled inside the PIMS so dispensing deducts stock and posts to the invoice in one motion. Standalone inventory tools are rarely worth the integration tax for a single practice.
BI & Analytics — VetSuccess (alternate: PIMS-native dashboards). Practice KPIs — average client transaction, active patients, new clients, compliance rates, revenue per DVM. VetSuccess (IDEXX) pulls from the PIMS and benchmarks against peer practices, which solo owners can defer but multi-site groups should run from day one.
Many modern PIMS now ship native dashboards that cover the basics.
Real Operators & What They Run
- VCA Animal Hospitals (Mars) — a corporate group running a centralized PIMS and IDEXX/Antech diagnostics at scale, with standardized communication and reminder workflows across hundreds of hospitals so every location reports the same KPIs.
- Banfield Pet Hospital (Mars) — built around a proprietary/standardized PIMS and an Optimum Wellness Plan subscription model; its stack is engineered around recurring wellness-plan billing and reminders, the clearest example of compliance-as-revenue at national scale.
- Independent cloud-modern startups — new single- and two-doctor practices increasingly open on ezyVet or Digitail + IDEXX VetLab + Weave + Vetsource, choosing cloud PIMS specifically to avoid an on-site server and to get text/booking/payments out of the box.
- Established suburban general practices — the long-tail middle typically still runs Cornerstone or AVImark on a server with IDEXX diagnostics, having layered PetDesk on top for reminders and online booking because ripping out a 15-year-old PIMS is painful.
- Specialty & emergency hospitals — multi-department referral centers lean on ezyVet, Provet Cloud, or Vetspire for complex scheduling and referral workflows, full PACS imaging, teleradiology reads, and VetSuccess analytics to manage doctor productivity.
- Mobile and house-call vets — solo cloud-only operators run a lightweight cloud PIMS (Shepherd, Digitail), a mobile card reader with CareCredit/Scratchpay financing, and Vetsource home delivery, skipping imaging-PACS and BI entirely.
Integration Architecture
The pattern is hub-and-spoke with the PIMS at the center. Diagnostics and imaging push *into* the record; communication, pharmacy, payments, accounting, and BI read *out* of it. Any tool that can't sync bi-directionally with the PIMS becomes a manual re-entry point — the single most common reason a veterinary stack feels slow.
Failure Modes
- Bolting on communication tools the PIMS can't talk to. A practice buys a slick reminder or booking app that doesn't truly two-way-sync with the PIMS, so the front desk re-enters appointments and reminders fire off stale due-date data. The fix is to verify a live, bi-directional integration with your specific PIMS version before signing — not just a logo on the vendor's "integrations" page.
- Manual lab and imaging re-entry. When diagnostics aren't wired to auto-post, technicians key chemistry values and attach radiographs by hand. This is slow, error-prone, and a medico-legal risk if a value is mistyped. Choosing diagnostics that natively integrate with the PIMS (or a PIMS that natively integrates with your analyzers) eliminates the entire failure class.
- Letting pharmacy revenue leak to Chewy. Practices that never stand up a branded home-delivery pharmacy watch refill revenue migrate to online retailers, then wonder why per-patient revenue is flat. Without an integrated home-delivery option and refill reminders, the convenience gap hands margin to a competitor for every chronic-medication patient.
- No financing at the point of estimate. Presenting a $3,000 surgical estimate with no CareCredit or Scratchpay option turns treatable cases into declined care and lost revenue. The failure is procedural as much as technical: financing has to be configured in the payment flow and offered by staff on every high-ticket estimate, or it sits unused.
Budget & Sizing
- Solo / single-doctor practice (1 DVM, ~3-6 staff). Cloud PIMS (Digitail, Shepherd, or ezyVet) + IDEXX VetLab + a communication suite that bundles phones, text, payments, and reviews (Weave) + Vetsource home delivery + CareCredit/Scratchpay. Skip standalone imaging-PACS, telehealth, and BI. Roughly $700-$1,500/month in software plus diagnostic consumables and payment processing fees.
- Multi-doctor practice (2-6 DVMs, busy GP). ezyVet or Cornerstone + full IDEXX diagnostics and digital radiography/PACS + Weave or PetDesk + Vetstoria online booking + Vetsource + integrated payments/financing + QuickBooks Online. Add VetSuccess once you have enough doctors to manage productivity. Roughly $1,500-$4,000/month in software, scaling with users.
- Hospital group / specialty-emergency (multi-site or referral). ezyVet, Provet Cloud, or Vetspire across locations + full diagnostics, PACS, and teleradiology + standardized communication/booking + Vetsource + Covetrus distribution + VetSuccess benchmarking + telehealth + Birdeye reputation across sites. Roughly $4,000-$12,000+/month depending on location count, with central IT and integration work on top.
30/60/90 Day Implementation Plan
- Days 0-30 — Stand up the spine. Select and configure the PIMS, migrate patient and client data from the old system, and validate that in-house diagnostics post results directly to the chart. Train doctors and technicians on charting and invoicing first; nothing else matters until the record is clean and reliable. Confirm controlled-substance and inventory tracking work day one.
- Days 31-60 — Wire the front of house. Connect the client-communication suite for two-way text, appointment confirmations, and reviews; turn on online booking with verified two-way schedule sync; and integrate payments with card-on-file and text-to-pay. Configure CareCredit and Scratchpay so financing is offered on every large estimate. This is the layer that fills the schedule and lifts close rate.
- Days 61-90 — Capture the revenue and measure it. Launch the branded home-delivery pharmacy with autoship and refill reminders, build out automated reminder/recall campaigns for overdue patients, and connect QuickBooks Online for daily sales summaries. Turn on BI/analytics dashboards (PIMS-native or VetSuccess) and start tracking average client transaction, compliance rates, and revenue per DVM against baseline.
FAQ
Should a new practice choose a cloud PIMS like ezyVet or a legacy system like Cornerstone? For a new or growth-minded practice, a cloud-modern PIMS — ezyVet, Digitail, Shepherd, or Provet Cloud — is the better default. You avoid an on-site server, get remote access and automatic updates, and inherit cleaner integrations with communication, booking, and pharmacy tools.
Cornerstone and AVImark still make sense when you're inheriting an established hospital already deep in that ecosystem or need a specific feature only the incumbent offers, but greenfield practices rarely benefit from starting on legacy server software.
Do I really need separate communication and booking tools, or can the PIMS do it? It depends on the PIMS. Newer cloud systems (Digitail, Provet Cloud) ship competent native booking and messaging, so a small practice may not need a separate vendor. Most established practices on Cornerstone or AVImark do add a dedicated communication suite (Weave, PetDesk) because the native reminder and texting tools are thin.
Verify true two-way schedule sync before buying anything standalone.
How do I stop losing prescription revenue to Chewy? Stand up a practice-branded home-delivery pharmacy — Vetsource is the most common — integrated with your PIMS so scripts are one click and refills auto-remind. When clients get the same home delivery and autoship convenience from you, with the prescribing veterinarian attached, refill revenue stays in-house instead of migrating to an online retailer.
Is pet financing actually worth integrating? Yes, for any practice doing surgery, dentistry, or emergency work. Offering CareCredit or Scratchpay at the moment you present a large estimate measurably raises acceptance of recommended care. The integration cost is trivial relative to the surgical and dental cases it converts from "let me think about it" into same-day approvals.
What can a solo practice safely skip? A single-doctor general practice can usually skip a standalone imaging-PACS (until X-ray volume justifies it), dedicated telehealth, standalone reputation software, and a separate BI tool. Concentrate the budget on a solid PIMS, in-house diagnostics that post to the chart, one good communication-and-payments suite, and a home-delivery pharmacy.
Add the rest as visit volume and headcount grow.
Who owns integration when something breaks between my PIMS and a third-party tool? Practically, the PIMS vendor and the third-party tool each blame the other, so name an internal owner — usually a practice manager or a tech-savvy lead technician — to test integrations on a schedule and open tickets fast.
Before buying any tool, confirm in writing that it supports your exact PIMS and version, and ask both vendors who provides support for the connection itself.
Sources
- IDEXX — ezyVet and Cornerstone product and integration documentation (2026).
- Covetrus — AVImark, ImproMed, and Vello practice software and prescription management overview (2026).
- Digitail — cloud veterinary PIMS feature and pricing guidance (2026).
- Weave — veterinary communication, phones, and payments platform documentation (2026).
- PetDesk — veterinary reminder, recall, and client-engagement product overview (2025).
- Vetstoria — real-time online booking and PIMS integration documentation (2026).
- Vetsource — home delivery and prescription management platform overview (2026).
- CareCredit (Synchrony) and Scratchpay — veterinary patient-financing program documentation (2026).
- AVMA — veterinary practice economics and technology adoption reporting (2025-2026).
- VetSuccess (IDEXX) — veterinary practice analytics and benchmarking documentation (2025).