Find a vet near you
1,636 Colorado pet service providers organized by city, county, service type, and affluence tier. Always free. Always ad-free.
Start here: If you need an in-home or mobile vet specifically — for a quality-of-life consultation, hospice, or euthanasia — jump to mobile veterinarians (25 Colorado providers). For a broader directory, browse by area below.
Browse by service
Mobile veterinarians
25 providers. House calls, in-home euthanasia, hospice consultations.
Pet cremation
65 providers. Group cremation, private cremation, aquamation.
Animal hospitals
331 providers. Full-service clinics with in-clinic euthanasia.
Veterinary clinics
104 providers. General practice and specialty clinics.
Pet boarding
20 providers. Some offer respite care for hospice families.
Pet sitters
81 providers. In-home care for families needing extra support.
Browse by area
Denver Metro
606 providers across Denver, Aurora, Lakewood, Westminster, Thornton, Arvada, Centennial.
Boulder County
148 providers across Boulder, Longmont, Louisville, Lafayette.
Douglas County
156 providers across Castle Rock, Highlands Ranch, Parker, Lone Tree.
Mountain Resort
94 providers across Vail, Aspen, Breckenridge, Steamboat Springs.
Browse by county
Colorado has 64 counties. We have detailed directories for the most populous:
- Jefferson (165) · Larimer (144) · Weld (50) · Mesa (64) · Pueblo (52)
- La Plata (33) · Routt (34) · Garfield (28) · Pitkin (14) · Gunnison (2)
- See full Colorado directory →
What to ask when you call
Five questions for a mobile vet
- What is your typical visit length? Most run 45-90 minutes. Anything under 30 minutes is unusual.
- What sedation protocol do you use? A good answer: "We give a deep sedative first so your pet is completely asleep before the second injection. There is no pain, no awareness."
- Do you provide aftercare (cremation transport)? Many vets partner with a local crematorium and can handle this for you.
- What is the cost? In Colorado, expect $350-$700 for the visit. Cremation is usually $100-$250 more. Ask if after-hours costs extra.
- Can you do a quality-of-life consultation first? Many vets will come for an assessment visit (no euthanasia) so you can decide together.