Emergency Guide

🚨 Emergency Vets in Berlin: 24-Hour English-Speaking Clinics

It's 11pm. Your dog just ate something off the street and won't stop retching. Your cat is breathing oddly. Your rabbit hasn't moved in an hour.

This is not the moment to google in a panic, attempt to translate German vet websites, and wonder what "Notfalldienst" means.

Bookmark this page now. Before you need it.


🚨 1. What Counts as a Pet Emergency?

Not every worrying symptom needs a midnight dash across Berlin. But some absolutely do.

🚨 Go now - do not wait

  • β€’Difficulty breathing, choking, or blue/grey gums
  • β€’Collapse or inability to stand
  • β€’Suspected poisoning
  • β€’Seizures
  • β€’Suspected broken bone or severe injury
  • β€’Eye injury or sudden loss of vision
  • β€’Bloated, distended, or hard abdomen
  • β€’Suspected urinary blockage (cats)
  • β€’Uncontrolled bleeding
  • β€’Loss of consciousness

⏳ Can wait until morning (call first thing)

  • β€’Limping that isn't severe and leg isn't visibly deformed
  • β€’Vomiting once or twice with no blood
  • β€’Mild diarrhea
  • β€’A cut that has stopped bleeding
  • β€’Ear scratching or head shaking

If you're unsure, call an emergency line and describe the symptoms.

πŸ₯ 2. Verified 24-Hour Emergency Vets in Berlin

The following practices are confirmed 24/7 in our verified directory. Always call ahead to confirm - hours and on-call arrangements can change.

πŸ₯

Klinik fΓΌr kleine Haustiere (FU Berlin Small Animal Clinic)

Zehlendorf / DΓΌppel

πŸ“ž 030 83862356

University clinic. Full surgical and ICU capability.

24/7
πŸ₯

Valera Veterinary Clinic

Zehlendorf

πŸ“ž 030 201805750

English-speaking staff. Verified by expat community.

24/7
πŸ₯

AniCura Tierklinik Berlin-Biesdorf

Biesdorf (East Berlin)

Large-scale 24h animal hospital. Check website for current number.

24/7
πŸ₯

The Berlin Veterinary Center (Dr. RΓΆdiger)

Reinickendorf

24/7 confirmed. Check our directory for current contact.

24/7
πŸ₯

Veterinary Practice BΓ€renwiese

Wilmersdorf

πŸ“ž 0174 1601606

Mobile number - call to confirm availability before travelling.

24/7

Berlin Veterinary Emergency Network

Emergency duty (tierarztlicher Bereitschaftsdienst) rotates among registered practices by district. The current duty vet number is typically listed on your regular vet's answering machine. Always listen to the full voicemail.

See all verified emergency-capable Berlin vets β†’

πŸ“ž 3. What to Say When You Call

Even at an English-speaking practice, having this information ready will get your pet seen faster:

1

Species and breed

e.g. "I have a 4-year-old male golden retriever"

2

Weight

e.g. Helpful for dosing if medication is needed immediately

3

Symptoms and when they started

e.g. "He started vomiting about 90 minutes ago, three times, and now he's just lying down and won't get up"

4

Any known ingestion

e.g. "We were at the park and I think he ate something. I'm not sure what."

5

Vaccination and medication status

e.g. "He's up to date on vaccinations and takes monthly flea/tick prevention"

6

Your location

e.g. They'll tell you if you need to come to them or if there's a closer option

Key German phrases to understand on the phone

Kommen Sie sofortCome immediately
Das ist ein NotfallThis is an emergency
Warten Sie bis morgenWait until tomorrow (if they say this and you're unsure, describe the symptoms again)
Wir haben keinen NotfalldienstWe don't have an emergency service (ask for the duty vet number)

πŸš— 4. Getting There

πŸš—

By car

The fastest option if you have one. Berlin's 24-hour clinics are spread across the city, so find your nearest one before an emergency happens.

πŸš•

By taxi/Uber

Works well. Let the driver know you have a pet emergency; most will accommodate a carrier or a dog on a leash. Have the address ready.

πŸš‡

By U-Bahn/S-Bahn

Dogs are allowed at any hour with a valid ticket. If your pet is seriously ill, take a taxi. You don't want to manage a sick animal on a crowded platform.

πŸ’Ά 5. What Emergency Vet Care Costs in Berlin

Emergency vet care in Germany is regulated by the Gebuhrenordnung fur Tierarzte (GOT), but emergency surcharges apply outside of normal hours.

ServiceApprox. Cost
Emergency consultation (out of hours)€80-150
Blood panel / basic diagnostics€80-200
X-ray€80-150
IV fluids and hospitalisation (per night)€150-300
Surgery (emergency, e.g. foreign body removal)€800-2,500+
Intensive care (per day)€200-500

Important: Emergency clinics in Germany typically require payment at the end of the visit, in full. Credit cards are widely accepted at larger clinics. If you have pet insurance, keep your policy number handy and ask for a detailed itemised invoice; you'll submit the claim yourself.

If cost is a concern, be upfront when you call. Veterinary social services and payment plans exist in Germany, though they vary by clinic.

Prevention: The Best Emergency Plan

The single best thing you can do right now, before any emergency, is to identify your nearest 24-hour vet clinic and save the number in your phone as "Emergency Vet Berlin."

Do it tonight.

And if you haven't yet found a regular vet who speaks English, establishing that relationship is your next step. Your regular vet knows your pet's history, which matters enormously in an emergency. Even if you end up at a different clinic, being able to share records speeds up treatment.

Know a 24-hour clinic in Berlin that belongs in this guide? Tell us about it

πŸ“š More Guides for Expats

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