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Questions you should ask when buying a horse. How long have you owned this horse? Does the horse have any history of abuse or neglect? Does the horse have any conditions that need treatment? Does the horse have any documents of registration? Why are you selling the horse? Is the horse trained?
The cost for a Pre-Purchase Exam consists of a physical and soundness evaluation. The veterinarian will draw blood to keep on hand for 6 months in the event that drug testing is requested. The typical exam can take anywhere from 2-3 hours depending on how many optional services are performed.
The price of a basic pre-purchase exam will vary from one veterinary practice to another, but in general you can expect to pay from $250 to $500.
Once you have chosen a horse or pony that you would like to buy it is sensible to have a pre-purchase veterinary examination (vetting) performed. The purpose of this is to ascertain if the horse has any pre-existing health conditions which may affect its ability to perform the activity it is intended for.
A regular vet visit might cost around $40 for your horse. If the visit is an emergency or requires on-call services, you might pay up to $150 for the appointment alone not including the costs of diagnostics, testing, treatments, and follow-up.
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A pre-purchase exam (or vet check) is important regardless of the horses asking price. Thats because you can get just as attached to an inexpensive horse as you can to a costly one, and any later vet care will cost as much as it would for a pricey horse.
A pre-purchase exam (or vet check) is important regardless of the horses asking price. Thats because you can get just as attached to an inexpensive horse as you can to a costly one, and any later vet care will cost as much as it would for a pricey horse.
A pre-purchase exam, better known as a PPE, is an essential part of the horse-buying process. If youre prepared to spend any amount of money on a horse, a pre-purchase exam is a wonderful investment. Know what issues you can live with and which are deal-breakers, then listen to your vets recommendations.
With these in mind, I wanted to share the main reasons for failing a pre-purchase examination, and explain a bit more about them. Lameness. This is by far the most common reason I fail a horse presented to me for a two or five stage vetting. Conformation. Feet. Sarcoids. Back Pain. Failing a horse vetting.
So simpler exams can vary from $50-80 up to $175-$250 for an exam that includes the basic evaluation plus flexions and a ridden exam. We have a lameness locator which is essentially a computer that measures your horses lameness, and this is offered at no additional cost.

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