Emergency & Critical Care
The full range of urgent care for pets in distress: stabilization, IV fluids, oxygen support, monitoring, and overnight observation when needed.
Compassionate care · Always here
Coral Springs families drive a short distance east to Pet Emergency Center when their daytime vet is closed and their pet needs urgent care. Independently owned, fully equipped on-site, and ready for the kind of cases you cannot wait through.

Coral Springs is a family-oriented community, and many of the pets we see from this area are part of family households: dogs in busy yards, cats with kids, exotic pets in homes that researched the species carefully. Coral Springs daytime vets are excellent, and many refer their after-hours cases to us.
Our hospital is small, independent, and run by veterinarians who live in this region. There is no corporate playbook here. Treatment is built around your pet and your real situation, with pricing explained before we proceed. That is why families from Heron Bay, Eagle Trace, Whispering Woods, and the surrounding communities make the drive.
Diagnostics, surgery, critical care, and follow-up coordination all happen under one roof. Your pet stays with us through the visit, not handed off to another building.
The full range of urgent care for pets in distress: stabilization, IV fluids, oxygen support, monitoring, and overnight observation when needed.
Foreign body removal, GDV correction, splenectomy, C-sections, wound repair, and more. Diagnostics and surgery happen in the same visit.
In-house imaging (digital X-ray, ultrasound) and bloodwork. We do not transfer your pet to another building for testing.
If you are not sure whether the situation is an emergency, a $75 video consultation with one of our vets can help you decide. Credited toward an in-person visit if needed.
Pet Emergency Center is at 921 East Cypress Creek Road in Fort Lauderdale. From most of Coral Springs, the route east is straightforward.
Coral Springs pets see suburban, family-oriented hazards more than coastal ones. Situations we commonly treat from Coral Springs families include:
Young dogs in busy households swallow socks, toys, corn cobs, hair ties, and worse. Vomiting that will not stop, refusal to eat, or lethargy are signs of an obstruction. We can image on-site and operate the same visit.
Chocolate, grapes, raisins, xylitol gum, certain houseplants, and lawn-care chemicals are common in Coral Springs households. If you saw your pet eat something, call us with a photo of the packaging or plant.
Coral Springs has several active dog parks. Bite wounds, eye injuries, and lameness from rough play are common. Bite wounds in particular look small on the surface and conceal damage underneath.
Many Coral Springs families care for reptiles, rabbits, and pocket pets. Most emergency hospitals do not see exotics. We do. Call us before you assume your bird or rabbit cannot be helped.
You do not need an appointment. If your pet is in distress, call us as you head out the door so we know to expect you and can prepare. Our team will be ready when you arrive.
If your pet is in active distress, call us first. We can advise on whether to drive or call a closer hospital before you leave.
Call us, walk in during open hours, or book a telehealth consultation if you would rather talk to a veterinarian from home first.