Showing 51-58 of 58 clinics
Our Score (67/100)
Highcroft Veterinary Group – Shirehampton Village Vets is part of the Highcroft Veterinary Group. Based on the clinic website, the wider group offers a broad small‑animal service (including dentistry, surgery, imaging and in‑house lab work) and also lists care for exotics (such as reptiles and birds). The website also states 24‑hour emergency care is available via a dedicated on-site emergency service called MiNightVet Bristol. From the latest written reviews available to us, owners describe: - Same-visit end-of-life care for an older cat, handled “calmly and efficiently,” with the vet offering reassurance afterwards. - Remote triage advice from a photo of a cat’s eyelid lump, described as “free advice” and “nothing to worry about.” - Mixed experiences on clinical assessment: one reviewer says an ongoing ear discharge was dismissed until the dog’s pain worsened, while other reviewers report quick, professional help when they needed a vet.
Highcroft Veterinary Group – Shirehampton Village Vets is part of the Highcroft Veterinary Group. Based on the clinic website, the wider group offers a broad small‑animal service (including dentistry, surgery, imaging and in‑house lab work) and also lists care for exotics (such as reptiles and birds). The website also states 24‑hour emergency care is available via a dedicated on-site emergency service called MiNightVet Bristol. From the latest written reviews available to us, owners describe: - Same-visit end-of-life care for an older cat, handled “calmly and efficiently,” with the vet offering reassurance afterwards. - Remote triage advice from a photo of a cat’s eyelid lump, described as “free advice” and “nothing to worry about.” - Mixed experiences on clinical assessment: one reviewer says an ongoing ear discharge was dismissed until the dog’s pain worsened, while other reviewers report quick, professional help when they needed a vet.
Tibbs and Simmons Farm Vets Ltd appears primarily oriented toward farm and equine work, with multiple owners discussing horse/pony care and one reviewer explicitly describing the vet they saw as a “large farm animals” vet. The available reviews include detailed equine call-out experiences (including night-time attendance and follow-up phone check-ins) alongside a sharply critical account of a small-animal visit involving blood sampling, medication dispensing, and billing confusion. No corporate group ownership is stated in the information provided. Concrete examples mentioned by reviewers include: - Night-time on-call attendance for a horse with colic symptoms, plus regular phone check-ins and a second visit around midnight. - Treatment and advice ranging from routine injections to managing acute stress laminitis in a mare. - A small-animal (cat) visit involving blood work and repeat medication, where the owner reported a difficult blood draw attempt, unclear medication explanation, and a later £50 bill that the practice reportedly said was “sent in error”.
Tibbs and Simmons Farm Vets Ltd appears primarily oriented toward farm and equine work, with multiple owners discussing horse/pony care and one reviewer explicitly describing the vet they saw as a “large farm animals” vet. The available reviews include detailed equine call-out experiences (including night-time attendance and follow-up phone check-ins) alongside a sharply critical account of a small-animal visit involving blood sampling, medication dispensing, and billing confusion. No corporate group ownership is stated in the information provided. Concrete examples mentioned by reviewers include: - Night-time on-call attendance for a horse with colic symptoms, plus regular phone check-ins and a second visit around midnight. - Treatment and advice ranging from routine injections to managing acute stress laminitis in a mare. - A small-animal (cat) visit involving blood work and repeat medication, where the owner reported a difficult blood draw attempt, unclear medication explanation, and a later £50 bill that the practice reportedly said was “sent in error”.
Our Score (64/100)
Highcroft Veterinary Group – Keynsham Veterinary Centre is part of the Highcroft Veterinary Group (reviews also mention CVS). Based on the practice’s published service list, it’s set up for routine small‑animal care (consults, vaccinations, neutering, dentistry, imaging and lab work) as well as more advanced services via referral areas (including cardiology, internal medicine, orthopaedics, ophthalmology and keyhole surgery). The wider group also states it provides 24‑hour emergency care through an on‑site dedicated emergency service (MiNightVet Bristol) for urgent care outside regular appointment hours. From the latest reviews available to us, owners often describe vets who “never rush” and explain findings clearly, plus a front‑of‑house team (named receptionist Lisa in multiple reviews) that’s repeatedly singled out for being friendly and helpful. Pricing comes up as a downside in several reviews (including mention of prescription charges). One older review describes a distressing experience around euthanasia, saying they weren’t given time to say goodbye; this conflicts with other reviewers’ descriptions of compassionate care.
Highcroft Veterinary Group – Keynsham Veterinary Centre is part of the Highcroft Veterinary Group (reviews also mention CVS). Based on the practice’s published service list, it’s set up for routine small‑animal care (consults, vaccinations, neutering, dentistry, imaging and lab work) as well as more advanced services via referral areas (including cardiology, internal medicine, orthopaedics, ophthalmology and keyhole surgery). The wider group also states it provides 24‑hour emergency care through an on‑site dedicated emergency service (MiNightVet Bristol) for urgent care outside regular appointment hours. From the latest reviews available to us, owners often describe vets who “never rush” and explain findings clearly, plus a front‑of‑house team (named receptionist Lisa in multiple reviews) that’s repeatedly singled out for being friendly and helpful. Pricing comes up as a downside in several reviews (including mention of prescription charges). One older review describes a distressing experience around euthanasia, saying they weren’t given time to say goodbye; this conflicts with other reviewers’ descriptions of compassionate care.
Williamson Vets appears to be connected with LLM Farm Vets (the clinic website source references “LLM Farm Vets” and “First Field in the livestock performance”). The limited website text points to a farm/livestock focus, including references to livestock performance, a pharmacy, and TB work. Reviews are mixed: some mention friendly staff and support “night and day,” while several recent reviews criticise the practice for being part of the farming industry or describe it simply as “disgraceful.” A few older reviews talk about meals/food, which may indicate some reviewer confusion about what’s being reviewed.
Williamson Vets appears to be connected with LLM Farm Vets (the clinic website source references “LLM Farm Vets” and “First Field in the livestock performance”). The limited website text points to a farm/livestock focus, including references to livestock performance, a pharmacy, and TB work. Reviews are mixed: some mention friendly staff and support “night and day,” while several recent reviews criticise the practice for being part of the farming industry or describe it simply as “disgraceful.” A few older reviews talk about meals/food, which may indicate some reviewer confusion about what’s being reviewed.
Animal House Vets is a multi-branch practice (the website describes four clinics) focused on cats and dogs, offering routine care alongside dentistry, surgery, and stated 24-hour emergency/out-of-hours arrangements. In reviews, owners describe being fitted in quickly for urgent situations (including end-of-life care) and getting frequent progress updates during short-term intensive treatment. However, there are also reviews describing a failure to be seen when emergency care was needed shortly after 5pm, with the owner reporting their cat died soon after. Concrete details mentioned include: - A “kitten package” that includes vaccinations, a microchip (inserted while under anaesthetic during neutering), and a bag of dry kitten food (neutering not included). - Updates “every few hours” during a week of repeat visits for a cat. - An instance where a vet returned early from lunch to see an unregistered cat needing urgent euthanasia.
Animal House Vets is a multi-branch practice (the website describes four clinics) focused on cats and dogs, offering routine care alongside dentistry, surgery, and stated 24-hour emergency/out-of-hours arrangements. In reviews, owners describe being fitted in quickly for urgent situations (including end-of-life care) and getting frequent progress updates during short-term intensive treatment. However, there are also reviews describing a failure to be seen when emergency care was needed shortly after 5pm, with the owner reporting their cat died soon after. Concrete details mentioned include: - A “kitten package” that includes vaccinations, a microchip (inserted while under anaesthetic during neutering), and a bag of dry kitten food (neutering not included). - Updates “every few hours” during a week of repeat visits for a cat. - An instance where a vet returned early from lunch to see an unregistered cat needing urgent euthanasia.
Luna Bristol has a Google rating of 4.5/5 from 4,463 reviews, but the latest written reviews available to us do not describe a veterinary clinic at all—they discuss a Lebanese restaurant (food, queues, service charges, “no alcohol served”). Because of that mismatch, we can’t reliably summarise Luna Bristol’s veterinary services, facilities, clinical approach, or staff based on the provided review text, and no separate website summary details were included in the inputs to fill that gap.
Luna Bristol has a Google rating of 4.5/5 from 4,463 reviews, but the latest written reviews available to us do not describe a veterinary clinic at all—they discuss a Lebanese restaurant (food, queues, service charges, “no alcohol served”). Because of that mismatch, we can’t reliably summarise Luna Bristol’s veterinary services, facilities, clinical approach, or staff based on the provided review text, and no separate website summary details were included in the inputs to fill that gap.
Animal Health Centre is a small-animal veterinary practice established in 2002. It handles a broad range of routine and medical needs for dogs, cats and small pets (including rabbits, ferrets, guinea pigs and hamsters), with facilities listed for an in-house lab plus X‑ray and ultrasound. The practice is accredited as an RCVS General Practice and a Cat Friendly Clinic (Silver). It is also described as a veterinary nurse training facility. Out-of-hours emergencies are provided by MiNightVet (with full-time night staff), rather than being handled in-house overnight.
Animal Health Centre is a small-animal veterinary practice established in 2002. It handles a broad range of routine and medical needs for dogs, cats and small pets (including rabbits, ferrets, guinea pigs and hamsters), with facilities listed for an in-house lab plus X‑ray and ultrasound. The practice is accredited as an RCVS General Practice and a Cat Friendly Clinic (Silver). It is also described as a veterinary nurse training facility. Out-of-hours emergencies are provided by MiNightVet (with full-time night staff), rather than being handled in-house overnight.
Highcroft Veterinary Group – Longwell Green Veterinary Centre is part of the Highcroft Veterinary Group, with access to hospital-style facilities (including an in-house lab, X‑ray and ultrasound) and an on-site dedicated out-of-hours emergency provider (MiNightVet). The website positions the wider group as set up for both routine care and advanced work, including referral services (cardiology, internal medicine, keyhole/laparoscopic surgery, ophthalmology, orthopaedics, and soft-tissue surgery), plus “Cat Friendly Clinic – Gold” and “Rabbit Friendly Clinic – Gold” accreditation. In the latest reviews available to us, owners repeatedly mention: - End-of-life care where families were given time and treated with “love and dignity” during euthanasia. - Inpatient care with frequent updates during investigations and emergency surgery, plus follow-up contact after outcomes were known. - A clear split in experiences on costs/diagnostics: one reviewer describes feeling pushed toward extensive investigations with a “massive pricelist” and alleges misdiagnosis, while another describes supportive billing communication with “no pressures” in difficult circumstances.
Highcroft Veterinary Group – Longwell Green Veterinary Centre is part of the Highcroft Veterinary Group, with access to hospital-style facilities (including an in-house lab, X‑ray and ultrasound) and an on-site dedicated out-of-hours emergency provider (MiNightVet). The website positions the wider group as set up for both routine care and advanced work, including referral services (cardiology, internal medicine, keyhole/laparoscopic surgery, ophthalmology, orthopaedics, and soft-tissue surgery), plus “Cat Friendly Clinic – Gold” and “Rabbit Friendly Clinic – Gold” accreditation. In the latest reviews available to us, owners repeatedly mention: - End-of-life care where families were given time and treated with “love and dignity” during euthanasia. - Inpatient care with frequent updates during investigations and emergency surgery, plus follow-up contact after outcomes were known. - A clear split in experiences on costs/diagnostics: one reviewer describes feeling pushed toward extensive investigations with a “massive pricelist” and alleges misdiagnosis, while another describes supportive billing communication with “no pressures” in difficult circumstances.
