Caprine Services
Mobile Goat Vet
Browse ambulatory veterinarians who actually work goats. Generic large-animal vets can handle the basics, but a herd that's running a real biosecurity, breeding, and production program needs a vet who knows caprine disease pressure, dosing realities, surgical referrals, and what a goat is supposed to look like off-feed at 9pm.
Browse Mobile Goat VetsFeatured Mobile Goat Vets
No live practices yet. Provider acquisition is in progress — listings will surface here automatically as providers join.
Provider? Be the first practice on the Marketplace.
Listing first means your business ranks first in search results, captures early inquiries, and earns the "Rising Star" badge as you build a track record.
Start a Listing →What This Covers
- ● Herd workups and biosecurity consults
- ● CAE, CL, and Johne's testing pulls
- ● Pregnancy ultrasound and fetal counts
- ● Disbudding sedation and analgesia
- ● Castration and surgical referrals
- ● Kidding emergencies and dystocia
- ● Parasite-program design with FEC and FAMACHA
- ● CVI / health certificates for movement
What to Look For When Hiring
- Goat caseload, not just livestock caseload. A vet who sees goats weekly is a different resource than one who sees them quarterly.
- VCPR posture. A valid veterinarian-client-patient relationship is what makes off-label dosing, extra-label drug use, and prescription products possible. Establish it before the emergency.
- After-hours coverage. Kidding doesn't keep business hours. Know the on-call reality.
- Trip fee, mileage, and minimums. Mobile economics depend on volume. Ask what a single-doe call actually costs.
- CVI issuance. Health certificates for sale and movement are a regular ask. Confirm they're set up to issue them.