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6 February 2026by Soulmed

How Much Does a Veterinary Clinic Fitout Cost?

Pricing, Fees & Budget Planning

Designing and building a veterinary clinic is one of the most significant investments a practice can make. Unlike a standard commercial renovation, a veterinary clinic must satisfy clinical functionality, compliance standards, workflow efficiency, animal welfare, and client experience – all within a tightly regulated environment.

Before you commit to budgets, blueprints, or builders, it’s essential to understand what drives cost, where industry benchmarks sit in Victoria and Australia, and how smart budgeting can protect your practice’s long-term performance.

A Realistic Cost Framework for Vet Clinic Fitouts

There’s no “one‑size‑fits‑all” figure for veterinary clinic fitouts – it is typically based on size, services, and complexity.

Typical veterinary clinic fitout cost ranges: ~$150,000 – $400,000+ (AUD)

In terms of per square metre benchmarks, recent industry data suggests:

  • Basic clinical fitout: ~$1,200 – $3,000/m²
  • More advanced configurations (surgery, diagnostics, laboratories): ~$3,000+ /m²

These figures encompass construction, cabinets and joinery, mechanical systems (HVAC), clinical‑grade finishes, and basic clinical infrastructure – but equipment is almost always budgeted separately.

What Actually Drives Fitout Costs?

Understanding cost drivers helps you budget more accurately and avoid surprises:

1. Clinic Size & Scope

The more consult rooms, treatment areas, imaging suites, and surgical zones you include, the higher the base cost per square metre due to specialised services and finishes.

2. Clinical Equipment

High‑end imaging, anaesthesia systems, ECGs, dental units and autoclaves are significant line items. Equipment costs can vary widely and can represent up to 30–40% of total budgeting on top of the core fitout.

3. Compliance and Regulatory Requirements

Australian veterinary clinics must be built with compliance in mind, including:
National Construction Code (NCC) requirements for health, safety, accessibility and emergency egress
Infection control and sterilisation standards for instrument reprocessing and hygiene zones
Radiation safety design for X‑ray and imaging areas (lead shielding, monitoring, licensing)
Workplace Health & Safety (WHS) obligations for staff safety
Meeting these often adds cost in materials, design, validation, and certification.

4. Council Approvals & Professional Fees

Permits, Development Applications (DA), Building Approvals (BA), and professional consultants (architects, engineers, certifiers) are essential but often underestimated cost areas. Always allocate sufficient budget early.

5. Design Quality & Workflow Planning

Thoughtful layout planning — especially around clean/dirty zoning, staff circulation, and animal flow — may not add much to the bottom line in dollars, but it adds massive value in daily performance and cost avoidance over time.

Budgeting Tips That Work

Before finalising a budget, here are strategic planning considerations:

Start with a Detailed Cost EstimateRequest a trade‑inclusive estimate that includes:
Construction labour and materials
Mechanical, electrical, hydraulic services
Clinical finishes and joinery
Contingencies (10–15%) for unforeseen issues
This reduces scope creep and budget surprises.
Separate Construction vs Equipment CostsTreat the physical fitout and clinical equipment as distinct budgeting lines — it helps clarify priorities and financing options.
Factor in Professional FeesArchitects and fitout specialists save money by anticipating compliance, accessibility, and functional problems before construction begins.
Plan Cash Flow and FinancingPractice owners often underbudget working capital, especially if opening a new clinic. Options like business loans, equipment finance or staged install plans help spread cost without undercutting quality.
Include Ongoing Operational CostsConsider maintenance, servicing (especially for imaging or sterilisation equipment), and consumables. These aren’t upfront construction costs but essential long‑term planning.

Compliance & Regulatory Must‑Knows

Building a veterinary clinic goes far beyond carpentry and paint:

National Construction Code (NCC) — minimum requirements for safety, health, accessibility and amenity in Australian buildings.
AS/NZS 4815:2006 — instrument sterilisation and surface hygiene guidelines.
✔ Radiation safety design requirements for veterinary imaging rooms (lead shielding, licences, inspections)
✔ Local WHS laws under Safe Work Australia and state regulators for workplace safety measures.
✔ Council planning approvals, fire safety systems, accessibility compliance, and emergency egress.

Engaging experienced professionals early means these compliance costs are planned and integrated — not reactive and expensive.

Investing Wisely Helps Your Clinic Thrive

A veterinary clinic fitout is a strategic investment – it determines how your team operates, how clients perceive your brand, and how resilient your practice is to growth and service expansion.

Getting cost planning right means balancing immediate needs with future readiness. It also means partnering with builders and designers who know medical environments, not just commercial construction.

With clear budgeting, thoughtful design, and informed expectations, you can shape a clinic that works efficiently from day one and delivers value for years to come.