Veterinary School Animal Experience Hours vs. Veterinary Hours
The Experience Barrier
Having a 3.9 VMCAS GPA will not get you into Veterinary School.
Unlike medical schools, which value research and human clinical experience, veterinary admissions committees demand massive amounts of real-world exposure to animals.
However, many applicants make a fatal categorization error on their VMCAS application. They confuse Animal Experience with Veterinary Experience.
Animal Experience (Low Value)
Animal Experience encompasses any time you spent working with animals where a veterinarian was NOT actively present or supervising you.While VMCAS asks you to list these hours, admissions committees assign them very low weight. They prove you like animals, but they do not prove you understand veterinary medicine.
Veterinary Experience (High Value)
Veterinary Experience is the gold standard. This is time spent actively working, shadowing, or volunteering under the direct supervision of a licensed Veterinarian.The "Large Animal" Advantage
If you want a massive advantage in the VMCAS applicant pool, you must step outside of the "small animal" (dog and cat) bubble.Over 80% of applicants only have experience in small animal clinics. Veterinary schools are desperate to graduate doctors who will treat livestock and agricultural animals.
If you secure 200 hours shadowing a Large Animal Veterinarian (working with cows, horses, or pigs) or an Exotic/Zoo Veterinarian, your application will be instantly flagged as high-priority, even if your VMCAS GPA is slightly below the median.
Check Your VMCAS GPA Viability
Before you spend 1,000 hours volunteering, ensure your Science GPA meets the minimum cutoff.
Check VMCAS Competitiveness