Farm Vets in Penzance

Farm Vets in Penzance

Large-animal veterinary services for livestock, horses and farm animals

About Farm & Large-Animal Vets in Penzance

Updated January 2026

For those inquiring about farm animal care, the options are limited in Penzance.

While Penzance's clinics excel in companion-animal services, they do not extend their offerings to farm or large-animal care. This focus means that those with livestock or larger animals may need to seek services outside the town. The concentration on dogs and cats allows the clinics to specialize and provide in-depth care for these animals, ensuring high standards in their specific area of expertise.

There are 2 veterinary clinics listed for farm and large-animal vets in Penzance.

Top Rated Farm & Large-Animal Vets in Penzance

Top-ranked veterinary practices based on quality, service, and customer reviews

#3 Ranking

Our Score (83/100)

4.8(250 reviews)
Veterinary Nurse Training
Independent Clinic
Treats:
dog
cat
bird
rabbit
exotic

Mounts Bay Veterinary Centre Ltd is an independent practice owned and run by local vets via an Employee Ownership Trust. The practice appears set up for routine preventative care (vaccinations, neutering) as well as urgent help, with reviewers describing support during overnight calls and difficult end‑of‑life appointments. Concrete details mentioned include a 3am phone call that resulted in a dog being “sorted,” euthanasia support for owners in distress (including staff physically comforting an upset owner), and reports of the practice being “immaculately clean.” It is also listed as a Veterinary Nurse Training facility.

Our Score (74/100)

4.6(277 reviews)
Emergency ServicesVeterinary Nurse Training
Corporate
Treats:
dog
cat
bird
rabbit
exotic
cow
pig
  • Fast access for urgent problems: examples include an emergency appointment within two hours and a same-day slot for a tail injury. - Hospitalisation with frequent updates: owners mention pets staying one to three days/nights and receiving regular phone calls about progress. - Communication quality is inconsistent: one reviewer describes being kept well-informed during serious illness; another reports a wild bird was euthanised without the requested prior call and that no clear notes/explanation were available afterward.