When something seems wrong with your dog at 11 PM, the hardest question is: is this an emergency, or can it wait until morning? Going to the ER unnecessarily costs hundreds; waiting when you shouldn’t can cost your dog’s life. This guide gives you a clear triage framework — the 15 signs that mean “go now,” the ones that can wait, and what to expect on cost.

This is a planning reference, not a substitute for professional advice. When in doubt, call your vet or an emergency clinic — most have a phone line that will help you triage.

Go to the Emergency Vet NOW — 15 Red-Flag Signs

These warrant an immediate emergency visit. Don’t wait:

  1. Difficulty breathing — labored, gasping, blue/gray gums, choking
  2. Bloated, hard abdomen + unproductive retching — possible bloat (GDV), a true life-threatening emergency in deep-chested breeds
  3. Collapse or inability to stand
  4. Seizure lasting > 2–3 minutes, or multiple seizures
  5. Suspected poisoning — chocolate, xylitol, grapes, rodenticide, antifreeze, human meds
  6. Hit by car or major trauma — even if they seem okay (internal bleeding can be hidden)
  7. Uncontrolled bleeding that won’t stop with pressure
  8. Bloody vomit or bloody/black diarrhea, especially repeated
  9. Straining to urinate with nothing coming out — possible blockage (emergency, especially male dogs)
  10. Pale white or blue gums — sign of shock or oxygen problems
  11. Severe, sudden pain — crying out, won’t let you touch them
  12. Heatstroke signs — excessive panting, drooling, vomiting after heat exposure
  13. Eye injury or sudden eye bulging
  14. Snake bite or major insect-sting reaction — swelling, hives, facial swelling
  15. Inability to deliver puppies (whelping emergency)

Probably Can Wait Until Morning (but call to confirm)

These usually aren’t 2 AM emergencies — but call your vet’s line if unsure:

  • Mild, single episode of vomiting or diarrhea (dog otherwise normal, eating, alert)
  • Limping with weight-bearing, no obvious break
  • Small cut that stops bleeding with pressure
  • Ear scratching / head shaking (likely ear infection)
  • Mild, occasional cough (but kennel cough that worsens needs attention)
  • Eating less than usual for one meal
  • One-time “scooting” or mild itching

Rule of thumb: if your dog is alert, breathing normally, and able to stand and walk, it’s usually not a middle-of-the-night emergency. If any red-flag sign above is present, go.

ER vs. Urgent Care vs. Regular Vet

  • Emergency hospital (ER): Open 24/7, surgical capacity. For the red-flag list above. Most expensive.
  • Urgent care vet: Same-day walk-in for non-life-threatening but can’t-wait issues (ear infections, minor wounds, mild GI). 20–40% cheaper than ER, shorter waits. A growing tier.
  • Regular vet: The “can wait until morning” list. Schedule normally.

What an Emergency Vet Visit Costs

Be financially prepared — ER care is expensive:

  • ER exam fee: $100–$300 (just to be seen)
  • Simple emergency (gastritis, mild reaction): $800–$2,000
  • Serious emergency (bloat surgery, trauma, toxin treatment): $4,000–$8,000+
  • Overnight hospitalization: $200–$700/night on top

This is exactly why an emergency fund or pet insurance matters. See our vet visit cost guide for how to plan for it.

Before an Emergency Happens: Be Prepared

  • Save the number of your nearest 24/7 emergency vet in your phone now — not when you’re panicking
  • Know the address and route (some ERs are 30+ min away)
  • Keep the ASPCA Poison Control number: (888) 426-4435 (fee applies but worth it)
  • Have a basic pet first-aid kit at home

Worth having before you need it: [placeholder-link: dog first-aid kit], [placeholder-link: pet thermometer], [placeholder-link: emergency pet carrier]. We’ll update these with vetted picks once our Amazon Associates application clears.

Find an Emergency Vet Near You

PetSoMo lists 24-hour and emergency veterinary clinics across the U.S. — find and save yours before you need it.