Services and Prices we Offer

Quality . Dedication

What Type of Service Do You Need?

Comprehensive care and treatments to keep your pets healthy and happy.

At a Modern Vet Clinic: Golden Retriever Sitting on Examination Table as a Female Veterinarian Assesses the Dog's Health

Pet Wellness

Pet Wellness/Sick Visits We have a full range of supplies, medications, and equipment, with the exception of full body radiographs. Whether you don’t have a

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Veterinarians carefully examining a cat's health using stethoscope during routine check-up in veterinary clinic

Feral Cats

Feral Cat Spay and Neuter (TNR Program) Feral cat spay and neuter is most humanely and effectively managed through Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR), a program where community

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Tired Golden Retriever puppy wearing the "cone of shame" after surgery

Spay & Neuter

Spaying and Neutering for Dogs and Cats Spaying and neutering are important for controlling pet overpopulation, improving the health and behavior of individual animals, and

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toothbrush for animals. man brushes teeth of a gray cat. animal care concept

Dental Care

Low-Cost Pet Dentistry in Michigan We were one of the first clinics in Michigan to offer low-cost dentistry. In the past 4 years, we have

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beautiful woman hugging her adorable golden retriever dog at home. love for animals concept. lifestyle indoors
Why Choose Quick Fix

Caring for pets, trusted by owners

Discover what makes Quick Fix Veterinary Clinic the trusted choice for pet owners, from our experienced team to our compassionate, personalized care for every furry friend.

Cat Vaccines

Service Fee
Calici/Herpes/Panleukopenia combo $15 (aka 3-in-1 vaccine)
Feline Leukemia $15
Rabies $25

Dog Vaccines

Service Fee
Distemper/lepto/Parvo $25
Rabies $25
Bordatella $25
Service Fee
FFERAL/Unowned community CAT spay/neuter package-includes 3 in 1 vaccine, flea/earmite treatment, and a MANDATORY ear tip. Animals must arrive in a trap. $50
Cat spay/neuter (includes 3 in 1 vaccine, e-collar, anti-nausea medication, and additional long-term pain medication. $75
Dog neuters (includes e-collar and take home meds) $150. Additional $50 for dogs over 60 lbs.
Cat vaccines Calici/Herpes/Distemper combo $15 (aka 3-in-1 vaccine)
  Feline Leukemia $15
  Rabies $15
Dog vaccines Distemper/lepto/Parvo $15
  Rabies $15
  Bordatella $15
Microchipping (cats and dogs) $30
FIV/Feline Leukemia test (cats) $35
Flea/tick treatment (Revolution) For parasite control and deworming products, we offer pyrantel, profender, revolution (for cats only), frontline, praziquantel, and panacur. Pricing varies and can be found when scheduling an appointment
Earmite treatment, 2 doses(cats) $15
General Dewormer $15
Tapeworm treatment $15 cats, $25 dogs
Antibiotics $20

Cat Surgery Guidelines:

For spay/neuter, cats must be at least 2 months old and weigh at least 2 pounds, and be healthy.

Dog Surgery Guidelines:

For the general public we typically only do dog neuters. Puppies must be at least 2 months old, weigh at least 3 lbs., and be healthy. Dogs must be friendly and non-aggressive.

Why are basic vaccines so important?

One of the most heart-breaking things I see as a vet are illnesses that could have easily, and cheaply, been prevented. More often than not I’m talking about Parvovirus in puppies and Calici/herpesvirus/distemper in kittens.

Parvo, while it can be successfully treated ~90% of the time, it can cost $7,000+ to do it. Calici causes mouth ulcers in cats, and makes eating, drinking, and swallowing, painful. Herpes often causes severe eye infections that lead to horrifyingly painful ulcers, permanent vision damage, and is a LEADING CAUSE of enucleation (eye removal). Distemper simply causes death, in 95%+ of cases.

IF you get your puppies/kittens vaccinated AND boostered per guidelines for the first few years of their lives, you can save yourself a significant amount of money, and them a lot of pain/trauma. If there’s anything I can instill in you…. Let. This. Be. It.

Please note: you must provide proof of a current, unexpired rabies vaccination at the time of service to receive a 3-yr rabies vaccine. Otherwise, by law, we can only give you a 1-yr vaccine.

Why Us?

There are now 3-4 low-cost spay/neuter places in the area to take your pet. What makes us different? We are the only group that provides 3 days of pain medication to female cats and includes e-collars in the cost of the surgery. How is this better for you and your pet? The obvious is your pet experiences less pain and discomfort post-surgery. E-collars significantly decrease the chance of infection post-surgery–which is when most infections occur. All too often animals lick their incisions, try to pull the sutures out, etc., and the owner ends up with a sick cat or an expensive trip to the ER. We decided that it’s in all of our best interests to send every female surgery patient, and large males, home with an e-collar.

We offer many routine surgeries such as: umbilical hernia repair, dentals, ear hematomas, degloving injuries, tail amputations, wound care, enucleations, pyometras, entropion (eyelid) procedures, cystotomies (bladder stone removal), small mass removals, etc. We will occasionally do foreign body surgeries and splenectomies. We also will do “unblocking” emergencies for male cats.

We do not do trauma-related surgeries or bone fractures. We will do procedures for cats with standard mandibular symphysis fractures. Price depends on the size of animal, type of surgery, etc. We do not declaw cats.

We have full gas anesthesia equipment, autoclave for instrument sterilization, surgical monitoring including Doppler for blood pressure, dental machine, chemistry analyzer, and the standard supplies and equipment you’d see at most clinics. For other blood work and urinalysis testing we send it to a lab and have the results in 1-2 days. We can provide the same testing capabilities of any veterinary facility.

Surgeries are performed under the guidelines by the Association of Shelter Veterinarians’ Veterinary Task Force to Advance Spay/Neuter. This is the gold standard for spay/neuter protocols.

Spay/Neuter Guidelines
Feline Anesthesia Guidelines

Per the spay/neuter guidelines, pre-surgical blood work is deemed ideal and recommended, but not necessary for most patients. Blood work may pick up underlying liver/kidney/other issues, but rarely is it so severe as to affect the choice of whether or not to go ahead with surgery. All anesthesia has a risk. If you would prefer your pet receive pre-surgical blood work, contact us ahead of time or see your veterinarian to have it scheduled. We can send out a full panel of blood work for $100. Arrangements must be made to do this at least 48 hours before the surgery.

Flea check, nail trim, physical exam, and pain medication.