What waste your veterinary clinics actually generates
Most practices don't realize how much regulated medical waste they generate, or how it should be classified. Here are the main categories you're dealing with:
// Waste type
Sharps
Needles from vaccinations and blood draws, scalpels, suture needles. High volume in surgical practices.
// Waste type
Regulated medical waste (red bag)
Blood-contaminated gauze, surgical drapes, used PPE, contaminated bandage material, suction canisters.
// Waste type
Pathological waste
Surgical specimens, necropsy tissue, euthanized animals (small species), placentas. Typically incinerated, not autoclaved.
// Waste type
Pharmaceutical waste
Expired vaccines, antibiotics, NSAIDs, anesthetic agents.
// Waste type
Controlled substances (Schedule II-V)
Pentobarbital (euthanasia solution), ketamine, opioids. DEA-compliant disposal required (DEA Form 41 documentation).
// Waste type
Cytotoxic/chemo waste
If you provide oncology services for pets, separate yellow-container chemo waste handling required.
What you should be paying
Real pricing ranges from regional and local operators in the WasteWise directory. National operators typically charge 1.5-3x these numbers for the same service.
// Solo vet (small animal)
$75-145/mo
1 vet, monthly pickup
Often paying 2x this on national contracts.
// Multi-vet small animal practice
$145-275/mo
2-5 vets, bi-weekly pickup
Most common for general practices.
// Surgical or specialty practice
$275-650+/mo
Weekly pickup, includes pathological
Surgical referral practices generate the most pathological waste.
If you're paying significantly more than the upper end of your range: you're almost certainly on a national-operator contract loaded with junk fees. Use our invoice analyzer to see exactly where the markup is.
Regulations that apply specifically to your industry
Beyond general state biomedical waste rules, here are the compliance requirements that hit your industry hardest:
DEA controlled substance disposal
Pentobarbital and other Schedule II-V drugs must be disposed of via reverse distributor or DEA-registered hauler. NEVER pour down drains. Documentation on DEA Form 41.
USDA APHIS regulations (for accredited vets)
If you handle reportable disease tissue (e.g., rabies suspects), specific containment and transport rules apply. Coordinate with your state vet.
State biomedical waste rules
Most states regulate vet waste identically to human medical waste. A few states have separate "animal waste" classifications — check yours.
OSHA Bloodborne Pathogens Standard
Yes, OSHA applies to vets. Many practices skip annual training — this is one of the most common citations.
Cremation regulations
If you handle deceased pets, state and local regulations on cremation, group cremation, and viewing/witnessing apply.
This is not legal advice. Regulations vary by state and change frequently. Verify current requirements with your state regulatory agency, your medical director, or qualified legal counsel before making compliance decisions.
Junk fees to watch for on your invoice
If your current waste invoice has any of these line items, you're almost certainly being marked up. Most regional operators don't charge any of these.
✗ "Veterinary specialty fee"
Some haulers charge a 10-25% premium on vet accounts vs. human medical practices for the same service. There's no regulatory or operational basis.
✗ "Pathological waste handling"
If your contract doesn't include pathological waste in the base service, you're paying extra per pickup for something every vet generates. Negotiate it into the base.
✗ "Controlled substance handling"
Some haulers charge $50-150 per Schedule II-V disposal event. Reverse distributors are usually cheaper.
✗ "Energy recovery / environmental fees"
Same generic junk fees as everywhere else. 30-50% of national-operator vet bills are these fees.