Acton Animal Hospital – Vets in Acton
Clinic Overview
Acton Animal Hospital is an independent, AAHA-accredited veterinary clinic located at 363 Main St, Acton, MA 01720. The practice treats dogs, cats, small mammals, and exotic pets. Regular hours are Monday–Friday 8:00am–6:00pm and Saturday 8:00am–12:00pm, with the clinic closed on Sundays.
Services
- •Wellness exams and preventive care
- •Dog and cat vaccinations
- •Parasite prevention (flea, tick, heartworm) and annual parasite screening
- •Dental care including anesthetic dental cleanings, full-mouth digital dental X-rays, and extractions as needed
- •Soft-tissue surgery including spay/neuter, mass removals, cystotomy, and gastrointestinal/hernia procedures
- •Diagnostics including in-house lab testing with same-day results, digital X-ray, and point-of-care ultrasound
- •Specialist-performed echocardiograms and comprehensive abdominal ultrasounds
- •Internal medicine workups (including endocrine disease, heart disease, kidney disease)
- •Dermatology care for allergies and skin disease (testing and treatment, allergy vaccines, diet trials, medicated baths, prescription medications)
- •Pain management, including cold laser therapy and therapeutic laser
- •Urgent care for non-life-threatening issues
- •Emergency care during regular business hours, with non-critical overnight stays when necessary for business-hours emergencies
- •Out-of-hours referral listed to Tufts Cummings Veterinary Medical Center (North Grafton), Massachusetts Veterinary Referral Hospital (Woburn), Westford Veterinary Emergency Hospital (Westford), and Angell Animal Medical Center (Boston)
Pricing
No published pricing information is available.
People
The clinic lists Dr. Shauna McLeod (DVM, owner) and Denise Gearin (Practice Manager). Recent reviews also mention Amy, Dr. Johnston, Briana, and Lana.
Reviews
Acton Animal Hospital has a 4.9/5 rating on Google from 152 reviews. Recent comments commonly mention friendly, punctual staff; knowledgeable veterinarians and assistants; and calm handling of anxious or reactive pets during exams. Other themes include follow-up from the team and treatment recommendations described as attentive and reasonable.

