Mesa County Animal Services and local veterinarians join forces to provide subsidized spay/neuter vouchers due to a generous grant from the Animal Assistance Foundation
Mesa County Animal Services is collaborating with local area veterinarians to offer spay and neuter vouchers for Mesa County pet owners through the Animal Assistance Foundation’s (AAF) generous funding.
The cost of a spay/neuter procedure is $25 for the pet owner, with a voucher present at participating veterinarian offices. The vouchers are valid from March 3 to Sept. 30, 2025. Pet owners can contact the participating veterinarians to check their voucher availability.
2025 participating local area veterinarians include:
All Pets Center 970-241-1976
Animal Birth Control 970-523-5487
Arrowhead Veterinary Hospital 970-858-8881
CLAWS (Feline ONLY) 970-241-3793
Cottonwood Veterinary Hospital 970-245-0135
Grand View Animal Hospital 970-523-2060
Monument View Veterinary Hospital 970-644-5552
Orchard Mesa Veterinary Hospital 970-241-9866
Redlands Pet Clinic 970-245-4060
VCA Tiara Rado Animal Hospital 970-243-4007
The participating veterinarians have been issued a limited number of vouchers for 2025. Issuance of the vouchers is entirely at the discretion of each participating veterinarian's office. Individuals may be requested to support that they have financial need or be able to communicate why they have a unique circumstance that results in a need for the voucher.
Pet owners are required to provide proof of current rabies vaccination at the time of the procedure. The rabies vaccination cost is NOT covered by the $25 co-pay. In the scenario of a pet without a current rabies vaccination, the owner will need to pay for that service.
We greatly appreciate the Animal Assistance Foundation, which has provided extremely generous funding for sterilization procedures, and participating local veterinarians who have agreed to offer the procedures for making these services available to Mesa County residents’ pets at a substantially reduced rate.
Sterilization procedures can help pets live longer, healthier lives. By managing overpopulation in our community, we can ensure that all pets, whether temporarily living in our shelter, a loving home, or as community cats, have access to the Five Freedoms: Freedom from hunger and thirst; freedom from discomfort; freedom from pain, injury or disease; freedom to express normal behavior; and freedom from fear and distress.
