Occupation intelligence

veterinary technician

Key facts

Do you have a passion for animal welfare and a keen eye for detail? As a veterinary technician, you'll play a vital role in supporting veterinarians and providing essential care to animals, contributing directly to their health and well-being.

Summary

Veterinary technicians are skilled professionals who work alongside veterinarians, providing crucial technical and administrative support. Your daily tasks can be varied and rewarding, ranging from assisting in surgical procedures and administering medications to performing laboratory tests and providing compassionate care to animals and their owners. This role requires a blend of scientific knowledge, practical skills, and a genuine love for animals.

Key responsibilities
  • • Assisting veterinarians during examinations, surgeries, and other procedures.
  • • Administering medications and treatments as directed by the veterinarian.
  • • Performing laboratory tests, such as blood work and urinalysis.
80%
Resilience Score

Do you have a passion for animal welfare and a keen eye for detail? As a veterinary technician, you'll play a vital role in supporting veterinarians and providing essential care to animals, contributing directly to their health and well-being.

Agriculture Short-cycle tertiary education 23% AI exposure
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Quick fit check

Could veterinary technician fit you?

Answer three quick questions. This is not a full assessment — it is a teaser to help you decide whether to compare your profile.

Progress0/3

Do you enjoy tasks that require Attention to Detail?

Do you enjoy tasks that require Stress Tolerance?

Do you enjoy tasks that require Dependability?

NexFuture

Future Outlook for veterinary technician

The outlook for veterinary technician is exceptionally stable. While AI tools will assist with daily tasks, the core of this role relies on human judgment, resulting in a high resilience score of 79.7%.

How are these scores calculated?

The Resilience Score (0–100) estimates how structurally protected this occupation is from automation and AI disruption, based on task-level analysis. Higher scores mean more human-judgment-intensive tasks. AI Exposure shows the estimated percentage of task hours that current AI capabilities could affect. These are model-derived structural indicators, not predictions about individual job security.

Play the future

How could veterinary technician change as AI adoption grows?

Human judgement, trust, and context remain strong protectors for this role.

Significant task-level transformation is estimated in 19 years (around 2045) under the selected Expected Pace scenario.
79%
Resilience
Automation Risk
EXP28%
Human advantage
MOAT77%
2026
2036
2050
AI Adoption Speed:

How AI may change this role

Deterministic, model-based interpretation of current role signals — not a guarantee of replacement.

Human-owned 80% Human-owned
What still depends on people

This role remains strongly human-led where assist in the administration of fluids to animals depends on trust, nuance, and real-world judgement.

The Human Edge To stay ahead in this role, focus on anatomy of animals and animal behaviour. These human-centric skills are the hardest for AI to replicate in the next 20 years.
Assist 33% Assist
Where AI may become a co-pilot

AI is more likely to assist supporting tasks such as maintain work environments in a veterinary practice, documentation, search, and workflow coordination.

Automate 23% Automate
Tasks most exposed to automation

Automation pressure appears selective rather than broad, with the strongest signal currently coming from Generative AI.

Detailed Analysis

Vital Signs, AI Vectors & Megatrends

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Vital Signs

AI Exposure Vectors

0-100%
Generative AI 32.8%

Exposure to content generation, creative augmentation, and large language model tools

Cognitive Software 28.2%

Exposure to workflow automation, decision-support software, and process digitisation

Robotic & Physical Automation 18.7%

Exposure to physical automation, robotics, and sensor-driven task displacement

AI / Machine Learning 14.4%

Exposure to AI-assisted analysis, pattern recognition, and predictive modelling tasks

Megatrend Signals

0-100%
Green Transition 14%
Demographic Shift 13%
Regulatory Pressure 2%
Digital Transformation 0%
Geopolitical Change 0%
Spatial Change -18%

Model-derived scores. Indicates structural exposure to megatrends, not direct demand.

Technical Details
Methodology: NexFuture v2.0 Sources: O*NET 30.0, ESCO v1.2.0 Updated: May 2026

NexFuture™ v2.0 combines O*NET ability and activity profiles with ESCO skill group distributions and six global megatrend signals. Scores are probabilistic estimates, not guarantees. See the NexFuture™ Methodology White Paper for full details.

Day in the life

What people in this role usually do

Agriculture

Day in the life

A typical day as a veterinary technician

09
09:00 · Morning
assist in the administration of fluids to animals
Prepare the equipment for administering fluids to animals, observe the animal during the treatment, and keep fluid balance records.
10
10:30 · Mid-morning
maintain work environments in a veterinary practice
Prepare and maintain work environments for use, including equipment and materials, ensuring that equipment and materials are available.
12
12:00 · Midday
monitor condition of hospitalised animals
Monitor hospitalised animals and make appropriate adjustments in areas such as nutrition, hygiene, and pain management.
14
14:00 · Afternoon
apply safe work practices in a veterinary setting
Apply safe work practices in a veterinary setting in order to identify hazards and associated risks so as to prevent accidents or incidents. This includes injury from animals, zoonotic diseases, chemicals, equipment and work environments.
15
15:30 · Late afternoon
assist in administering veterinary anaesthetics
Assist the veterinary surgeon in administering anaesthetics to animals including the maintenance and monitoring of anaesthesia during veterinary procedures.
17
17:00 · Wrap-up
assist in general veterinary medical procedures
Assist veterinarians by preparing both the animal and the equipment for medical procedures, and providing care and support to the animal undergoing a medical procedure.

Task order is illustrative. Individual days vary.

Software & Technologies & Knowledge areas
Software & Technologies
Animal Intelligence Software Animal IntelligenceFileMaker ProMcAllister Software Systems AVImarkMicrosoft AccessMicrosoft ExcelMicrosoft Office softwareMicrosoft OutlookMicrosoft PowerPointMicrosoft WordPractice management software PMSVeterinary practice management software PMSWeb browser softwareWord processing software
Knowledge areas
  • anatomy of animals

    The study of animal body parts, their structure and dynamic relationships, on a level as demanded by the specific occupation.

  • animal behaviour

    The natural behavioural patterns of animals, i.e. how normal and abnormal behaviour might be expressed according to species, environment, human-animal interaction and occupation.

  • biosecurity related to animals

    Awareness of hygiene and bio-security measures when working with animals, including causes, transmission and prevention of diseases and use of policies, materials and equipment.

  • environmental enrichment for animals

    Types, methods and use of enrichment for animals to allow the expression of natural behaviour, including the provision of environmental stimuli, feeding activities, puzzles, items for manipulation, social and training activities.

  • physiology of animals

    The study of the mechanical, physical, bioelectrical and biochemical functioning of animals, their organs and their cells.

  • safe work practices in a veterinary setting

    Safe work practices in a veterinary setting in order to identify hazards and associated risks so as to prevent accidents or incidents. This includes injury from animals, zoonotic diseases, chemicals, equipment and working environment.

Cross-sector skills
  • animal welfare
  • animal welfare legislation
Essential skills
providing therapy or veterinary treatment for animals
  • assist in general veterinary medical procedures

    Assist veterinarians by preparing both the animal and the equipment for medical procedures, and providing care and support to the animal undergoing a medical procedure.

  • assist in administering veterinary anaesthetics

    Assist the veterinary surgeon in administering anaesthetics to animals including the maintenance and monitoring of anaesthesia during veterinary procedures.

  • prepare environment for veterinary surgery

    Prepare the surgical environment, including preparation rooms, operating theatres, equipment and materials. prior to surgery.

  • assist the veterinary surgeon as a scrub nurse

    Provide assistance in the handling of equipment and materials in a sterile manner during surgical procedures in operating theatre.'

  • prepare veterinary anaesthetic equipment

    Prepare and turn on all equipment required for animal anaesthesia, such as the anaesthesia machine, breathing circuit, endotracheal tube, intubation tools and anaesthetic monitors. Ensure they function and have undergone appropriate safety checks.

  • support veterinary diagnostic procedures

    Prepare equipment and animals for veterinary diagnostic tests. Conduct or support sample collection. Preserve samples from animals for analysis and communicate the results. Provide care for the animal undergoing examination.'

monitoring health conditions of humans and animals
  • manage animal biosecurity

    Plan and use appropriate biosafety measures to prevent transmission of diseases and ensure effective overall biosecurity. Maintain and follow biosecurity procedures and infection control when working with animals, including recognising potential health issues and taking appropriate action, communicating site hygiene control measures and biosecurity procedures, as well as reporting to others.

  • monitor condition of hospitalised animals

    Monitor hospitalised animals and make appropriate adjustments in areas such as nutrition, hygiene, and pain management.

  • monitor the welfare of animals

    Monitor animals’ physical condition and behaviour and report any concerns or unexpected changes, including signs of health or ill-health, appearance, condition of the animals' accommodation, intake of food and water and environmental conditions.

complying with health and safety procedures
  • apply safe work practices in a veterinary setting

    Apply safe work practices in a veterinary setting in order to identify hazards and associated risks so as to prevent accidents or incidents. This includes injury from animals, zoonotic diseases, chemicals, equipment and work environments.

  • manage infection control in the facility

    Implement a set of measures to prevent and control infections, formulating and establishing health and safety procedures and policies.

moving and herding animals
  • control animal movement

    Direct, control or restrain some or part of an animal's, or a group of animals', movement.

tending and breeding animals
  • provide first aid to animals

    Administer emergency treatment to prevent deterioration of the condition, suffering and pain until veterinary assistance can be sought. Basic emergency treatment needs to be done by non-veterinarians prior to first-aid provided by a veterinarian. Non-veterinarians providing emergency treatment are expected to seek treatment by a veterinarian as soon as possible.

developing educational programmes
  • manage personal professional development

    Take responsibility for lifelong learning and continuous professional development. Engage in learning to support and update professional competence. Identify priority areas for professional development based on reflection about own practice and through contact with peers and stakeholders. Pursue a cycle of self-improvement and develop credible career plans.

allocating and controlling physical resources
  • maintain work environments in a veterinary practice

    Prepare and maintain work environments for use, including equipment and materials, ensuring that equipment and materials are available.

maintaining and enforcing physical security
  • deal with challenging people

    Work safely and communicate effectively with individuals and groups of people who are in challenging circumstances. This would include recognition of signs of aggression, distress, threatening and how to address them to promote personal safety and that of others.

Skill DNA

Skill DNA

Work personality traits and values that define this role

Key traits you need
Attention to Detail Stress Tolerance Dependability Integrity Cooperation Adaptability/Flexibility Self-Control Initiative Persistence Achievement/Effort Concern for Others Leadership Social Orientation Analytical Thinking Independence Innovation
Key rewards you can expect
AchievementWorking Condit…RecognitionRelationshipsSupportIndependence
Career progression

Growth Pathways & Similar Roles

Explore typical career progression paths, adjacent skills, and similar roles to plan your next transition.

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Common questions

Frequently asked questions

What kind of education or training is required to become a veterinary technician?
Veterinary technicians typically complete an associate’s degree program in veterinary technology. These programs cover a wide range of topics, including animal anatomy, physiology, pharmacology, and clinical procedures. National legislation dictates specific requirements, which may include practical experience and examinations.
What are the typical work conditions for a veterinary technician?
Veterinary technicians generally work in clinical settings such as veterinary hospitals, clinics, and animal shelters. The work can be physically demanding, requiring prolonged standing, lifting, and handling animals. Exposure to animal waste, medications, and potential bites or scratches is also common. Adherence to safety protocols is essential.
What personality traits or work styles are important for success as a veterinary technician?
Successful veterinary technicians are detail-oriented, compassionate, and able to work effectively as part of a team. They need to be adaptable and able to handle stressful situations calmly. Strong communication skills are also essential for interacting with veterinarians, animal owners, and colleagues. The ability to work independently and prioritize tasks is crucial.