Veterinary IT  |  7 min read  |  Advanced IT Support

The 5 IT Issues Every Veterinary Practice Needs to Fix in 2026

And what they’re already costing you

Most vet practices don’t think they have an IT problem. They’re busy, booked out, and running fine on the surface. But when you look a little closer, especially across growing teams or multi-site clinics, things are rarely as smooth as they need to be. The issues are there. They’re just quiet enough to ignore, until they aren’t.

Systems run a little slower than they should. Integrations mis-behave occasionally. Backups exist, but nobody has ever actually tested them. None of it feels urgent, and that’s exactly the problem.

Veterinary practices now depend heavily on technology for patient records, diagnostics, billing, and compliance. When something fails, it doesn’t stay contained. It ripples across the whole operation fast.

Organizations like the American Veterinary Medical Association continue to emphasize the importance of accurate medical records, data protection, and operational continuity. All of that now depends directly on your IT environment.

And the wider picture reinforces the point. High-profile healthcare IT incidents, including the global outage triggered by a faulty CrowdStrike update, showed just how quickly systems can fail and how far the damage spreads. Most practices are not as resilient as they think they are.

Here are the five issues we see most consistently across veterinary practices right now, what they cost you when left unaddressed, and what to do about each one.


Issue 01

Backups That Exist But Don’t Actually Protect You

Most practices will tell you they have backups. Far fewer can tell you when those backups were last tested, how long recovery would actually take, or whether the backups are protected from ransomware.

Across healthcare in 2025, there were multiple incidents where organizations lost access to patient data, not because backups didn’t exist, but because they couldn’t be restored properly when it mattered. The AVMA is clear that complete and accessible medical records are essential for both clinical care and legal protection. If those records are unavailable, even temporarily, the impact is immediate.

What to do: Test full data restores regularly, not just verify that files are being copied. Ensure backups are stored offsite and isolated from your main network so ransomware can’t reach them. Know your actual recovery time rather than assuming it.
What it costs if you don’t: Lost or incomplete patient records, hours of manual reconstruction, and increased exposure to complaints and disputes. This is where a proper backup and disaster recovery setup becomes critical, not just having backups, but knowing they will actually work when you need them.

Issue 02

System Performance That Quietly Slows the Whole Clinic Down

Veterinary practices run on connected systems. Practice management software, imaging platforms, lab integrations like IDEXX, cloud-based tools. When performance drops, even slightly, everything feels it.

Sluggish performance rarely triggers an alarm. It just slows everyone down, a little more each day. Recent veterinary IT analysis continues to flag integration reliability and system performance as major pressure points, particularly in high-volume clinics.

⚠️ Worth knowing: Small delays compound quickly across a busy day. If each appointment takes two or three extra minutes because systems are slow, that’s a significant amount of lost capacity over a week, without anyone ever identifying a single clear cause.
What to do: Monitor system performance during peak hours. Identify bottlenecks across your network, servers, and integrations. Fix root causes rather than treating the same symptoms repeatedly.
What it costs if you don’t: Longer appointment times, reduced daily capacity, and a team operating under constant low-level pressure. In most cases this comes down to systems that haven’t been properly monitored or optimized over time, which is where managed IT services for veterinary practices tend to make a noticeable difference.

Issue 03

Cybersecurity Gaps That Leave the Practice Exposed

Healthcare is one of the most targeted sectors for cybercrime, and that trend has not slowed. Veterinary practices are part of that ecosystem whether they realize it or not. They hold sensitive client data, rely on continuous system access, and often have no dedicated security resources.

The AVMA has increasingly highlighted data protection and cybersecurity awareness as part of responsible practice management. Cyber incidents are no longer rare events. They are expected risks that need to be planned for.

🚨 Real exposure: A lot of breaches still start with a single email. One staff member clicks the wrong link, and the damage is done. Getting the basics right, email security, endpoint protection, and staff awareness, goes a long way toward closing the most common entry points.
What to do: Implement proper email security and endpoint protection. Train staff to recognize phishing attempts. Make sure backups are protected against ransomware specifically, not just hardware failure.
What it costs if you don’t: System downtime, potential data breaches, and reputational damage that takes a long time to recover from. This is why putting proper cybersecurity protection in place is no longer something you can leave until later.

For a deeper look at the email side specifically, our guide to email security best practices for small businesses covers the essentials.


Issue 04

Workarounds That Have Quietly Become Permanent

Inside most practices, staff adapt to system limitations without making a fuss. They restart applications, save files in different places, or avoid features that don’t behave properly. That adaptability keeps things moving in the short term. Over time, it creates inconsistency across the whole practice.

AVMA guidance around operational standards reinforces the importance of consistent, accurate record-keeping and process clarity. Workarounds undermine both. And because they develop gradually, nobody thinks of them as a problem. They’re just how things are done now.

⚠️ Why this matters: When different staff members handle the same task in different ways because the system doesn’t work properly, errors become more likely and records become less reliable. Neither of those things show up as an obvious IT failure.
What to do: Identify recurring system frustrations across the team. Fix the underlying issues rather than working around them. Standardize workflows so everyone is operating the same way.
What it costs if you don’t: Increased administrative workload, inconsistent records, and a higher likelihood of errors over time. This pattern is often linked to the wider set of common IT challenges businesses face as they grow, where systems evolve without any clear structure behind them.

Issue 05

No Clear Ownership or IT Strategy

In many veterinary practices, IT responsibility is informal. It sits with a practice manager, a well-meaning team member, or an external provider focused on reactive support. That works in the short term. It doesn’t support long-term stability.

As systems grow more complex, the absence of clear ownership becomes a risk in itself. Decisions get made reactively. Costs drift upward. Nobody is looking ahead.

What to do: Define who is responsible for IT decisions. Establish a forward-looking plan that gets reviewed regularly. Stop treating IT as something to fix when it breaks and start treating it as something to manage continuously.
What it costs if you don’t: Reactive decision-making, rising complexity, increasing costs, and a greater chance of larger failures later. This is usually the point where practices move toward fully managed IT support to bring structure, accountability, and a clear plan.

Quick Self-Assessment

A few questions that tend to surface the most important issues quickly:

  • Do you know how long it would take to recover your data if you needed to right now?
  • Are systems ever slowing you or your team down during peak hours?
  • Are staff working around problems instead of reporting them?
  • Do you feel genuinely confident about cybersecurity, or are you assuming things are fine?
  • Is anyone actively responsible for improving IT, not just fixing it when something breaks?

Most veterinary practices are not far from being in a good position. They don’t need to start from scratch. What they need is visibility, a clear picture of where things actually stand, and a plan to address the gaps in the right order.

If something has already gone wrong and you need urgent help, our rapid response IT support team can step in quickly to get things back on track.

And if you’re not sure where you stand, I’m always happy to take a quick look and give you a straight answer. No pitch, just an honest second opinion.


Not Sure Where Your Practice Stands?

Advanced IT Support works with veterinary practices across Jacksonville and Waycross to identify gaps, fix the right things first, and keep systems running the way they should. Get in touch for a free, no-pressure consultation.

Book a Free Consultation

Written by Jeremiah Dillingham — Advanced IT Support

Jeremiah is the founder of Advanced IT Support, a managed IT provider serving small and mid-size businesses in Jacksonville, FL and Waycross, GA. Advanced IT Support specializes in cybersecurity, cloud management, and proactive IT support for teams of 5 to 50 employees.


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