Accountant for veterinarians
Accounting firm for veterinarians in France: clinics, teams, equipment, investments, margin visibility and business structuring.
Accounting firm for veterinarians in France: clinics, teams, equipment, investments, margin visibility and business structuring.
The need for an accountant for veterinarians arises when the business no longer behaves like a simple solo practice. Consultations, technical procedures, teams, equipment, premises, investments and growth decisions all need a clearer financial reading.
A veterinary clinic often has more economic moving parts than a standard liberal profession. Owners need to understand margin, payroll weight, investment load, available cash and financing capacity. Compliance-only accounting is not enough once the clinic starts growing.
A solo veterinarian in liberal practice files Form 2035 under the BNC regime and is affiliated to CARPV (Caisse Autonome de Retraite et de Prévoyance des Vétérinaires) for professional pension and disability coverage.
As the practice grows — additional staff, a partner joining, equipment investment, second site — the right structure changes:
SCM (société civile de moyens): Two or more veterinarians share costs — rent, equipment, reception — without pooling clients or income. Each files their own 2035. The SCM does not generate its own revenue.
SELARL or SELAS: A professional exercise company allows the practice to be operated through a corporate structure, subject to corporate tax (IS). The shareholder veterinarian draws a salary and dividends. The IS rate makes retained earnings more efficient to accumulate.
SPFPL: A financial holding company for veterinary SEL shares, allowing wealth management and tax-efficient dividend reinvestment.
The choice depends on revenue level, number of partners, investment plans and personal financial objectives. We model each scenario with real numbers before any structural change.
Imaging equipment (digital radiology, ultrasound, endoscopy), surgery tables, anesthesia systems, laboratory analyzers and clinic fit-out represent significant capital. Their accounting treatment has a direct impact on reported income, tax liability and financing capacity.
Equipment must be capitalized and depreciated over its economic life — typically five to ten years depending on type. Accelerated depreciation may be available for qualifying investments. We build a depreciation plan that smooths the tax impact and reflects the actual economic contribution of each asset.
Financing decisions — leasing vs bank credit vs cash purchase — should be modeled against cash flow. A lease preserves capital but creates a fixed monthly charge. The right choice depends on the clinic's overall debt load and cash generation.
Veterinary clinics buy drugs, vaccines, consumables and veterinary products at wholesale and sell them at a margin to clients. This purchasing and resale activity needs to be tracked separately from service revenue (consultations, procedures, surgeries).
The product margin — revenue from drugs and supplies minus purchase cost — is a significant part of overall clinic economics. Stock management matters: dormant stock ties up cash, and expiry waste directly reduces margin. We set up a stock tracking framework that connects the ordering process to the accounting system.
As soon as the activity relies on several veterinarians, veterinary technicians (ASV), reception staff or administrative support, payroll becomes one of the main profit drivers. French veterinary practices typically fall under the Convention Collective Nationale vétérinaire (IDCC 1875) for employed staff.
Beyond payroll compliance, the owner needs to see the total labor cost as a percentage of revenue and monitor it monthly. Overstaffing without revenue growth is one of the fastest ways for a growing clinic to destroy margin.
When a second veterinarian becomes a partner — through a capital purchase, a progressive buy-in or a new build — the financial setup needs to be clear for both parties: price, payment schedule, shareholder agreement, governance, partner compensation, profit distribution and exit provisions.
We advise on both sides of partner transactions: the incoming partner needs to understand the real value and the financing capacity; the existing owner needs to protect the practice's continuity and their own liquidity.
A fast-growing clinic can run short of cash even with strong revenue. Investment, payroll growth and stock all consume cash before income arrives. We build a rolling cash forecast that connects the growth plan to the financing need.
Partner entry, a second site, transmission, practice property or a holding structure all require a much cleaner financial base. The topics that matter most:
Owners need a useful reading of revenue, recurring purchases, fixed costs and the clinic's real contribution margin.
When the time comes to sell, the value of a veterinary practice depends on client base, equipment condition, staff retention, lease terms and the transferability of goodwill. We prepare the financial documentation and support the valuation discussion.
The CARPV (Caisse Autonome de Retraite et de Prévoyance des Vétérinaires) is the mandatory pension and provident fund for every French liberal veterinarian. Contributions are based on prior-year income with a one-year lag, which creates a recurring provisioning need. The fund covers basic retirement, supplementary retirement, disability and death cover. Annual contributions typically reach €8,000-€15,000 depending on income level. Provisioning a fixed monthly amount prevents the classic January N+1 cash surprise when contributions are reassessed on a higher-income year.
We combine BNC and SELARL accounting expertise, IDCC 1875 payroll for veterinary staff (assistants, ASV, administrative), equipment depreciation modelling, CARPV provisioning discipline and structural advice on partner entry, multi-site expansion and eventual transmission. Free quote within 24 hours, first diagnostic meeting on the house — review your current setup, identify quick wins on margin or payroll efficiency, and define a 12-month roadmap aligned with your clinic's growth plan.
Veterinary activity can combine clinics, technical equipment, teams and growth plans. The accounting need is strongly tied to margin and cash management.
Separate revenue, recurring purchases, payroll, fixed costs and investment before judging performance.
Measure how staffing choices affect the clinic's profitability and flexibility.
Compare equipment and fit-out plans with cash and financing capacity.
Document partner entry, transfer or multi-site growth before decisions become urgent.
Wherever you are in France, we deploy a 100% digital interface to deliver fast, highly-structured accounting and financial steering.
Samuel Hayot is a French chartered accountant and statutory auditor registered with the Paris professional bodies.
The firm is based in Paris 8 and operates with a delivery model designed for businesses located across France.
Pennylane, Dext, Silae and an automation-first setup built for visibility and speed.
Visible phone number, simple contact path, fast engagement letter and tighter qualification of the mandate.
30 complimentary minutes with Samuel Hayot to challenge your reporting and surface your priority levers.
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Because clinics often combine teams, technical investment, recurring purchases and structuring decisions that require a more operational financial reading.
Payroll weight, recurring purchases, equipment investment, available cash and the clinic's real contribution margin.
When a partner joins, a second site opens, major investment is planned or a transfer starts being considered. The right moment is typically 12-18 months ahead of the change, not the day before — quantified scenarios let the partners commit on real numbers.
CARPV total annual contributions typically reach €8,000-€15,000 depending on income, with a one-year lag between income earned and contributions called. Provisioning 8-12% of monthly net BNC profit prevents the classic January N+1 cash surprise when a strong year triggers higher contributions in the following year.
Veterinary services and product sales are subject to 20% VAT in France — unlike human medical services, which benefit from a VAT exemption. The clinic must charge VAT on consultations, procedures, surgeries and drug sales, and file regular CA3 returns. Some specific drug categories may follow different rates; we audit the POS configuration to ensure compliance.

Chartered Accountant, registered with the Institute of Chartered Accountants.
Regulated French accounting and audit firm based in Paris 8, built to support companies across France with a digital and decision-oriented approach.