German survey spotlights pay gains, persistent strain for employed vets: full analysis
A new paper in Veterinary Sciences puts updated numbers behind a familiar workforce concern in Germany: employed veterinarians are earning more than they did a few years ago, but many are still working under conditions that may undermine retention and job satisfaction. According to the study abstract, the survey analyzed responses from up to 1,184 employed veterinarians, representing roughly 6% of that workforce, and found hourly salary growth of about 19% versus a 2020 study, while remaining below pay levels in comparable professions. The study also examined legal violations and differences between owner-managed and corporate-managed practices. (tieraerzteverband.de)
The backdrop is years of concern about working life in German veterinary medicine. A 2020 survey publicized by the German Federal Association of Practicing Veterinarians, or bpt, described dissatisfaction among employed veterinarians over excessive hours and inadequate pay. Earlier academic work from Germany likewise found that practitioners, especially employed veterinarians, were less satisfied with income and working hours than veterinarians in non-clinical roles, and that a positive workplace atmosphere was one of the most important drivers of satisfaction. (tieraerzteverband.de)
That context matters because Germany’s veterinary workforce is also changing structurally. The Federal Veterinary Association has reported a clear trend toward employment relationships rather than self-employment, arguing that the perceived veterinarian shortage is less about headcount than about available working hours. In other words, even if more veterinarians are entering or staying in employed roles, persistent overtime, emergency duty burdens, or weak compliance with labor rules can still leave practices short on usable clinical capacity. (bundestieraerztekammer.de)
The new study’s focus on labor-law violations is especially notable. German veterinary employment guidance for associates spells out that normal practice duties, prep time, and related tasks count as working time, and it outlines strict rest-period rules. That means the issue isn’t only whether associates feel overworked, but whether practice systems are aligned with labor requirements. The paper’s comparison of owner-managed and corporate-managed settings may also draw attention, as consolidation continues to reshape parts of the companion animal market in Europe and raises questions about whether scale improves, or complicates, scheduling and compensation practices. (bundangestelltertieraerzte.de)
Recent German and European research suggests the pressure is not limited to pay. A 2025 Veterinary Sciences paper on German veterinarians described veterinary medicine as a highly stressful profession with long working hours and significant emotional strain, and noted that fewer night and weekend shifts were associated with higher job satisfaction in prior German survey work. A 2024 cross-European survey in the same journal similarly argued that supportive workplaces, work-life balance, and job satisfaction remain unresolved priorities across the profession. (mdpi.com)
Why it matters: For veterinary professionals, this study reinforces that compensation benchmarks should be read alongside staffing models, emergency-duty design, overtime tracking, and management culture. If hourly pay is improving but job quality remains inconsistent, practices may still struggle to recruit and keep associates, especially younger veterinarians who are already at higher risk of stress and overcommitment. For consolidators and independent groups alike, the practical question is whether they can translate wage gains into jobs that feel legally compliant, professionally sustainable, and compatible with life outside the clinic. (mdpi.com)
What to watch: The next signal will be whether German veterinary associations, employers, and corporate groups respond with updated salary guidance, stronger labor compliance efforts, or redesigned shift structures, particularly around nights and weekends. If they don’t, the profession may continue to see the same pattern: more veterinarians choosing employed work, but not enough sustainable working hours to ease workforce pressure. (bmcvetres.biomedcentral.com)