US Pet Industry Hits $157B Record, But Small Businesses Face Rising Costs

The US pet industry has reached a record $157 billion in consumer spending, driven by high rates of pet ownership. Small business owners testified before a Senate committee about the significant challenges of rising healthcare costs, labor expenses, and regulatory complexity. Franchise owners and veterinarians detailed how policy uncertainty and state-by-state product registration create operational burdens. Despite the sector's rapid growth, these pressures force difficult decisions about wages, investment, and expansion for community-based enterprises.

Key Points: US Pet Market Hits $157B, Small Businesses Cite Challenges

  • Record $157B in US pet spending
  • Rising healthcare and labor costs
  • Regulatory hurdles for small businesses
  • Franchise and veterinary practice challenges
4 min read

US pet market hits record levels, but faces rising costs, regulatory challenges

The US pet industry reaches a record $157 billion, but small business owners tell senators about rising costs, labor issues, and regulatory hurdles.

"Pets have a very special place in our lives, in our families and even here in the Senate. - Senator Joni Ernst"

Washington, March 12

The US pet industry has reached a record $157 billion in spending, but small business owners told senators that rising healthcare costs, regulatory hurdles, labour challenges, and financing constraints are making it harder for many companies to keep pace with the sector's rapid growth.

At a hearing of the Senate Small Business and Entrepreneurship Committee on Wednesday (local time), lawmakers and business owners painted a picture of a booming consumer market that has become increasingly central to Main Street businesses across the United States.

Senator Joni Ernst, the Republican chair of the committee, said pets occupy an expanding role in American life and in the economy that serves them.

"Pets have a very special place in our lives, in our families and even here in the Senate," she said, noting that about 57 per cent of American households own at least one pet. In rural America, she said, that figure rises to 71 per cent, with nearly half of households owning more than one animal.

As pet ownership has grown, she said, businesses built around animal care have expanded alongside it. Local veterinarians, community trainers, pet stores, and grooming services now form a vast ecosystem of small enterprises supporting what has become one of the country's fastest-growing consumer industries.

But several witnesses told senators that running those businesses has become more complicated and more expensive.

Josh Rogers, a franchise owner of Camp Bow Wow dog daycare and boarding services, said his company now operates seven locations across Missouri, Colorado, and Florida and employs more than 140 workers.

Rogers said the franchise model allowed him to expand rapidly, describing how it "allowed us to go into business for ourselves, but not by ourselves." He said the business opened its first location in 2020 and reached break-even in six weeks.

Still, he told lawmakers that policy uncertainty and labour costs remain major concerns. He pointed in particular to the federal "joint employer" standard, which governs the legal relationship between franchise operators and parent companies.

Another witness, Dr Gary Brown, a veterinarian from West Virginia, said veterinary practices remain essential pillars of local economies, particularly in rural communities.

Brown told the committee that the United States has roughly 34,000 veterinary practices. A typical companion animal practice generates more than $1.5 million in annual revenue, while each full-time veterinarian produces a median gross revenue of about $600,000.

"Veterinary practices are community-based businesses that provide stable employment," Brown said, adding that many clinics also anchor the broader network of commerce in smaller towns.

Robert Van Sickle, co-founder of the Boston-based pet treat company Polka Dog, described the balancing act of operating a growing small business in an increasingly competitive industry.

Polka Dog began in 2002 as a single neighbourhood shop in Boston's South End. Today, the company operates 11 retail locations, two warehouses, and a 14,000-square-foot manufacturing kitchen that distributes products to retailers around the world.

By most measures, Van Sickle said, the company has been a success. Yet the daily pressures of running the business remain constant.

"Despite our longevity and growth and how our company might look to someone from the outside, within the walls we still operate very much as a small business," he said.

Van Sickle said rising costs have forced difficult decisions about wages, investment, and expansion. The company expects its employee health insurance premiums to rise sharply again this year, after increases in recent years.

Lawmakers also heard about regulatory obstacles facing businesses that sell products nationwide. Van Sickle said companies like his must register products with agriculture departments in all 50 states, each with different forms and labelling rules.

The process, he said, is time-consuming and often confusing.

"It's more time-consuming than it is onerous from a financial standpoint," Van Sickle said, but he added that a unified national system would greatly simplify compliance for small manufacturers.

Democrats on the committee used the hearing to highlight broader economic pressures facing small businesses and consumers.

Senator Edward Markey of Massachusetts said rising prices for fuel, electricity, food and health care were squeezing both pet owners and the businesses serving them.

"This pet inflation may mean that a trip to the vet, a visit to the pet store, or even keeping a pet at all is out of reach for many Americans," Markey said.

The hearing underscored how deeply pet ownership has become embedded in American culture. According to industry figures cited during the hearing, millions of households now treat pets as family members, driving spending on food, veterinary services, grooming, and boarding.

The growth of the sector accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic, when many Americans adopted pets while working from home. The trend has continued, turning animal care into a major segment of the US consumer economy.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

A
Arjun K
The part about 71% pet ownership in rural America is interesting. In rural India, many households have dogs for security and cattle/buffalo for livelihood, but they are rarely seen as "pets" in the Western sense. The commercial pet industry is still very urban-centric here. The struggle with 50 different state regulations in the US sounds like a nightmare—imagine navigating 28 different state rules in India!
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Rohit P
While the growth is impressive, the article highlights a critical issue: "pet inflation." If basic vet care is becoming unaffordable for average Americans, what about the situation in developing countries? In India, specialized pet care is already a luxury for most. The focus should be on making animal welfare accessible, not just growing a luxury market.
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Sarah B
As a dog owner myself, I understand the costs involved. The franchise model mentioned (Camp Bow Wow) is something that could work well in Indian cities like Bangalore or Mumbai, where dual-income families need reliable pet care. But the labour and real estate costs here are also major hurdles for entrepreneurs.
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Vikram M
The statistic about each vet generating ~$600,000 revenue is eye-opening. In India, a vet's economics are very different, with much lower fee structures. The US model is driven by high insurance and service costs. We need a sustainable middle path for our growing pet parent community.
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Karthik V
A respectful criticism: The article and hearing seem very focused on the business and economic angle. What about the ethical aspect of pet ownership and breeding? The boom shouldn't come at the cost of animal welfare or lead to impulsive adoptions followed

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