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SalaryTruthBLS DATA

Updated May 2026 · BLS OEWS 2025 reference period

Entry-Level Veterinarian Salary (2026)

Entry-level veterinarians earn approximately $80,097 per year as of 2026, based on the 10th percentile of Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS wage data — a standard proxy for first-year pay before significant experience or specialization. Across U.S. metros, entry-level pay ranges from $38,000 (lowest) to $104,190 (highest), depending on local labor market and cost of living.

This page answers a common U.S. wage question: Entry-Level Veterinarian Salary (2026). The answer draws on BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) — the federal survey that captures wages for over 800 occupations across every U.S. metropolitan area. Why BLS OEWS data is the right anchor: alternative wage sources (Glassdoor, levels.fyi, Payscale) are self-reported and skew toward specific roles, industries, or geographies. BLS OEWS is employer-reported, mandatory for businesses above the survey threshold, and uniformly applied across occupations and metros.

The detailed answer below uses the BLS numbers, explains how to read them, and translates the statistical detail into the worker-relevant interpretation of the question.

$80,097
Entry-level (10th percentile)
$38,000
Lowest-Paying Metro
$104,190
Highest-Paying Metro

10th percentile across U.S. metros, employment-weighted

What This Pay Level Means

The 10th percentile is the BLS-published wage below which only 10% of workers in this occupation earn — a reliable proxy for new entrants in their first one-to-two years. Workers in this band have minimal independent scope, are often still in formal training or apprenticeship, and have limited negotiation leverage. Pay grows fastest in the first three-to-five years as scope and credentials expand.

For workers with 2–5 years of experience, the right benchmark shifts to the 25th percentile (junior / early-career band). For 5+ years, the 50th percentile (median) becomes the anchor. See "How much does a junior veterinarian make?" and "How much do veterinarians make?" for those bands.

Top-Paying Metros at This Level

MetroEntry-level Pay
Nashville, TN$104,190
Anchorage, AK$104,030
Baltimore, MD$103,830
Providence, RI$102,960
New York, NY$101,450

What the Numbers Tell You

Geographic pay spread for Veterinarians is unusually wide — top metros pay roughly 2.1× what the lowest-paying metros pay, a $109,840 gap. Most of that variation tracks cost of living, regional industry concentration, and the depth of senior workers in each market.

Veterinarian is a smaller occupation, with about 49,250 workers tracked. Individual employers can move the local market noticeably.

Other Pay Levels for Veterinarians

Each percentile band targets a distinct experience level — see the dedicated page for your career stage:

How This Salary Is Calculated

Wages come from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics' Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) program — an annual survey of about 1.2 million U.S. establishments published by Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) code and Metropolitan Statistical Area. The figure on this page is employment-weighted across 70 BLS-tracked metros for SOC code 29-1131. The mapping from BLS percentiles to experience bands (entry / junior / mid / senior / top 10%) follows the convention used by the U.S. Department of Labor's prevailing wage system. See full methodology.

Frequently Asked Questions

Entry-Level Veterinarian Salary (2026)?

Entry-level veterinarians earn approximately $80,097 per year as of 2026, based on the 10th percentile of Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS wage data — a standard proxy for first-year pay before significant experience or specialization. Across U.S. metros, entry-level pay ranges from $38,000 (lowest) to $104,190 (highest), depending on local labor market and cost of living.

How does this percentile compare to the median?

Veterinarians have a national median (50th percentile) of $133,716. The 10th percentile shown on this page ($80,097) is 40% below the median — typical for this experience band.

Where do veterinarians at this level earn the most?

Nashville, TN pays the highest at this percentile band — $104,190. Lowest-paying tracked metro: Little Rock, AR at $38,000.

What years of experience does this percentile represent?

The 10th percentile is the BLS-published wage below which only 10% of workers in this occupation earn — a reliable proxy for new entrants in their first one-to-two years. Workers in this band have minimal independent scope, are often still in formal training or apprenticeship, and have limited negotiation leverage. Pay grows fastest in the first three-to-five years as scope and credentials expand.

Where does this veterinarian salary data come from?

Every wage figure comes from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics' Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) program at bls.gov/oes — an annual federal survey of more than 1 million U.S. employers. The percentile figure on this page is employment-weighted across BLS-tracked metros.

Entry-level veterinarians earn approximately $80,097 per year as of 2026, based on the 10th percentile of Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS wage data — a standard proxy for first-year pay before significant experience or specialization. Across U.S. metros, entry-level pay ranges from $38,000 (lowest) to $104,190 (highest), depending on local labor market and cost of living.