Guide · Imaging
How much does a dog X-ray cost?
Last updated: May 2026 · Methodology · Sources
Reviewed by Pet Cost Editorial Team
Most dog X-rays cost $100–$450 per region in general practice. Emergency clinics charge $200–$700. Sedation, when needed, adds $100–$300. A typical two-view chest series totals $250–$500.
Cost components
| Component | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| X-ray, single region (general practice) | $100 | $220 | $450 |
| X-ray, single region (ER) | $200 | $400 | $700 |
| Two-view chest series | $250 | $400 | $700 |
| Abdominal series (2–3 views) | $250 | $450 | $800 |
| Sedation (when needed) | $100 | $180 | $300 |
| Radiologist tele-consult | $60 | $110 | $200 |
| Office exam (typically required) | $50 | $75 | $150 |
What drives the price
- Number of views. Most diagnostics require 2–3 views per region.
- Sedation. Wiggly, painful, or large dogs may need sedation for accurate images.
- Clinic type. ER and specialty clinics charge 1.5–2× general practice.
- Radiologist read. Many clinics tele-consult a board-certified radiologist for an additional $60–$200.
When X-rays are worth it
- Suspected swallowed object or bowel obstruction
- Limping, suspected fracture, hip/joint evaluation
- Coughing or breathing issues (chest series)
- Pre-anesthetic screening for older dogs
Insurance note
X-rays are typically covered by accident-and-illness pet insurance after deductible — they're commonly part of diagnostic workups for covered conditions. Confirm with your policy.
FAQ
Why does the ER charge so much more?
24/7 staffing, premium equipment, and stat reads from on-call radiologists. Same imaging, very different overhead.
Is sedation always needed?
No. Calm, well-positioned patients often don't need it. Painful or anxious dogs benefit from sedation for image quality and welfare.