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Warning issued after pet owners turn to AI for advice instead of vets

Washington Examiner Published Jun 29, 2026 Reviewed Jul 1, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Around 10% of pet owners now use AI sources for pet care advice across the UK.
about 10 % · pet owners
RSPCA, animal charity
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Citation-ready fact
In the South East of England, around 9% of pet owners are said to be turning to AI.
about 9 % · pet owners
RSPCA, animal charity
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Around 55% of pet owners are concerned about affording vet bills.
about 55 % · pet owners
RSPCA, animal charity
View source ↗

Concern is growing over pet owners asking AI bots what’s wrong with their animal.

Concern is growing over pet owners asking AI bots what’s wrong with their animal.

Most people have turned to Google once or twice to search for a symptom when feeling unwell, but end up with an answer that often leaves them even more worried.

An increasing number of pet owners are doing this for their pets, according to the animal charity RSPCA.

AI is being used to check symptoms and for advice instead of trained vets, often in a bid to save cash as costs have soared.

RSPCA named the growing use of chatbots like ChatGPT and Gemini as one of its top concerns.

Around 10% of pet owners now use AI sources for pet care advice across the UK. In the South East of England, around 9% of pet owners are said to be turning to AI, RSPCA’s new animal kindness index reveals.

The most common queries to tools like Gemini and Grok were for checking symptoms for an unwell pets, followed by behaviour and body language questions.

While chatbots can be a useful tool in some cases, they could become a ‘ticking time bomb’, RSPCA said.

It fears pet owners are looking for a quick fix because of costly vet visits, with around 55% of pet owners concerned about affording vets bills.

Reliance on the chatbot’s answers could lead to complacency and even pet owners unknowingly breaking the law if they don’t seek treatment for a sick or suffering pet.

TV vet Rory Cowlam, known for his CBBC series, admitted that he uses AI tools at his clinic all the time as they can support investigations or lab work.

He said: ‘But there is a massive difference between a vet using clinical AI to support an examination, and a pet owner using a text chatbot to skip one entirely.  

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