Each year, the AAVMC publishes the Veterinary Medical School Admissions Requirements (VMSAR) index, which details admissions requirements and data for every national and international veterinary school that are members of the Association of American Veterinary Medical Colleges (AAVMC). As the official guide to getting into vet school, it provides hundreds of pages of must-have information, essential to achieving your goal of becoming a veterinarian. You can purchase VMSAR here.
You can also review the list of the AAVMC affiliated veterinary schools for school specific requirements. The AAVMC created a Summary of Course Prerequisites chart for students to utilize as a quick overview of programs. However, you should always check each programs website for the most current information on prerequisite courses and application requirements.
Although requirements do vary from program to program, veterinary schools generally require the following courses:
- One year of biology with lab (BIOL 1107/L and 1108/L)
- One year of inorganic / general chemistry with lab (CHEM 1211/L and 1212/L)
- One year of organic chemistry with lab (CHEM 2211/L and 2212/L)
- Biochemistry (BCMB 3100 or BCMB 4020)
- One year of English (ENGL 1101 and ENGL 1102)
- 8 hours minimum of advanced biology courses (300/3000 level or higher biology courses (at the undergraduate level) that have general biology as a prerequisite.) Behavior, production and ecology courses do not count toward the advanced biological sciences requirement.
Recommended:
- Anatomy: CBIO 3000
- Microbiology: MIBO 3500 or 3000/L or 2500/L
- Cell Biology: CBIO 3400
- Physiology: VPHY 3100, PMCY 3000, CBIO 3710
- Genetics: GENE 3200
- Immunology: CBIO 4100
- 14 hours of humanities or social studies (examples of courses: psychology, sociology, philosophy, history, government, foreign languages, economics, or fine arts).
- Recommended: Psychology: PSYC 1101