VetClick
Menu Menu
Login

VetClick

/ News
Tuesday, 16th December 2025 | 2,183 veterinary jobs online | 109 people actively seeking work | 5,635 practices registered

Veterinary Industry News

Send us your news
RCVS logo

RCVS logo

New Exit Survey Results Paint A Picture Of Why Vets And Vet Nurses Choose To Leave The Register

4 weeks ago
313 views

Posted
19th November, 2025 19h03

Author
RCVS


The Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons (RCVS) has today (Wednesday 19 November 2025) published its ‘Exit Survey 2022 – 2024’ report, an examination of why veterinary surgeons and veterinary nurses choose to leave their respective registers based on the analysis of voluntary exit surveys.

The RCVS decided to start asking those voluntarily leaving the registers to complete an exit survey in order to gain a deeper understanding of why relatively small numbers of veterinary surgeons and veterinary nurses were leaving the UK profession, as well as ask about their future plans and the possibility of returning to their profession at some future point.

The exit surveys for veterinary surgeons voluntarily leaving the RCVS Registers were launched in April 2022 and those for veterinary nurses were launched in September 2023, with the period in review running until 31 December 2024 for both. In the data veterinary surgeons were further subdivided into two categories – those leaving the Register altogether, and those leaving the UK-practising category of the Register to join either the overseas-practising or non-practising categories.  

Some of the key findings from the report are:

Vicki Bolton, RCVS Research Manager, said: “Thank you to all those veterinary surgeons and veterinary nurses who responded to these exit surveys. This data is invaluable to us in understanding the reasons why people choose to leave the RCVS Registers.

“The reasons given don’t always make for easy reading, especially when they are to do with dissatisfaction over the direction the professions are taking, physical and mental health and wellbeing, financial pressures and concerns about regulation and its costs.

“However, it is important to remember that, overall, relatively few veterinary surgeons and veterinary nurses leave the professions each year. There is no mass exodus from the professions and the numbers joining the UK Register annually well exceed those leaving, as demonstrated by consistent year-on-year increases in the number of veterinary surgeon and veterinary nurse registrants.

“That being said, these results will form an invaluable part of our ongoing work on veterinary workforce and gives the RCVS food for thought about how and where we can better support veterinary surgeons and veterinary nurses to stay in the professions rather than leave prematurely.”

The full exit survey report is available to read on our website and a PDF version can also be downloaded at: www.rcvs.org.uk/publications

Vicki Bolton and Research Officer Melanie Otour will be giving a presentation (titled ‘Vexit? The results of the RCVS exit survey’) about the data at this year’s London Vet Show on Friday 21 November in Gallery Suite 13.


More from RCVS


You might be interested in...