Veterinary Technology · North Carolina

Veterinary Technology colleges in North Carolina

Veterinary Technology program coverage in North Carolina is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.

Veterinary Technology trains the clinical support staff who assist veterinarians with animal nursing, lab work, anesthesia, and imaging, suited to people who want hands-on patient care.

We're still verifying Veterinary Technology programs in North Carolina. Try a broader search at /results?q=Veterinary Technology or browse all colleges in North Carolina.

What you'll study in a Veterinary Technology program

  • Animal anatomy and physiology across companion, large, and exotic species
  • Veterinary pharmacology and safe medication calculation and administration
  • Animal handling, restraint, and low-stress patient-positioning techniques
  • Clinical pathology, hematology, urinalysis, and parasitology lab procedures
  • Radiographic positioning, exposure, and diagnostic-imaging safety
  • Anesthesia induction, patient monitoring, and pain management
  • Surgical preparation, sterile technique, and intraoperative assisting
  • Dental prophylaxis, charting, and oral-health care
  • Animal nursing, nutrition, fluid therapy, and owner communication

Where a Veterinary Technology degree can lead

  • Veterinary Technician
  • Veterinary Technologist
  • Emergency / Critical Care Veterinary Technician
  • Surgical Veterinary Technician
  • Laboratory Animal Technician
  • Zoo / Wildlife Veterinary Technician

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 veterinary technologists and technicians median $45,980).

Veterinary Technology prepares students to work alongside veterinarians as the clinical backbone of animal care, much the way a nurse supports a physician. Under a veterinarian's supervision, technicians restrain and handle animals, monitor vital signs, draw blood, run laboratory tests, take and develop radiographs, induce and watch over anesthesia, assist in surgery, perform dental cleanings, administer medications, and explain home care to owners. Coursework blends animal anatomy and physiology, pharmacology, nutrition, and clinical pathology with extensive practice in the skills patients actually need. This is the applied clinical-care side of the profession, distinct from veterinary medicine itself, which requires a doctoral degree to diagnose disease, prescribe drugs, and perform surgery, and distinct from animal science, which studies production, breeding, and biology of animals rather than direct patient nursing.

The credential is usually an associate's degree, though some students earn a bachelor's and use the title veterinary technologist; both paths center on supervised hands-on training. Programs pair classroom science with laboratory sections and clinical externships in working hospitals, where students log practical experience handling live patients before they graduate. In most states, working as a credentialed technician requires passing a national licensing or credentialing examination and registering with the state, and programmatic accreditation can affect exam eligibility, so prospective students should verify a program's accreditation and their state's specific requirements. Graduates work in companion-animal clinics, emergency and critical-care hospitals, specialty and surgical practices, equine and large-animal practices, research and laboratory-animal facilities, zoos and wildlife settings, and diagnostic laboratories.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of veterinary technologists and technicians, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $45,980 and projects employment to grow about 9.1% from 2024 to 2034; an associate's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

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