Vitéz-Móré, Tamás and Máté, Marietta and Ózsvári, László (2026) Kisállateledel és -felszerelésbolttal rendelkező állatorvosi rendelők jövedelmezőségének összehasonlító elemzése Magyarországon = A comparative analysis of the profitability of veterinary practices with integrated pet shops in Hungary. MAGYAR ÁLLATORVOSOK LAPJA, 148 (1). pp. 45-54. ISSN 0025-004X
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Abstract
A szerzők bemutatják hazai állatorvosi rendelők főbb pénzügyi mutatóinak és saját kisállateledel és -felszerelésbolt (továbbiakban: pet shop) üzemeltetésének összehasonlító elemzését 100 db állatorvosi praxis 2023. évi hivatalos üzleti adatai alapján. A pet shopot nem üzemeltető rendelőket összehasonlítva a pet shoppal rendelkező praxisokkal az átlagos éves árbevétel 64,3 millió Ft vs. 206,3 millió Ft, az átlagos adózott eredmény pedig 5,5 millió Ft vs. 34,4 millió Ft, továbbá az árbevételarányos adózott eredmény (return of sales, ROS) 8,6% vs. 16,7% volt, vagyis a pet shopot (üzletet, ill. webshopot és ennek B2B2C modelljét) üzemeltető rendelők fő pénzügyi mutatói kedvezőbbek voltak. | Background: Veterinary practices are increasingly seeking additional revenue streams to improve profitability. Operating complementary businesses such as online and offline pet shops has emerged as a strategic approach to increase client engagement and overall financial performance. Objectives: The objective of this study is to examine the profitability differences among veterinary clinics based on the integration of a pet shop service. Materials and Methods: Key official business data for 2023 from 100 Hungarian small animal veterinary practices were analysed. The sample included practices with and without pet shops (54 vs. 46), geographically covering all counties, including Budapest. Descriptive statistical analyses (mean, median, minimum, maximum) were conducted, focusing on revenue, profit and profit margin, i.e. return on sales (ROS, %). Results and Discussion: Practices operating pet shops demonstrated notably greater annual revenue (HUF 64.3 million vs. HUF 206.3 million), net profit (HUF 5.5 million vs. HUF 34.4 million), and profitability, with a return on sales of 16.7% compared to 8.6% for those without such services. Offline pet shops facilitated client acquisition and enhanced personal interactions, while online stores broadened geographical reach and enabled data-driven marketing strategies. The increasingly popular B2B2C model can significantly reduce inventory and logistical costs, while increasing customer engagement, particularly when combining online and offline channels. Overall, Hungarian veterinary practices with integrating pet shop services showed greater average ROS by at least 8 percentage points.
| Item Type: | Article |
|---|---|
| Subjects: | S Agriculture / mezőgazdaság > SV Veterinary science / állatorvostudomány |
| SWORD Depositor: | MTMT SWORD |
| Depositing User: | MTMT SWORD |
| Date Deposited: | 14 Jan 2026 07:50 |
| Last Modified: | 14 Jan 2026 07:50 |
| URI: | https://real.mtak.hu/id/eprint/232015 |
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