Twin Peaks Veterinary Center
Hours
How to Save on Veterinary Costs at Twin Peaks Veterinary Center
Preventive care
Routine wellness exams can help identify health issues early, often before they become more serious or expensive to treat. Regular checkups are one of the most effective ways to manage long term veterinary costs.
Compare prescription pricing
Some pet medications prescribed at veterinary clinics may also be available through local or online pharmacies. It can be helpful to compare pricing when appropriate to reduce ongoing medication costs.
Consider pet insurance
Pet insurance may help cover a portion of eligible veterinary expenses depending on the plan, including accidents, illnesses, and in some cases preventive care. Coverage details, reimbursement levels, and deductibles vary by provider.
Why Pet Insurance Information Appears on This Page
Looking for information about Twin Peaks Veterinary Center? This page also includes pet insurance resources to help pet parents understand how to prepare for unexpected veterinary expenses.
Veterinary care costs can vary widely depending on the type of visit, treatment, or emergency. Many pet parents explore pet insurance before they need it so they are better prepared when unexpected situations arise.
How to Choose a Pet Insurance Provider
Pet Insurance Review helps pet parents compare insurance providers using verified customer reviews and real-world experiences. Our tools make it easier to evaluate providers based on claims experience, service quality, and overall satisfaction.
We have collected more than 220,000 reviews from pet parents, creating one of the largest independent databases of pet insurance feedback available.
How rankings are determined
Unexpected veterinary expenses can happen at any clinic. The providers below are ranked using verified reviews submitted by real pet parents through Pet Insurance Review. Results reflect overall satisfaction, claims experience, and value based on real world feedback. Rankings are updated regularly as new reviews are submitted.
| Rating | Provider | Total Review |
|---|---|---|
| 4.8 | Adoro | 19 |
| 4.5 | AKC | 1,801 |
| 4.4 | ASPCA | 12,228 |
| 4.9 | Embrace | 19,973 |
| 4.9 | Fetch | 5,918 |
| 4.1 | Figo | 2,868 |
| 4.4 | Hartville | 183 |
| 4.9 | Healthy Paws | 11,371 |
| 4.8 | Lemonade | 833 |
| 4.6 | ManyPets | 2,416 |
| 4.7 | MetLife | 11,234 |
| 4.8 | Nationwide | 25,705 |
| 3.9 | Pet Assure | 15 |
| 4.3 | PetPartners | 121 |
| 4.9 | Pets Best | 15,347 |
| 4.8 | Prudent Pet | 2,867 |
| 4.7 | Pumpkin | 3,545 |
| 4.6 | Spot | 11,586 |
| 4.9 | Trupanion | 55,033 |
Compare Pet Insurance Plans
You can compare coverage options from multiple providers to find a plan that fits your budget and your pet’s healthcare needs.
Getting to Know Your Veterinarian
Choosing a veterinarian is an important decision for pet parents. A strong vet relationship is built on trust, communication, and understanding your pet’s individual needs.
Experience
Ask whether the clinic has experience treating your specific type of pet, since care can vary between dogs, cats, and pocket pets.
Emergency Care Procedures
It’s helpful to understand how the clinic handles after-hours emergencies, including whether they provide emergency services or refer to nearby emergency hospitals.
Communication Preferences
Ask how the clinic communicates with pet parents, including updates, test results, and follow up questions.
Breed Specific Health Considerations
Some breeds may be more prone to certain health conditions. Early awareness can help with prevention and early treatment.
Facility Tour
If available, touring the clinic can help you and your pet feel more comfortable before the first visit.
Final Note
Pet care decisions often involve both medical and financial considerations. Having access to trusted veterinary information alongside pet insurance comparisons can help pet parents feel more confident when planning for their pet’s health and wellbeing.
Explore Topics
Reviews from Google
507 reviews
My kitty and I love Twin Peaks. She feels loved there even if it's to get her nails done the staff is always caring and forgiving in her case. Use your imagination we call her Lucifer sometimes! Not only does my kitty go there but my son's Golden does as well. We all appreciate the good care our pets get. Try them and I'm sure you will agree with my comments!
Nov 2, 2025
We just moved to AZ almost a year ago....and it's been hard finding "new" everything after so many years of living in IL and dealing with familiar people/places. But I have to say, I'm so happy with Twin Peaks Veterinary Center, happier even than I was back home. I love Dr. Miller as my dogs' new doctor. He has an incredible bedside manner and is extremely knowledgeable... and the staff at the front desk are amazing as well. They are super quick to respond to emails, any questions and are always very friendly. I'm beyond pleased!
Aug 1, 2025
I give three stars only because prior to my final experience I had some good ones. I am now going to a new vet. My 11 year old dog had a seizure at the groomer. The TP vet poopooed that it was caused by stress and suggested a $500 blood test to find the cause. Ok, my dog is older and we might find out other things that should be addressed. A week later I got a call from a tech saying that nothing showed up and just monitor her. Are you kidding me! Never any contact with the vet? I had to ask for a written report from the blood test. This dog has been a member of my family for 11 years and as we face old age I want more information, more suggestions, more follow through and better bedside manner. I have had dogs my whole life and never felt so dismissed by a vet. I certainly did not get any value for my $.
Nov 2, 2025
First time here after moving to the area. Great, welcoming staff. The Doctor specialized in skin and was very knowledgeable and informative. 10/10 would recommend. Will bring all of our animals for future visits.
Dec 16, 2025
I do not enjoy writing bad reviews, particularly when it’s a veterinarian whose personality I have liked and who I have taken my dog to since he was a puppy (about 6 years). However, the care my small terrier Finny received was so bad that I wrote a personal letter to the vet Dr. Scott Miller on October 23, 2025. I am only posting this review, over a month later, because he and his office Twin Peaks Veterinary Center could not even be bothered to respond. I asked for nothing in the letter. Everyone makes mistakes, particularly when trying to diagnose people or pets. There is no shame in offering a referral, and in fact, I asked for one early on in Finny’s treatment, but Dr. Miller continued to assure me that another doctor would not be necessary. Finny presented with a cough and had been recently boarded in another state. He was (is) up to date on all vaccines. Despite 2 NEGATIVE Valley Fever tests, Dr. Miller treated Finny with fluconazole. He insisted the tests were not useful. I questioned why I was paying for them if that was the case, but I did not receive a satisfactory response. Dr. Miller then started throwing serious medication at a problem he admitted he did not understand. If these were benign meds, then it might not have been a problem. However, my little 14-pound sweetie was on 2 serious antibiotics and fluconazole. And then steroids, and Zyrtec. The office ran 3 separate x-rays on 3 separate occasions, but Dr. Miller couldn’t seem to tell me if Finny had pneumonia. First Dr. Miller said Finny did have it, then he didn’t, and finally that maybe he never had it at all. Blood work was repeated multiple times. The cocktail of drugs given to my dog caused him to vomit for 2 weeks, every time he moved. He was in pain and was treated elsewhere with meds for his esophagus, and other meds to prevent stomach damage. It goes without saying that his liver was trashed and he had to start on liver meds. Twin Peaks Vet also did not send the actual x-rays to the new vet office, just the radiology report. Who was the radiologist? My vet bill from Twin Peaks was a whopping $1,806.73. Was this necessary? Finnegan’s pain was certainly more important than my pocketbook, but the needless tests were unfair and a heavy burden for me. As a practicing vet, it is Dr. Miller’s responsibility to keep current with medical trends. He should have been aware of the “mystery respiratory dog illness” from 2023 (renamed aCIRDC). Finnegan had all the mild symptoms, including the fact that he had been boarded prior to the coughing; monitoring, not a cocktail of dangerous drugs, was likely called for. Dr. Miller’s treatment made my little Finny worse. In all of this—my dog’s suffering, the extremely high bills, the nights of worry, the throwing up—none of it can compare to the incredible hurt I have felt that Dr. Miller or the office didn’t care enough to call—after 3 weeks—to see how Finny was. When I called the office after he had been vomiting all night, the office staff relayed the message that Dr. Miller was “finished treating him and I should see another doctor.” And while Dr. Miller had personally called in the past, now he refused to speak to me. I am deeply, deeply hurt and disappointed that my dog and I mean so little to this practice.
Nov 29, 2025
Veterinarians in Tucson, Arizona
ABC Pet Care Clinic
10185 E Old Vail Rd Suite 141, Tucson, AZ 85747, USA(520) 495-5721
ABC Pet Care Clinic
1114 S Craycroft Rd, Tucson, AZ 85711, USA(520) 745-4564
ABC Vaccination Clinic
5350 E Broadway Blvd #118, Tucson, AZ 85711, USA(520) 881-7387
Acacia Animal Hospital
4205 N Campbell Ave, Tucson, AZ 85719, USA(520) 308-4225
Acoma Animal Clinic
6781 N Thornydale Rd #207, Tucson, AZ 85741, USA(520) 441-3860
Adobe Veterinary Center
8300 E Tanque Verde Rd, Tucson, AZ 85749, USA(520) 546-8387
Ajo Veterinary Clinic
382 W Ajo Way, Tucson, AZ 85713, USA(520) 623-5728
Animal Birth Control East: Nelson Harrison DVM
1114 S Craycroft Rd, Tucson, AZ 85711, USA(520) 745-4564