Most veterinary practices assume HIPAA governs their data handling. It doesn't. HIPAA applies to human healthcare providers and their business associates—veterinary medicine falls outside its scope. However, this doesn't mean pet owner data is unregulated.
State consumer privacy laws fill the gap. The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) and its successor CPRA apply to businesses meeting any of these thresholds: $25 million+ annual revenue, buying/selling personal information of 100,000+ California residents annually, or deriving 50%+ of revenue from selling personal information.
Many multi-location veterinary practices or those with high-volume online booking systems meet these thresholds without realizing it. Pet owner names, email addresses, phone numbers, and even IP addresses collected through website analytics constitute personal information under CCPA.
Other states with active privacy laws include Virginia (VCDPA), Colorado (CPA), Connecticut (CTDPA), and Utah (UCPA). Each has different triggers and requirements. A veterinary practice serving pet owners across state lines—common for specialty or emergency practices—may face multiple overlapping obligations.
This is educational content, not legal advice. Verify current requirements with a privacy attorney licensed in your state.
The practical implication for SEO: every tracking tool, form submission, and cookie on your website potentially triggers disclosure requirements. Understanding which laws apply determines your minimum compliance baseline.