Vaccination schedules, strategic deworming, dental care, annual wellness exams, and biosecurity protocols — the foundational health calendar every horse owner should know, built on AAEP guidelines and established equine veterinary science.
The diseases, dental problems, and parasite burdens that cost the most to treat are overwhelmingly the ones that appropriate preventive care prevents or catches early. A consistent annual wellness program — vaccinations on schedule, targeted deworming based on fecal egg counts, biannual dental exams, and an annual veterinary examination — is the foundation of a long, healthy, productive equine career.
The guides below follow AAEP (American Association of Equine Practitioners) guidelines and current evidence-based veterinary practice. Each covers what the protocol is, why it matters, how it works, and the specific questions worth asking your veterinarian.
| Topic | Key Point | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Core Vaccines | EEE/WEE, Tetanus, West Nile, Rabies — annually for all horses | Schedule with your vet in early spring before mosquito season |
| Risk-Based Vaccines | Influenza, EHV, Strangles — based on exposure and event schedule | Every 3–6 months for performance and show horses |
| Fecal Egg Count | Identifies which horses need deworming and what products are still effective | Spring and fall; more frequently for high shedders |
| Bot Fly Treatment | Ivermectin or moxidectin after first killing frost — targets full season's larvae | Late fall or early winter; all horses regardless of FEC status |
| Dental Exam | Adult horses annually; under 5 or over 20 every 6 months | Schedule with annual wellness exam or separately |
| Annual Wellness Exam | Full physical, BCS, bloodwork discussion, vaccination and deworming review | Schedule same time each year; spring is common |
| ACTH Testing | Screen for Cushing's (PPID) — recommended from age 10+ | Spring for clearest results; fall if symptoms present |
| Coggins (EIA Test) | Required for travel and most competitions; 6 or 12 month validity varies by state | Annual; time with spring vet visit |
HorseVeterinarian.AI is a free educational resource from Bridle & Bit Magazine — Arizona's premier equestrian publication since 1978. The best preventive care happens in partnership with a licensed equine veterinarian who knows your horse.
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