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Veterinary device security monitoring market to hit $2.32 billion by 2030

4 hours ago
By AI, Created 13:59 UTC, Jul 08, 2026, AGP -

The veterinary device security monitoring market is moving into a high-growth phase as connected animal-health devices face rising cyber risk, stricter data-security demands and faster adoption of IoT tools. The Business Research Company forecasts the market will climb from $1.29 billion in 2025 to $2.32 billion by 2030, with North America leading and Asia Pacific set to grow fastest.

Why it matters: - Connected veterinary devices increasingly carry sensitive animal-health data and support diagnosis and treatment. - Security failures can disrupt care, compromise data integrity and expose veterinary systems to unauthorized access. - Rising pet ownership, more animal disease monitoring and broader cyber threats are expanding demand for protection tools.

What happened: - The Business Research Company released its Veterinary Device Security Monitoring Global Market Report 2026, covering market size, trends and forecasts for 2026-2035. - The report estimates the market will rise from $1.29 billion in 2025 to $1.45 billion in 2026, a 12.3% CAGR. - The market is forecast to reach $2.32 billion by 2030, implying a 12.5% CAGR over the period. - North America held the largest market share in 2025. - Asia Pacific is expected to be the fastest-growing region during the forecast period.

The details: - Veterinary device security monitoring means continuous tracking, analysis and protection of connected veterinary medical devices and systems against cyber risks, unauthorized access and data breaches. - The market’s recent growth has been driven by limited cybersecurity maturity in veterinary device ecosystems, fragmented device integration, slow adoption of IoT-based monitoring, weak standardized security protocols and mostly manual, reactive security practices. - Future growth is tied to the spread of connected veterinary IoT ecosystems, more complex cyber threats, wider use of cloud-based veterinary platforms, stricter data-protection enforcement and higher investment in AI-powered predictive monitoring. - Emerging trends include zero-trust device authentication, real-time anomaly detection, edge-based security analytics, interoperable device identity management and automated compliance monitoring. - The report says pet adoption is helping drive demand because more households are using connected wearables and implants to monitor pet health. - In March 2025, the American Pet Products Association reported that 94 million U.S. households owned at least one pet, up from 82 million in 2023. - Animal disease prevalence is also lifting demand for secure monitoring as more connected devices are used for early detection and treatment support. - The Council on Foreign Relations estimated in February 2023 that about 60% of known infectious diseases and up to 75% of emerging infectious diseases originate from zoonotic sources. - Cybersecurity threats are another major driver as veterinary systems adopt electronic health records and IoT-enabled monitoring devices. - The Australian Cyber Security Centre reported in November 2024 that the Australian Cybersecurity Hotline received more than 36,700 calls during the 2023-24 financial year and handled more than 1,100 cybersecurity incidents. - The report includes market analysis across Asia-Pacific, South East Asia, Western Europe, Eastern Europe, North America, South America and the Middle East and Africa. - The 2026 report package also includes market attractiveness scoring, TAM analysis, company scoring matrices, Excel forecasting dashboards, market hotspot infographics and updated graphics and tables. - Download a free sample of the report. - View the full market report.

Between the lines: - The forecast suggests veterinary cybersecurity is shifting from a niche technical concern to a broader infrastructure market tied to animal-health digitization. - The strongest demand drivers are not only cyberattacks, but also the expansion of connected care, cloud platforms and compliance pressure. - Regional growth patterns point to a mature North American base and faster adoption in Asia Pacific, where connected veterinary systems may still have more room to scale.

What's next: - Market growth will likely track adoption of connected veterinary IoT devices, cloud-based platforms and AI-assisted monitoring tools. - Vendors that can combine real-time detection with compliance automation and interoperable device identity management may gain an edge. - The report expects the security stack for veterinary care to become more automated as cyber risks and regulatory expectations rise.

The bottom line: - Veterinary device security monitoring is moving from early adoption to scale, with strong growth expected through 2030 as pet care, connected devices and cybersecurity concerns converge.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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