PUBLISHER: Grand View Research | PRODUCT CODE: 2040428
PUBLISHER: Grand View Research | PRODUCT CODE: 2040428
The Asia Pacific animal health market size was estimated at USD 15.5 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach USD 37.8 billion by 2033, growing at a CAGR of 12.0% from 2026 to 2033. The market is experiencing growth driven by intensifying livestock and aquaculture production across Southeast Asia and China, surging companion animal ownership in urban APAC markets, government-driven One Health and epidemiological surveillance mandates, and the rapid emergence of AI-assisted diagnostics and the adoption of precision livestock farming.
One of the most dynamic drivers shaping the Asia Pacific animal health industry is the rapid emergence of AI-assisted diagnostics and precision livestock farming technologies. Across the region, mounting pressure from food security demands, disease outbreak frequency, and labor constraints is accelerating the transition from conventional veterinary practices toward data-driven animal health management systems.
In China, large-scale pig and poultry operations are increasingly deploying AI-powered disease surveillance tools capable of real-time behavioral monitoring, early mortality detection, and automated feed optimization. The Chinese government's broader push toward agricultural modernization, reflected in its biotech- and innovation-friendly regulatory updates, has created a conducive environment for the integration of veterinary technology at the farm level. According to published research, AI applications are being actively validated for disease pattern recognition, vaccination scheduling, and herd productivity analytics, with China's veterinary biotech startup ecosystem developing localized diagnostic platforms tailored to domestic livestock breeds.
In Australia, precision livestock farming has moved beyond pilot stages. Wearable biosensors for cattle and sheep, drone-assisted herd monitoring, and satellite-linked health-tracking systems are operational across large pastoral holdings. The country's advanced veterinary infrastructure and high digital literacy among farm operators position it as the regional benchmark for technology adoption in animal health. Across Southeast Asia, adoption remains at varying stages, but the trajectory is upward. Indonesia and Thailand, both significant contributors to regional poultry and aquaculture output, are witnessing the growing integration of IoT-based water-quality monitoring and automated disease-alert systems into commercial aquaculture operations. The incubaFORUM ASIA 2026, backed by Phibro Animal Health as a Premium-Platinum Sponsor, reflects the region's structured effort to accelerate agri-animal health innovation through industry-startup collaboration.
In India, AI adoption within animal health is gaining traction through intersecting forces: government digital agriculture initiatives, a growing veterinary biotech sector, and increasing private investment in companion and livestock health platforms. Biotech industry participants have formally acknowledged AI's expanding role in bridging human and animal nutrition research, further validating cross-sector technology convergence. Moreover, multinational animal health companies operating across APAC, including Zoetis, Boehringer Ingelheim, and Elanco, are channeling investments into digital health divisions and forming regional partnerships to localize technology deployment. The convergence of farm-level data infrastructure, regulatory modernization, and rising producer awareness across key APAC markets positions AI-assisted diagnostics and precision farming as a structurally significant, long-duration growth driver for the regional animal health sector.
Asia Pacific Animal Health Market Report Segmentation
This report forecasts revenue growth at the regional and country levels and provides an analysis of the latest industry trends in each of the sub-segments from 2021 to 2033. For this study, Grand View Research has segmented the Asia Pacific animal health market report based on product, animal, distribution channel, and country: