Buying a horse is equal parts heart and head. The pre-purchase exam — the PPE — is how you bring the head back into it. Done well, it doesn’t tell you whether to buy; it tells you what you’d be buying, so you can decide with open eyes.
A PPE is a veterinary assessment of a horse’s current health and soundness, arranged by the buyer (with a vet who works for you, not the seller). It’s a snapshot, not a guarantee or a crystal ball. It won’t promise the horse never goes lame — it tells you the risks visible today so you can weigh them against the horse’s intended job.
A trail companion and an upper-level prospect warrant different exams. Tell your vet what you intend to do with the horse; they’ll recommend which add-ons (especially x-rays) make sense. Spending a bit more on imaging for an expensive performance prospect can save a very costly mistake.
Almost no horse ‘passes’ perfectly — every horse has findings. The skill is interpreting them in context: is this finding likely to matter for this job? Your vet will frame the risks; the decision stays yours. A clear-eyed ‘yes, with these things to manage’ is often the realistic outcome, and that’s fine.
You, the buyer — not the seller. Hire your own vet so the assessment is in your interest, and ideally one with no prior relationship to the horse.
Neither, really. A PPE reports findings; almost every horse has some. The question is whether those findings matter for your intended use — your vet helps you judge.
It depends on the horse’s price, age and job. For pricier performance prospects, imaging is often wise. For a modest trail horse, a clinical exam may suffice. Ask your vet.
Yes — a PPE is a snapshot of today, not a guarantee. It reduces risk by surfacing visible problems; it can’t predict the future.