Temperature-Reading Microchips in Horses
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Temperature-Reading Microchips in Horses: What They Can and Cannot Do
By Dr Duncan Houston
Taking a horse’s temperature matters, but it is not always straightforward. Some horses resent rectal thermometers, some handlers are understandably cautious around the hind end, and in a busy yard or outbreak situation, repeated temperature checks can quickly become time-consuming. Those practical problems are exactly why temperature-sensing microchips have attracted so much interest in equine practice. (Ker)
These chips are promising, but they should be understood clearly. They are not a magical replacement for every temperature check, and they do not give the same measurement as a rectal thermometer. What they offer is a fast, lower-stress way to monitor temperature trends at the implantation site, which can be especially useful for screening and repeated checks. (Ker)
This article explains how temperature-reading microchips work, where they help most, what their limits are, and why they may become increasingly useful in equine health monitoring.
Quick Answer
Temperature-sensing microchips can provide fast, convenient temperature readings in horses and are useful for repeated screening, trend monitoring, and outbreak management. They measure temperature at the chip site rather than a true rectal temperature, so they are best viewed as a practical monitoring tool, not a total replacement for full clinical assessment when a horse is unwell. (Ker)
Quick Decision Guide
Horse needs frequent routine temperature checks, such as during an outbreak, travel, or intensive monitoring → temperature microchips may be very useful. (Ker)
Horse is difficult or unsafe to temperature rectally → a microchip-based system may reduce stress and handling risk. (Ker)
Horse has an abnormal scan temperature plus dullness, cough, nasal discharge, colic signs, or poor appetite → treat the horse as potentially unwell and pursue full veterinary assessment. (Ker)
Horse appears sick but chip temperature seems normal → do not rely on the chip alone. Clinical signs still matter. This is an inference based on the fact that the chip measures temperature at the implantation site rather than standard rectal temperature. (Merck Animal Health USA)
Why Rectal Temperature Checks Are Not Always Easy
Rectal temperature remains a standard clinical measurement, but that does not mean it is always convenient. It requires time, safe handling, a working thermometer, and reasonably good technique. In the real world, those things are not always present, especially when multiple horses need to be checked quickly. (Ker)
This becomes even more relevant during disease surveillance, transport monitoring, competition settings, or any situation where horses may need repeated temperature checks over days rather than once in a while. In those settings, a quicker screening method is genuinely useful. (Ker)
What This Usually Turns Out To Be
When owners are interested in temperature-reading microchips, the real situation is usually one of these:
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the horse is hard to temperature safely
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the yard wants faster routine screening
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there is concern about infectious disease monitoring
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the horse is travelling, competing, or being monitored closely
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the owner wants easier trend tracking rather than one-off readings
The mistake I see most often is assuming that easier monitoring means the chip tells you everything you need to know.
It does not.
It gives useful temperature information. It does not replace clinical judgement.
What Are Temperature-Reading Microchips?
These are identification microchips with an integrated temperature sensor. Commercial products such as Bio-Thermo are already marketed for horses, and the temperature can be read using compatible scanners. Merck Animal Health describes them as identification chips with a built-in biosensor that measures temperature at the implantation site. (Merck Animal Health USA)
Research has also evaluated percutaneous thermal sensing microchips, or PTSMs, in horses. In one published study, foals were implanted with temperature-sensitive microchips in the neckline, and the chips were read by an antenna placed near the drinking trough for no-contact monitoring. (PubMed)
So this is not just a theory floating around the horse world. There is both commercial deployment and peer-reviewed research behind the concept. (PubMed)
Where Are They Placed?
Temperature microchips are typically implanted in the neck region, similar to standard identification microchips used in horses. Commercial equine guidance and published research both describe neck or neckline placement rather than some entirely new or unusual site. (PubMed)
That part matters because it explains one of the biggest limitations: the chip is measuring temperature where it sits, not a rectal core temperature.
Are They More Accurate Than Rectal Thermometers?
This needs careful wording.
Temperature-sensing microchips can produce stable, rapid, and practical readings, and some sources describe them as faster and in some settings more accurate than traditional temperature taking. However, what they are directly measuring is temperature at the implantation site, not the exact same thing as a rectal temperature. (Ker)
That means the most useful way to think about them is not “better than rectal in every circumstance,” but “very useful for consistent monitoring and trend detection.” The trend is often what matters first anyway, especially when screening many horses for fever or monitoring a known patient over time. This is an inference from the sources describing implantation-site measurement and repeated monitoring use cases. (PubMed)
Why This Technology Is So Useful in Outbreaks and Screening
This is probably where the technology is strongest.
If a yard is monitoring for infectious disease, repeated temperature checks are essential. A method that allows quick scanning rather than repeated rectal handling can save time, reduce stress, and improve compliance. The technology has specifically been discussed for early disease detection and outbreak-style monitoring. (Equus Magazine)
This also helps in situations where subtle fever detection matters before more obvious signs appear. Repeated scanning and temperature logging are much more practical when the system is fast enough that people will actually use it consistently. (Ker)
What Vets Care About Most
The key questions are:
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what does this horse’s normal temperature pattern look like
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is the reading rising over time
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does the reading match the horse’s clinical picture
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is the system being used for screening or diagnosis
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is the chip being read with the correct scanner or compatible software
What matters most is not just the number. It is the context.
A temperature trend in a bright, normal horse means one thing. A rising temperature trend in a quiet horse with nasal discharge or poor appetite means something very different.
What These Chips Can Help With
Temperature-reading microchips may be especially helpful for:
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repeated screening during infectious disease concern
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monitoring groups of horses efficiently
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horses that resent rectal temperature checks
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reducing handler risk in reactive horses
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maintaining temperature logs over time
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travel and event monitoring where fast checks are useful
Commercial equine systems already emphasize rapid scanning, historical temperature records, and compatibility with app-based logging. (EquiTrace)
What They Cannot Do
This is the important reality check.
They do not replace a proper veterinary examination.
They do not diagnose the reason for a fever.
They do not tell you whether the horse has colic, pleuropneumonia, strangles, EHV, pain, or inflammatory disease.
They also do not remove the need to assess the whole horse. If a horse looks unwell, a normal chip reading should not be used as a free pass to ignore other signs. That is a clinical inference from the fact that the chips are monitoring one parameter at one body site, not performing full diagnostics. (PubMed)
Severity Framework
| Severity | What It Looks Like | What It May Mean | What To Do |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low concern | Normal scan temperature, horse bright and eating, no abnormal signs | No obvious fever pattern at present | Continue normal monitoring |
| Moderate concern | Mild rise in chip temperature or trending upward, horse otherwise mostly normal | Early fever or transient change possible | Recheck, monitor closely, watch for other signs |
| High concern | Elevated scan temperature plus dullness, reduced appetite, cough, discharge, or stiffness | Illness is possible and needs assessment | Contact your vet and escalate monitoring |
| Urgent concern | High temperature trend plus marked depression, colic signs, breathing issues, neurological signs, or rapid deterioration | Significant disease may be present | Seek urgent veterinary care immediately |
Common Mistakes Owners Make
Common mistakes include:
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treating chip temperature as the whole diagnosis
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ignoring the horse because the scan seems normal
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failing to establish the horse’s normal baseline
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using a technology feature without following clinical signs
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assuming every abnormal reading means severe disease
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relying on convenience instead of judgement
One of the biggest mistakes is forgetting that monitoring tools are there to support decision-making, not replace it.
What Should You Do Right Now?
If you are considering a temperature microchip for your horse:
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Decide whether your main goal is easier routine screening, outbreak monitoring, or individual health tracking
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Make sure the chip and scanner system are actually compatible
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Establish your horse’s normal temperature pattern over time
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Use trends, not just single readings
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Always interpret the number alongside appetite, demeanor, nasal signs, breathing, movement, and manure output
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Escalate quickly if the horse appears unwell, regardless of convenience tech
Simple checkpoint:
easy scanning + good trend data + sensible interpretation → very useful tool
easy scanning + blind trust in the number → bad medicine
When Is This an Emergency?
Seek urgent veterinary attention if your horse has:
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fever plus depression or weakness
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coughing with breathing difficulty
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neurological signs
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colic signs
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refusal to eat or drink
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sudden deterioration
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severe lameness or distress regardless of the temperature reading
A temperature chip can help flag a problem, but the horse still gets the final vote.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do temperature microchips replace rectal thermometers in horses?
Not completely. They are very useful for screening and trend monitoring, but they measure temperature at the implantation site rather than standard rectal temperature. (PubMed)
Are temperature-reading horse microchips already available?
Yes. Commercial equine products such as Bio-Thermo microchips are already marketed, and equine software platforms exist that log these readings. (Merck Animal Health USA)
Can they help during a disease outbreak?
Yes. This is one of their most useful applications because they allow quick repeated screening and easier temperature tracking across groups of horses. (Ker)
Do they work with phones?
App-based logging and software integration already exist in some systems, though the exact setup depends on the chip and scanner ecosystem being used. (EquiTrace)
Are they only for identification?
No. Some microchips combine identification with temperature sensing, so they can function as both an ID tool and a monitoring tool. (Merck Animal Health USA)
Final Thoughts
Temperature-reading microchips are a genuinely useful development in horse health monitoring.
Their biggest strength is not that they magically know everything. It is that they make repeated temperature checks easier, faster, and more practical. That matters in real life, because the best monitoring system is often the one people will actually use consistently.
Used well, these chips can improve screening, trend tracking, and outbreak management. Used badly, they can create false reassurance if owners forget to look at the rest of the horse.
So the real value is not just the chip. It is the combination of good technology and good judgement.
If you want help deciding whether temperature-monitoring microchips make sense for your horse, travel routine, or yard setup, ASK A VET™ can help you think through the next step clearly and practically.