==================================================================

                          UNITED STATES
               SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                     Washington, D.C. 20549

                           Form 10-KSB
(Mark One)

[X]  ANNUAL REPORT UNDER SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES
     EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

             For the fiscal year ended March 31, 2003

                                OR

[ ]  TRANSITION REPORT UNDER SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
     SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

     For the transition period from ___________ to ___________

                Commission file number 000-28827

                       PETMED EXPRESS, INC.
          ----------------------------------------------
          (Name of small business issuer in its charter)

                FLORIDA                           65-0680967
    ---------------------------------        -------------------
      (State or other jurisdiction              (IRS Employer
    of incorporation or organization)        Identification No.)

    1441 S.W. 29th Avenue, Pompano Beach, Florida       33069
    ---------------------------------------------     ----------
      (Address of principal executive offices)        (Zip Code)

            Issuer's telephone number: (954) 979-5995

 Securities registered under Section 12(b) of the Exchange Act:
                              None

 Securities registered under Section 12(g) of the Exchange Act:
             Common Stock, par value $.001 per share

Check  whether  the issuer (1) filed all reports required  to  be
filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Exchange Act during the  past
12  months  (or  for such shorter period that the registrant  was
required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to  such
filing requirements for the past 90 days.  Yes [X] No [  ]

Check  if there is no disclosure of delinquent filers in response
to  Item 405 of Regulation S-B is not contained in this form, and
no  disclosure  will  be contained, to the best  of  registrant's
knowledge,   in   definitive  proxy  or  information   statements
incorporated by reference to Part III of this Form 10-KSB or  any
amendment to this Form 10-KSB.  [   ]

State   issuer's  revenues  for  its  most  recent  fiscal  year.
$54,975,000 for the 12 months ended March 31, 2003.

State  the  aggregate market value of the voting  and  non-voting
common equity held by non-affiliates computed by reference to the
price at which the common equity was sold, or the average bid and
asked  price of such common equity, as of a specific date  within
the  past 60 days.  The aggregate market value of the voting  and
non-voting  common  equity  held by  non-affiliates  computed  by
reference  to  the  price  at which common  equity  was  sold  is
$29,903,000 at June 13, 2003.

State the number of shares outstanding of each of the issuer's
classes of common equity, as of the latest practicable date.  As
of June 13, 2003, 19,105,044 shares of common stock are issued
and outstanding.

               DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE

If the following documents are incorporated by reference, briefly
describe them and identify the part of the Form 10-KSB into which
the  document is incorporated: (1) any annual report to  security
holders;  (2)  any proxy or information statement;  and  (3)  any
prospectus filed pursuant to Rule 424(b) or (c) of the Securities
Act  of 1933 ("Securities Act").  The listed documents should  be
clearly described for identification purposes.

Transitional Small Business Disclosure Format (check one):
Yes [ ]     No [X]




                       PETMED EXPRESS, INC.
                           Form 10-KSB
                              INDEX


PART I..........................................................  3
 Item 1.  Description of Business...............................  3
 Item 2.  Description of Property............................... 11
 Item 3.  Legal Proceedings..................................... 11
 Item 4.  Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders... 12
PART II......................................................... 13
 Item 5.  Market for Common Equity and Related Stockholder
          Matters............................................... 13
 Item 6.  Management's Discussion and Analysis or Plan of
          Operation............................................. 15
 Item 7.  Financial Statements.................................. 18
 Item 8.  Changes In and Disagreements with Accountants on
          Accounting and Financial Disclosure................... 18
PART III........................................................ 19
 Item 9.  Directors, Executive Officers, Promoters and
          Control Persons....................................... 19
 Item 10. Executive Compensation................................ 21
 Item 11. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners
          and Management........................................ 24
 Item 12. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions........ 25
 Item 13. Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules, and
          Reports on Form 8-K................................... 26
 Item 14. Controls and Procedures............................... 27
SIGNATURES...................................................... 28
CERTIFICATIONS.................................................. 29















                                1




            CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING
                   STATEMENTS AND RISK FACTORS

  This  discussion in this annual report regarding PetMed Express
and   our   business  and  operations  contains  "forward-looking
statements." These forward-looking statements use words  such  as
"believes,"   "intends,"  "expects,"  "may,"  "will,"   "should,"
"plan,"  "projected," "contemplates," "anticipates,"  or  similar
statements.  These statements are based on our beliefs,  as  well
as  assumptions  we  have used based upon  information  currently
available  to us.  Because these statements reflect  our  current
views  concerning future events, these statements involve  risks,
uncertainties and assumptions.  Actual future results may  differ
significantly  from the results discussed in the  forward-looking
statements.    A reader, whether investing in our common stock or
not,  should  not  place undue reliance on these  forward-looking
statements,  which  apply  only as of the  date  of  this  annual
report.

  When  used  in  this  annual report  on  Form  10-KSB,  "PetMed
Express,"  "1-800-PetMeds,"  "PetMed,"  "1-888-PetMeds,"  "PetMed
Express.com,"  "the Company,"  "we," "our," and  "us"  refers  to
PetMed Express, Inc. and our subsidiaries.




























                                2



                              PART I

Item 1.  Description of Business.

General
-------

  Petmed Express, Inc. and subsidiaries, d/b/a 1-800-PetMeds,  is
a   leading   nationwide  pet  pharmacy.   The  Company   markets
prescription  and  non-prescription pet  medications  along  with
health  and nutritional supplements for dogs and cats  direct  to
the   consumer.   The  Company  offers  consumers  an  attractive
alternative   for   obtaining  pet  medications   in   terms   of
convenience, price, and speed of delivery.

  The  Company  markets its products through national television,
on-line  and  direct  mail advertising campaigns,  which  aim  to
increase  the  recognition  of  the "1-800-PetMeds"  brand  name,
increase traffic on its web site at www.1800PetMeds.com,  acquire
new  customers, and maximize repeat purchases.  Our  fiscal  year
end  is  March 31, and our executive offices are located at  1441
S.W.  29th Avenue, Pompano Beach, Florida 33069, telephone number
is  954-979-5995.  The information contained on the Company's web
site is not part of our annual report.

Our Products
------------

  We  offer  a  broad selection of products for  dogs  and  cats.
These  products  include a majority of the well-known  brands  of
medication,  such  as  Frontline[R], Advantage[R],  Heartgard[R],
Sentinel[R],   Interceptor[R],  Program[R],  Revolution[R],   and
Rimadyl[R].  Generally, our prices are discounted up to 25%, from
the prices for medications charged by veterinarians.

  We  research new products, and regularly select new products or
the  latest generation of existing products to become part of our
product  selection.   In  addition, we also  refine  our  current
products to respond to changing consumer-purchasing habits.   Our
web  site  is  designed  to  give us the  flexibility  to  change
featured  products  or  promotions.  Our  product  line  provides
customers  with  a  wide variety of selections  across  the  most
popular  health  categories  for  dogs  and  cats.   Our  current
products include:

  Prescription  Medications:  Heartworm medications, antibiotics,
  anti-inflammatory  medications  and  medications  for   chronic
  diseases, such as arthritis and thyroid conditions, as well  as
  several generic substitutes;

  Non-Prescription  Medications:  A majority  of  the  well-known
  flea  and  tick  control products; and health  and  nutritional
  supplements.

Sales
-----

  The  following table provides a breakdown of the percentage  of
our total sales, by each category during the indicated periods:




                                           Fiscal Year
                                 --------------------------------
                                 March 31, 2003    March 31, 2002
                                 --------------    --------------
                                             
Prescription medications               29%               34%
Non-prescription medications           64%               58%
Shipping and handling charges
  and other                             7%                8%
                                 --------------    --------------
Total                                 100%              100%
                                 ==============    ==============



  During  March 2001, the Company discontinued the sales  of  all
accessories.  Additionally, the Company discontinued  the  PetMed
Express,  Inc. membership plan.  It was determined by  management
to  concentrate  sales  efforts  on  the  prescription  and  non-
prescription  pet medications and the health and nutritional  pet
supplements.

  We  offer  our  products  through three  main  sales  channels,
including  the  PetMed  Express catalog and  postcards,  customer
service  representatives and the Internet, through our web  site.
We  have  designed  both our catalog and web site  to  provide  a
convenient,  cost-effective and informative  shopping  experience
that  encourages consumers to purchase products important  for  a
pet's health and quality of life.  We believe that these multiple
channels  allow us to increase the visibility of our  brand  name
and  provide  customers with increased shopping  flexibility  and
service.

The PetMed Express Catalog

  The  PetMed  Express  catalog  is  a  full-color  catalog  that
features approximately 300 products.  The catalog is produced  by
a   combination  of  in-house  writers,  production  artists  and
independent  contractors.   We mail  catalogs  and  postcards  in
response  to requests generated from our advertising  and  direct
mail campaigns.


                                3



Contact Center

  We  currently  employ 100 customer service  representatives  in
our contact center.  Our customer service representatives receive
and  process  inbound  customer calls,  facilitate  our  outbound
campaigns  around maximizing customers' reorders on a  consistent
basis, facilitate our live web chat and process customer e-mails.
Our  telephone system is equipped with certain features including
pop-up  screens and call blending capabilities that give  us  the
ability    to   efficiently   utilize   our   customer    service
representatives'  time, providing quality  customer  service  and
support.   Our  customer service representatives receive  a  base
salary  and are rewarded with commissions for achieving  targeted
sales.

Our Web Site

  We  seek  to  combine  our  product selection  and  pet  health
information with the shopping ease of the Internet to  deliver  a
convenient and personalized shopping experience.  We believe that
our web site offers health and nutritional product selections for
dogs  and  cats,  supported  by  relevant  editorial  and  easily
obtainable  or retrievable resource information.  From  our  home
page,  customers can search our web site for products and  access
resources  on  a  variety  of  information  on  cats  and   dogs.
Customers can shop at our web site by category, product  line  or
individual  product.   We  attracted  approximately  3.8  million
visitors to our website over the past 12 months (June 2002 to May
2003), of which 12% of those visitors resulted in a sale, and our
website  generated  44%  of our total sales  for  the  same  time
period.

Our Customers
-------------

  As  of  May  31,  2003,  approximately 830,000  customers  have
purchased from us within the last eighteen months.  During fiscal
2003,  we  attracted  approximately 414,000 new  customers.   Our
customers  are  located throughout the United  States,  with  the
largest   concentration  of  customers  residing  in  California,
Florida, Texas, New York, Georgia, Virginia and New Jersey.   The
average retail purchase was approximately $71.

  While  our primary focus has been on retail customers, we  have
also  sold  various non-prescription medications wholesale  to  a
variety  of  businesses,  including  pet  stores,  groomers   and
traditional  brick and mortar stores in the United  States.   For
the  fiscal year ended March 31, 2003, the majority of our  sales
were made to retail customers with less than 1% of our sales made
to   wholesale  customers.   Our  focus  remains  on  the  retail
customers,  and we anticipate that the percentage  of  our  total
sales  attributable to wholesale sales will continue to  decrease
in the future.

Marketing
---------

  The   goal  of  our  marketing  strategy  is  to  build   brand
recognition, increase customer traffic, add new customers,  build
strong   customer   loyalty,  maximize   reorders   and   develop
incremental   revenue  opportunities.   We  have  an   integrated
marketing  campaign that includes television advertising,  direct
mailing and e-mailing and online marketing.

Television Advertising

  Our  television advertising is designed to build brand  equity,
create awareness, and generate initial purchases of products  via
phone, mail, fax and the Internet.  We have used 30 and 15 second
television commercials to attract new customer orders, with  this
tagline "your pets same exact medications delivered to your home,
saving you time and money".  Our television commercials typically
focus  on  our ability to rapidly deliver to customers  the  same
medications offered by veterinarians, but at reduced prices.   We
generally  purchase  advertising on national  cable  channels  to
target  our  key demographic groups.  We believe that  television
advertising   is  particularly  effective  and  instrumental   in
building brand awareness.

Direct Mailing and E-mailing

  We  use direct mailing and e-mailing, for our customers with e-
mail  accounts, to advertise our products to selected  groups  of
customers.  We utilize potential customers from the responses  to
our television advertising and our customer database to encourage
and remind our customers to reorder.

Online Marketing

  We   supplement   our  traditional  advertising   with   online
advertising  and  marketing  efforts.   We  are  members  of  the
LinkShare  Network, which is an affiliate program  with  merchant
clients  and  affiliate web sites.  This network is  designed  to
develop and build a long-term, branded affiliate program in order
to increase online sales and establish an Internet presence.  The
LinkShare Network enables us to establish link arrangements  with
other web sites, as well as portals and search engines.  We  also
make  our  brand  available to internet consumers  by  publishing
targeted  keywords and achieving prominent placement on  the  top
search  engines  and  search engine networks,  including  Google,
Microsoft Network, Yahoo, and Overture.



                                4


Operations
----------

Purchasing

  We  purchase our products from a variety of sources,  including
certain  manufacturers, domestic distributors,  and  wholesalers.
We  have multiple suppliers for each of our products.  We  source
prescription and non-prescription medications from a  variety  of
national  distributors in order to obtain the  lowest  cost.   We
purchase  the majority of our health and nutritional  supplements
directly  from  manufacturers.  See Risk Factors.  Having  strong
relationships   with  product  manufacturers  will   ensure   the
availability  of  adequate  volume of  products  ordered  by  our
customers,  and  enable  us to provide more  and  better  product
information.    Historically,   substantially   all   the   major
manufacturers  of  prescription and non-prescription  medications
have   declined  to  sell  these  products  to  direct  marketing
companies, including us.  As part of our growth strategy, we will
seek  to develop direct relationships with leading pharmaceutical
manufacturers   of  the  more  popular  prescription   and   non-
prescription medications.

Order Processing

  The  Company  provides its customers with  toll-free  telephone
access  to its customer service representatives.  Our call center
generally  operates  from  8:00 AM to  11:00  PM  Monday  through
Thursday,  8:00 AM to 9:00 PM on Friday, 9:00 AM to  6:00  PM  on
Saturday,  and  10:00 AM to 5:00 PM on Sunday,  Eastern  Standard
Time.   The  process  of  customers purchasing  products  through
PetMed Express consists of a few simple steps.  A customer  first
places  a  call to the PetMed Express toll free phone  number  or
visits  our  web site.  The following information  is  needed  to
process    prescription   orders:   general   pet    information,
prescription, and the veterinarian's name and phone number.  This
information  is  entered  into our  computer  system.   Then  our
pharmacists  and  pharmacy technicians verify all  prescriptions.
The order process system checks for prescription verification for
medication orders and a valid payment method for all orders.   An
invoice is generated and printed in our fulfillment center, where
items  are  picked for shipping.  The customer's  order  is  then
selected  from the Company's inventory and shipped  via  priority
mail   or  United  Parcel  Service.   Our  customers  enjoy   the
convenience of rapid home delivery, with approximately 69% of all
orders  are shipped within 24 hours via priority mail  or  United
Parcel  Service.  Our web site allows customers to easily  browse
and  purchase substantially all of our products and  services  on
line.   Our site is designed to be fast, secure and easy  to  use
with   order  and  shipping  confirmations,  with  on-line  order
tracking capabilities.

Warehousing and Shipping

  We  inventory  our products and fill all customer  orders  from
our  32,000  square foot facility in Pompano Beach, Florida.   We
have an in-house fulfillment and distribution operation, which is
used  to  manage  the  entire supply chain,  beginning  with  the
placement of the order, continuing through order processing,  and
then fulfillment and shipment of the product to the customer.  We
offer a variety of shipping options, including next day delivery.
We  ship  to  anywhere in the United States served by the  United
Parcel  Service  or  the United States Postal Service.   Priority
orders are expedited in our fulfillment process.  Our goal is  to
ship  the products the same day that the order is received.   For
prescription  medications,  our  goal  is  to  ship  the  product
immediately after the prescription has been authorized.

Customer Service and Support

  We  believe  that a high level of customer service and  support
is  critical  in  retaining  and  expanding  our  customer  base.
Customer  service representatives participate in ongoing training
programs  under  the supervision of our training manager.   These
training  sessions include a variety of topics  such  as  product
knowledge,  computer  usage,  customer  service  tips   and   the
relationship  between  PetMed  Express  and  veterinarians.   Our
customer  service  representatives respond to customer's  e-mails
and  calls that are related to order status, prices and shipping.
Our  customer  service representatives also respond to  customers
through  our  newly implemented live web chat.  If  our  customer
service  representatives are unable to respond  to  a  customer's
inquiry  at the time of the call, we strive to provide an  answer
within 24 hours.  We believe our customer service representatives
are   a   valuable   source   of  feedback   regarding   customer
satisfaction.    Our   customer  returns  and   credits   average
approximately 1.6% of total sales.

Technology
----------

  PetMed  Express utilizes the latest integrated technologies  in
call    center,   e-commerce,   order   entry,   and    inventory
control/fulfillment   operations.    The   systems   are   custom
configured  by  the  Company to optimize our  computer  telephone
integration and mail order processing.  The system is designed to
maintain a large database of specialized information and  process
a  large  volume  of  orders efficiently  and  effectively.   Our
systems  provide  our agents with real time product  availability
information  and  updated  customer information  to  enhance  our
customer  service.  We also have an integrated direct  connection
for  processing credit cards to ensure that a valid  credit  card
number and authorization have been received at the same time  our
agents  are  on  the phone with the customers.   Our  information
systems  provide our agents records of all prior contact  with  a
customer, including the customer's address, phone number,  e-mail
address,  fax  number, prescription information,  order  history,
payment history and notes.


                                5



Competition
-----------

  The  pet  medications  and  health and nutritional  supplements
market is competitive and highly fragmented.  Our competitors can
be  divided  into several groups including: veterinarians,  other
mail-order   suppliers  of  pet  medications   and   health   and
nutritional supplements, and web or online stores that specialize
in  pet medications and health and nutritional supplements.   The
Company  believes  that  the following are principal  competitive
factors in our market:

     *     Product  selection  and  availability,  including  the
           availability  of  prescription  and   non-prescription
           medications;

     *     Brand recognition;

     *     Reliability and speed of delivery;

     *     Personalized service and convenience;

     *     Price; and

     *     Quality of web site content.

  We  compete with veterinarians in the sale of prescription  and
non-prescription  pet  medications  and  health  and  nutritional
supplements.   Many  pet  owners may prefer  the  convenience  of
purchasing   the  pet  medications  or  health  and   nutritional
supplements  at  the time of the veterinarian visit,  or  may  be
hesitant  to  offend their veterinarian, by not purchasing  these
products from the veterinarian.  In order to effectively  compete
with  veterinarians, we must continue to educate pet owners about
the service, convenience and savings offered by PetMed Express.

  We  also compete with brick and mortar and online retailers  of
non-prescription   medications   and   health   and   nutritional
supplements.   Many  of these competitors have  longer  operating
histories,  larger  customer or user bases,  a  more  established
online  presence,  greater  brand recognition  and  significantly
greater  financial,  marketing and other resources  than  we  do.
Many  of  these  current  and potential  competitors  can  devote
substantially more resources to web site and systems  development
than we can.

  The   pet   medication   market  size  is   estimated   to   be
approximately $3 billion, with veterinarians having the  majority
of the market share.  The cat and dog population is approximately
141  million, with approximately 62% of all households  owning  a
pet.

  The   Company  believes  that  the  following  are   the   main
competitive  strengths which differentiate  1-800-PetMeds's  from
the competition:

     *     Experienced management team;

     *     Consumer benefit structure of savings and convenience;

     *     Licensed pharmacy to conduct business in 49 states;

     *     Operating / technology infrastructure in place;

     *     Multiple sources of supply for pet medications; and

     *     Quality customer service support.

Intellectual Property
---------------------

  We  conduct  our business under the trade name "1-800-PetMeds".
We believe this name, which is also a toll-free phone number, has
added  significant  value  and is  an  important  factor  in  the
marketing  of our products.  We have also obtained the  right  to
the  Internet addresses www.1800PetMeds.com, www.1888PetMeds.com,
www.petmedexpress.com,  along  with  www.petmeds.com.    As  with
phone  numbers,  we do not have and cannot acquire  any  property
rights  in  an Internet address.  We do not expect  to  lose  the
ability to use the Internet addresses; however, there can  be  no
assurance in this regard and the loss of these addresses may have
a  material adverse effect on our financial position and  results
of  operations.  We hold  the trade name "PetMed Express[R]"  and
"1-888-PetMeds[R]", which are our registered trademarks.

Government Regulation
---------------------

  Dispensing  prescription medicines is  governed  at  the  state
level  by  the board of pharmacy, or similar regulatory agencies,
of  each state where prescription medications are dispensed.   We
are  subject  to  regulation by the  State  of  Florida  and,  in
particular,  are licensed by the Florida Board of Pharmacy.   Our
license  is valid until February 28, 2004.  We are also  licensed
and/or  regulated  by 48 other state pharmacy  boards  and  other
regulatory authorities including, but not necessarily limited to,
the  Food  and Drug Administration ("FDA") and the United  States
Environmental Protection Agency ("EPA").  As a licensed  pharmacy
in  the  State of Florida, we are subject to the Florida Pharmacy
Act and regulations promulgated hereunder.  To the extent that we
are  unable  to  maintain our license with the Florida  Board  of
Pharmacy  as  a community pharmacy, or if we do not maintain  the
licenses  granted by other state boards, or if we become  subject
to  actions  by  the  FDA, or other enforcement  regulators,  our
distribution  of  prescription medications to  pet  owners  could
cease,  which  could  have  a  material  adverse  effect  on  our
operations.  See Item 3. Legal Proceedings.


                                6


Employees
---------

  The  Company currently has 164 full time employees,  including:
100  in  marketing  and customer service; 16 in  fulfillment  and
purchasing; 37 in our pharmacy; 2 in information technologies;  5
in  administrative positions; and 4 in management.  None  of  the
Company's  employees  are  represented  by  a  labor  union,  nor
governed  by  any collective bargaining agreements.  The  Company
considers relations with its employees as satisfactory.

Risk Factors
------------

  You  should  carefully  consider the  risks  and  uncertainties
described below, and all the other information included  in  this
annual  report  before you decide to invest in our common  stock.
Any  of the following risks could materially adversely affect our
business,  financial  condition or operating  results  and  could
result in a loss of your investment.


We  have  only recently attained profitability and there  are  no
assurances  that we can sustain profitable operations  in  future
periods.

  While  we  reported net income of approximately $3,258,000  and
$825,000   for  the  years  ended  March  31,  2003   and   2002,
respectively, we reported a net loss of approximately  $2,827,000
for the year ended March 31, 2001 and have an accumulated deficit
at March 31, 2003 of approximately $1,714,000.  Our profitability
during  fiscal 2003 is due in part to an increase in our revenues
of  approximately $22,949,000, or approximately 72%, from  fiscal
2002.   There  are  no  assurances we will continue  to  generate
revenues  at  this  increased  level,  or  that  we  will  remain
profitable during fiscal 2004 and beyond.  If our operations were
to  cease being profitable, our liquidity in future periods would
be adversely affected.


We may fail to comply with various state regulations covering the
dispensing  of prescription pet medications. We could be  subject
to  reprimands, sanctions, probations, fines, suspensions or  the
loss of one or more of our pharmacy licenses.

  The  sale  and  delivery  of prescription  pet  medications  is
generally  governed  by state laws and state regulations.   Since
our  pharmacy is located in the state of Florida, the Company  is
governed  by  the laws and regulations of the state  of  Florida.
Each  prescription pet medication sale we make is  likely  to  be
covered  by the laws of the state where the customer is  located.
The  laws  and regulations relating to the sale and  delivery  of
prescription  pet  medications vary  from  state  to  state,  but
generally  require that prescription pet medications be dispensed
with  the authorization from a prescribing veterinarian.  To  the
extent  that  we  are  unable to maintain our  license  with  the
Florida  Board of Pharmacy as a community pharmacy, or if  we  do
not maintain the licenses granted by other state boards, or if we
become  subject  to  actions  by the FDA,  or  other  enforcement
regulators, our distribution of prescription medications  to  pet
owners could cease, which could have a material adverse effect on
our operations.

  While  we make every effort to fully comply with the applicable
state  rules and regulations, from time to time we have been  the
subject  of administrative complaints regarding the authorization
of prescriptions prior to shipment.  We cannot assure you that we
will  not continue to be the subject of administrative complaints
in  the  future.   We cannot guarantee you that we  will  not  be
subject to reprimand, sanctions, probations, or to fines, or that
one  or  more  of our pharmacy licenses may not be  suspended  or
revoked.  See Item 3. Legal Proceedings.


Our alternate veterinarian program was discontinued and was under
investigation by the Florida Board of Pharmacy and Florida Agency
for  Health  Care  Administration, and by various  other  state's
pharmacy  boards, which could reduce or eliminate our ability  to
verify certain prescriptions outside the state of Florida.

  We  utilized the services of alternate veterinarians to  verify
certain  prescriptions for animals residing outside the state  of
Florida.  The alternate veterinarian was not the veterinarian who
had actually seen the animal and may reside in another state from
the  animal.  In February 2002, we voluntarily ceased the use  of
the  alternate veterinarian program, and in March 2002 a business
decision  was made to enter into a settlement agreement with  the
Florida Board of Pharmacy.  See Item 3. Legal Proceedings.   Many
of  the  complaints were for prescriptions verified  through  our
alternate   veterinarian  program.   The  alternate  veterinarian
program  used  a  veterinarian outside the state  of  Florida  to
verify  the  prescription for certain pets outside the  state  of
Florida.  The program was not used for pets residing in the State
of Florida.  Future complaints may be brought against the Company
by  states in which this program was utilized.  We are unable  to
assess  the  potential  impact on  our  business  or  any  future
penalties that may be assessed from these or other complaints.


We  currently  purchase  our  prescription  and  non-prescription
medications  from  third party distributors and  we  are  not  an
authorized  distributor of those products.  We do  not  have  any
guaranteed  supply  of these medications at  any  pre-established
prices.

  For the fiscal year ended March 31, 2003, approximately 93%  of
our  sales  were attributable to sales of prescription  and  non-
prescription  medications.  Sales of  these  products  have  also
accounted for 92% of our total sales during the fiscal year ended
March  31,  2002.   Historically,  substantially  all  the  major
pharmaceutical  manufacturers have declined to sell  prescription
and non-prescription pet medications directly to us.  In order to
assure  a supply of these products, we purchase medications  from
various  secondary  sources,  including  a  variety  of  domestic
distributors.    Our  business  strategy  includes   seeking   to
establish   direct  purchasing  arrangements   with   major   pet
pharmaceutical   manufacturing  companies.   If   we   were   not
successful in achieving this goal, we would continue to rely upon
distributors.


                                7



  We   cannot   guarantee  that  if  we  continue   to   purchase
prescription and non-prescription pet medications from  secondary
sources  that we will be able to purchase an adequate  supply  to
meet  our customers' demands, or that we will be able to purchase
these   products  at  competitive  prices.   As  these   products
represent a significant portion of our sales, our failure to fill
customer  orders  for these products could adversely  impact  our
sales.   If  we should be forced to pay higher prices  for  these
products  to ensure an adequate supply, we cannot guarantee  that
we  will be able to pass along to our customers any increases  in
the  prices we pay for these medications.  This inability to pass
along  increased  prices could materially  adversely  affect  our
results of operations.


Our  failure  to  properly  manage our inventory  may  result  in
excessive   inventory  carrying  costs,  which  could  materially
adversely   affect  our  financial  condition  and   results   of
operations.

  Our  current  product line contains approximately 600  SKUs  in
the  fiscal year ended March 31, 2003.  A significant portion  of
our  sales is attributable to products representing approximately
90  SKUs.  We need to properly manage our inventory to provide an
adequate  supply of these products and avoid excessive  inventory
of  the  products  representing the  balance  of  the  SKUs.   We
generally place orders for products with our suppliers based upon
our  internal estimates of the amounts of inventory we will  need
to  fill  future  orders.  These estimates may  be  significantly
different  from the actual orders we receive.  In the event  that
subsequent  orders fall short of original estimates,  we  may  be
left  with excess inventory.  Significant excess inventory  could
result in price discounts and increased inventory carrying costs.
Similarly, if we fail to have an adequate supply of some SKUs, we
may  lose sales opportunities.  We cannot guarantee that we  will
maintain  appropriate inventory levels.  Any failure on our  part
to  maintain  appropriate inventory levels may  have  a  material
adverse  effect  on  our  financial  condition  and  results   of
operations.


Resistance  from  veterinarians to authorize prescriptions  could
cause our sales to decrease and could materially adversely affect
our financial condition and results of operations.

  Since  we  began  our  operations,  from  time  to  time,  some
veterinarians have resisted providing our customers with  a  copy
of  their  pet's prescription or authorizing the prescription  to
our  pharmacy  staff,  thereby  effectively  preventing  us  from
filling   such   prescriptions  under  state   law.    Sales   of
prescription medications represented approximately 29% and 34% of
our  sales  for the fiscal years ended March 31, 2003  and  2002,
respectively.  Although veterinarians in some states are required
by   law   to  provide  the  pet  owner  with  this  prescription
information,  if  the  number  of  veterinarians  who  refuse  to
authorize prescriptions should increase, our sales could decrease
and  our  financial  condition and results of operations  may  be
materially adversely impacted.


Our  success  depends in part on the willingness of consumers  to
purchase  pet  medications from us.  If  we  do  not  succeed  in
changing  consumer-purchasing patterns, our results of operations
may be materially adversely affected.

  The  direct marketing of prescription and non-prescription  pet
medications  and  health and nutritional supplements  is  in  its
infancy.   Our  success will depend upon our  ability  to  engage
consumers  who  have historically purchased pet  medications  and
health  and nutritional supplements from veterinarians.   We  may
not  be able to convert a large number of these pet owners to our
customers.  In  order  for  us to be successful,  many  of  these
consumers  must  be willing to utilize new ways of  buying  these
products.   We  cannot guarantee that we will  be  successful  in
shifting   these   consumers'  purchasing  patterns   away   from
veterinarians to us.  If we do not attract consumers to  purchase
these  products  from  us,  our  results  of  operations  may  be
materially adversely impacted.


In  the  past  we  have purchased medications from  international
distributors and we did not always know if those distributors had
the  authority  of the manufacturer to sell the products  in  the
United States.  As a result, we may be subject to future civil or
administrative actions regarding those products.

  During   fiscal  2002,  a  business  decision   was   made   to
discontinue    purchasing   any   product   from    international
distributors.   We  have purchased a portion of our  prescription
and  non-prescription medications from international distributors
in  the  past.   These  medications  may  be  trademarked  and/or
copyrighted products manufactured in foreign countries or in  the
United   States   and  sold  by  the  manufacturer   to   foreign
distributors.   Some  of  the prescription  and  non-prescription
medications  may have been manufactured by entities, particularly
foreign  licensees, who are not the licensors or  owners  of  the
trademarks or copyrights for the medications.  From time to time,
United  States trademark and copyright holders, their  licensees,
trade  associations  and the United States Customs  Service  have
brought forth litigation or administrative agency proceedings  in
an  attempt to halt the importation or sale of trademarked and/or
copyrighted products.  The courts remain divided on the extent to
which  trademark, copyright or other laws, rules, regulations  or
decisions  may  restrict  the  importation  or  sales   of   this
merchandise  without  the consent of the trademark  or  copyright
owner.  See Item 3 Legal Proceedings.


Significant portions of our sales are made to residents of  seven
states.  If we should lose our pharmacy license in one or more of
these  states, our financial condition and results of  operations
would be materially adversely affected.

  While  we  ship pet medications to customers in almost  all  50
states, approximately 53% of our sales for the fiscal year  ended
March  31,  2003 were made to customers located in the states  of
California, Florida, Texas, New York, Georgia, Virginia  and  New
Jersey.   If for any reason our license to operate a pharmacy  in
one or more of those states should be suspended or revoked, or if
it  is  not  renewed,  our  financial condition  and  results  of
operations may be materially adversely affected.



                                8



We   face   significant   competition  from   veterinarians   and
traditional  and  online  retailers  and  may  not  be  able   to
profitably compete with them.

  We  compete directly and indirectly with veterinarians  in  the
sale  of  pet medications and health and nutritional supplements.
Veterinarians hold a competitive advantage over us  because  many
pet  owners may find it more convenient or preferable to purchase
these  products directly from their veterinarians at the time  of
an  office  visit.  We also compete directly and indirectly  with
both  online  and  traditional retailers of pet  medications  and
health  and nutritional supplements.  Both online and traditional
retailers  may  hold a competitive advantage over us  because  of
longer  operating  histories, established  brand  names,  greater
resources and an established customer base.  Online retailers may
have  a  competitive  advantage over us  because  of  established
affiliate  relationships  to drive traffic  to  their  web  site.
Traditional  retailers may hold a competitive advantage  over  us
because pet owners may prefer to purchase these products  from  a
store  instead of online or through traditional catalog/telephone
methods.  In order to effectively compete in the future,  we  may
be  required to offer promotions and other incentives, which  may
result in lower operating margins or increased operating losses.

  We  also  face  a  significant competitive challenge  from  our
competitors  forming  alliances with each other,  such  as  those
between   online   and   brick  and   mortar   retailers.   These
relationships may enable both their retail and online  stores  to
negotiate  better  pricing and better  terms  from  suppliers  by
aggregating  the  demand  for  products  and  negotiating  volume
discounts which could be a competitive disadvantage to us.


The  content of our web site could expose us to various kinds  of
liability,  which, if prosecuted successfully,  could  negatively
impact our business.

  Because  we post product information and other content  on  our
web  site,  we face potential liability for negligence, copyright
infringement,   patent   infringement,  trademark   infringement,
defamation  and other claims based on the nature and  content  of
the  materials  we post.  Various claims have been  brought,  and
sometimes  successfully  prosecuted,  against  Internet   content
distributors.  We could be exposed to liability with  respect  to
the  unauthorized duplication of content or unauthorized  use  of
other  parties'  proprietary technology.   Although  we  maintain
general   liability  insurance,  our  insurance  may  not   cover
potential  claims  of  this  type, or  may  not  be  adequate  to
indemnify  us  for  all  liability  that  may  be  imposed.   Any
imposition of liability that is not covered by insurance,  or  is
in  excess  of  insurance  coverage, could  materially  adversely
affect our financial condition and results of operations.


We  may  not be able to protect our intellectual property rights,
and  we  may  be  found  to infringe on the propriety  rights  of
others.

  We  rely on a combination of trademark, trade secret, copyright
laws  and  contractual restrictions to protect  our  intellectual
property.   These  afford  only limited protection.  Despite  our
efforts  to protect our proprietary rights, unauthorized  parties
may  attempt  to copy our non-prescription private label  generic
equivalents,  when and if developed, as well as  aspects  of  our
sales formats, or to obtain and use information that we regard as
proprietary,  including the technology used to  operate  our  web
site, our content and our trademarks.

  Litigation  or proceedings before the United States Patent  and
Trademark  Office may be necessary in the future to  enforce  our
intellectual  property rights, to protect our trade  secrets  and
domain  names,  and to determine the validity and  scope  of  the
proprietary rights of others.  Any litigation or adverse priority
proceeding  could  result in substantial costs and  diversion  of
resources,  and could seriously harm our business  and  operating
results.

  Third  parties  may also claim  infringement by us with respect
to   past,  current  or  future  technologies.   We  expect  that
participants  in  our  markets will be increasingly  involved  in
infringement claims as the number of services and competitors  in
our  industry  segment grows.  Any claim, whether meritorious  or
not,  could be time consuming, result in costly litigation, cause
service  upgrade  delays or require us to enter into  royalty  or
licensing  agreements.   These royalty  or  licensing  agreements
might not be available on terms acceptable to us or at all.


If  we  are  unable  to protect our Internet domain  name  or  to
prevent others from using names that are confusingly similar, our
business may be adversely impacted.

  Our     Internet     domain     names,     www.1800PetMeds.com,
www.1888PetMeds.com, www.petmedexpress.com,  and  www.petmeds.com
are  critical  to our brand recognition and our overall  success.
If  we  are unable to protect these domain names, our competitors
could  capitalize  on our brand recognition.   We  are  aware  of
substantially  similar  domain names,  including  www.petmed.com,
used  by  competitors.  Governmental agencies and their designees
generally  regulate  the acquisition and  maintenance  of  domain
names.   The regulation of domain names in the United States  and
in  foreign countries has changed, and may undergo further change
in  the  near  future.   Furthermore,  the  relationship  between
regulations governing domain names and laws protecting trademarks
and similar proprietary rights is unclear.  Therefore, we may not
be able to protect our own domain names, or prevent third parties
from  acquiring  domain  names that are confusingly  similar  to,
infringe  upon  or  otherwise decrease the value  of  our  domain
names.



                                9




Since  all of our operations are housed in a single location,  we
are  more  susceptible to business interruption in the  event  of
damage to or disruptions in our facility.

  Our  headquarters and distribution center are  located  in  the
same  building  in  South Florida, and all of  our  shipments  of
products  to  our customers are made from this sole  distribution
center.   We  have no present plans to establish  any  additional
distribution  centers  or offices.  Because  we  consolidate  our
operations in one location, we are more susceptible to power  and
equipment  failures, and business interruptions in the  event  of
fires,  floods  and  other  natural  disasters  than  if  we  had
additional  locations.  Furthermore, because we  are  located  in
South  Florida,  which  is  a hurricane-sensitive  area,  we  are
particularly  susceptible to the risk  of  damage  to,  or  total
destruction  of,  our  headquarters and distribution  center  and
surrounding transportation infrastructure caused by a  hurricane.
We  cannot assure you that we are adequately insured to cover the
amount  of any losses relating to any of these potential  events,
business interruptions resulting from damage to or destruction of
our  headquarters  and distribution center; or  interruptions  or
disruptions  to  major  transportation  infrastructure  or  other
events that do not occur on our premises.


A portion of our sales are seasonal and our operating results are
difficult to predict and may fluctuate.

  Because  our  operating results are difficult  to  predict,  we
believe  that  quarter-to-quarter comparisons  of  our  operating
results are not a good indication of our future performance.  The
majority of our product sales are affected by the seasons, due to
the   seasonality  of  mainly  heartworm  and   flea   and   tick
medications.  Industry seasonality trends, according to  Fountain
Agricounsel  LLC,  Management Consultants  to  Agribusiness,  are
divided  into percentage of industry sales by quarter.   For  the
quarters  ended March 31, June 30, September 30, and December  31
industry sales are 19%, 37%, 28%, and 16%, respectively.

  In  addition  to the seasonality of our sales, our  annual  and
quarterly operating results have fluctuated in the past  and  may
fluctuate  significantly  in  the future  due  to  a  variety  of
factors, many of which are out of our control.  Factors that  may
cause our operating results to fluctuate include:

     *    Our  inability to  obtain new customers at a reasonable
          cost, retain existing customers, or encourage reorders;

     *    Our inability to increase the number of visitors to our
          web site, or  our inability to  convert visitors to our
          web site into customers;

     *    The mix of  medications and other pet  products sold by
          us;

     *    Our inability to manage inventory levels;

     *    Our  inability  to  adequately  maintain,  upgrade  and
          develop  our  web site,  the  systems  that we  use  to
          process customer's orders and payments, or our computer
          network;

     *    Increased competition within our market niche;

     *    Price competition;

     *    Increases in the cost of advertising;

     *    The amount and timing  of operating  costs and  capital
          expenditures relating to expansion of our product  line
          or operations; and

     *    Disruption   of   our  toll-free   telephone   service,
          technical difficulties, systems and Internet outages or
          slowdowns.

Any  change  in  one  or more of these factors  could  materially
adversely affect our results of operations in future periods.

Our  shares  of  common stock currently have  a  limited  trading
market.

  Our  shares  of common stock are currently quoted  on  the  OTC
Bulletin Board. Our shares of common stock currently have only  a
limited  trading market.  As a result, you may find it  difficult
to  dispose  of shares of our common stock and you may  suffer  a
loss  of all or a substantial portion of your investment  in  our
common stock.

Our  stock price fluctuates from time to time and may fall  below
expectations  of  securities analysts and  investors,  and  could
subject  us to litigation, which may result in you suffering  the
loss of your investment.

  The   market   price   of  our  common  stock   may   fluctuate
significantly in response to a number of factors, some  of  which
are   beyond  our  control.   These  factors  include:  quarterly
variations in operating results; changes in accounting treatments
or  principles;  announcements by us or our  competitors  of  new
products   and   services   offerings,   significant   contracts,
acquisitions or strategic relationships; additions or  departures
of  key personnel; any future sales of our common stock or  other
securities;  stock  market  price  and  volume  fluctuations   of
publicly-traded  companies; and general political,  economic  and
market conditions.

  It  is likely that in some future quarter our operating results
may  fall  below  the  expectations of  securities  analysts  and
investors, which could result in a decrease in the trading  price
of  our  common  stock.   In  the past, securities  class  action
litigation  has  often been brought against a  company  following
periods of volatility in the market price of its securities.   We
may   be  the  targets  of  similar  litigation  in  the  future.
Securities  litigation  could result  in  substantial  costs  and
divert   management's  attention  and  resources,   which   could
seriously harm our business and operating results.


                                10




The interests of our controlling stockholders could conflict with
those of our other stockholders.

  Tricon Holdings, LLC, ("Tricon") our principal shareholder, own
and control 38.7%  of our voting securities and together with the
exercise of 2,160,000 warrants,  would own  and control 44.9%  of
our voting securities.  Guven Kivilcim, member of Tricon, and one
of  our   directors,  owns  and  controls  9.5%  of   our  voting
securities  and  together with the  exercise of 540,000 warrants,
would  own  and  control  11.9% of our voting securities.   These
shareholders  collectively  have  a  54.6%  beneficial ownership.
These  stockholders  are   able  to  influence   the  outcome  of
stockholder  votes,  including  votes concerning: the election of
directors;  amendments to our  charter and   by-laws;   and   the
approval of  significant  corporate transactions  like  a  merger
or sale  of our assets.    This controlling influence  could have
the  effect of  delaying or preventing  a change in control, even
if many of our stockholders believe it is in their best interest.


We  may  issue  additional shares of preferred stock  that  could
defer  a change of control or dilute the interests of our  common
stockholders.   Our  charter documents  could  defer  a  takeover
effort,   which  could  inhibit  your  ability  to   receive   an
acquisition premium for your shares.

  Our  charter  permits our board of directors  to  issue  up  to
5,000,000 shares of preferred stock without shareholder approval.
Currently  there  are  2,500 shares of our Convertible  Preferred
Stock  issued and outstanding.  This leaves 4,997,500  shares  of
preferred stock available for issuance at the discretion  of  our
board  of  directors.   These shares, if  issued,  could  contain
dividend,  liquidation, conversion, voting or other rights  which
could adversely affect the rights of our common shareholders  and
which  could  also  be utilized, under some circumstances,  as  a
method  of  discouraging, delaying or preventing  our  change  in
control.  Provisions of our articles of incorporation, bylaws and
Florida  law  could make it more difficult for a third  party  to
acquire  us, even if many of our stockholders believe  it  is  in
their best interest.


Item 2.  Description of Property.

  As  of  March 31, 2001, our facilities, including our principal
executive offices, a 50,000 square foot building, were located at
1441  SW  29th  Avenue,  Pompano Beach,  FL  33062.  The  Company
purchased this  building  in February 1999, and financed it  with
a  seven  year,  7.75%  mortgage  with a commercial bank  in  the
original principal  amount  of $1,680,000.  On May 31, 2001,  the
Company sold  their 50,000  square  foot  office  building, which
houses the Company's principal  executive  offices and warehouse,
to an unrelated third party.  The Company received gross proceeds
of $2,150,000,  of which approximately $1,561,000 was used to pay
off  the mortgage,  and the Company recognized a loss on the sale
of approximately $185,000.  The Company then entered into a five-
year  term  lease agreement for 20,000 of the 50,000 square  foot
Pompano Beach office building.  On February 22, 2002, the Company
entered  into  a lease addendum which added approximately  12,000
square feet, effective June 1, 2002, to accommodate the Company's
warehouse expansion.  The future minimum annual lease payments as
of  March  31,  2003, are as follows: $277,000 for  fiscal  2004,
$288,000  for fiscal 2005, $300,000 for fiscal 2006, and  $50,000
for fiscal 2007.


Item 3.  Legal Proceedings.

  Various  complaints had been filed with the  Florida  Board  of
Pharmacy.  These complaints, the majority of which were filed  by
veterinarians  who are in competition with the  Company  for  the
sale of pet prescription-required products, alleged violations of
the Pharmacy Practice Act and regulations promulgated thereunder.
The  vast  majority of the complaints alleged that  the  Company,
through   its  pharmacists,  improperly  dispensed  prescription-
required  veterinary  medication based on prescriptions  verified
through   the   Company's  discontinued  alternate   veterinarian
program.   The alternate veterinarian program used a veterinarian
outside  the state of Florida to verify prescriptions for certain
pets  outside  the state of Florida.  While the program  was  not
used  for  pets residing in the state of Florida, the  complaints
had,  for  the  most part, been filed with the Florida  Board  of
Pharmacy.   Other complaints alleged the dispensing of medication
without a valid prescription, the sale of non-conforming products
and  that  the  Company's  pharmacy was  operating  at  the  same
location  as  another pharmacy, with which it had  a  contractual
relationship.    The  Company  contested  all   allegations   and
continued  discussions  in an attempt to reach  a  resolution  of
these matters.

  In  February 2002, the Company voluntarily ceased  the  use  of
its  alternate veterinarian program, and in March 2002 a business
decision  was made to enter into a settlement agreement with  the
Florida Board of Pharmacy, rather than to proceed with costly and
lengthy litigation.  In April 2002, the Florida Board of Pharmacy
approved the settlement agreement.  The Florida Board of Pharmacy
did  not reach any finding of fact or conclusion of law that  the
Company  committed any wrongdoing or violated any rules  or  laws
governing  the practice of pharmacy.  According to the settlement
agreement, the Company's pharmacy license was placed on probation
for  a  period  of  three  years and the Company,  the  Company's
pharmacists   and   contracted  pharmacy  and  pharmacist,   paid
approximately $120,000 in fines and investigative costs, in  July
2002.  The Company remains licensed with the State of Florida and
continues to operate its principal business in Florida.

  Additional  complaints  have  been  filed  with  other  states'
Pharmacy  Boards.  These complaints, the majority of  which  were
filed  by  veterinarians who are in competition with the  Company
for  the  sale  of  pet  prescription-required  products,  allege
violations   of   the  Pharmacy  Practice  Act  and   regulations
promulgated  thereunder.   The vast majority  of  the  complaints
allege  that  the  Company, through its  pharmacists,  improperly
dispensed  prescription-required veterinary medication  based  on
prescriptions   verified   through   the   Company's    alternate
veterinarian program.  The Company contested all allegations  and
continued  discussions  in an attempt to reach  a  resolution  of
these matters.


                                11



  In  fiscal 2003, the Company reached settlement agreements with
the  Louisiana,  Missouri, New Mexico, and  Ohio  State  Pharmacy
Boards.  According to the settlement agreements, the Company  was
required to terminate the alternate veterinarian program  in  the
state  and the Company's permit was placed on probation.   As  of
March  31, 2003, the Company had paid all fines in full to  cover
any or all administrative and investigative costs associated with
these  settlements.   At March 31, 2003,  there  was  no  accrual
relating  to these settlements.  There can be no assurances  made
that  other  states  will  not attempt to  take  similar  actions
against the Company in the future.

  In  February  2000, the United States Environmental  Protection
Agency  ("EPA") issued a Stop Sale, Use or Removal Order  to  the
Company  regarding the alleged distribution or sale of misbranded
Advantage  products  in  violation of  the  Federal  Insecticide,
Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act ("FIFRA"), as amended.  The  order
provides  that  the company shall not distribute,  sell,  use  or
remove  the  products  listed in the order, which  are  allegedly
misbranded.   The order further provides that the  Company  shall
not  commence any sale or distribution of those products  without
the  prior written approval from the EPA.  The Stop Sale, Use  or
Removal  Order  does not assert any claim for  monetary  damages;
rather,  it  is in the nature of a cease and desist  order.   The
Company denied any alleged violations.  On February 16, 2000, the
Company  submitted  a written response to  the  order.   The  EPA
assessed  a fine in the amount of $445,000.  In fiscal  2001  the
Company accrued $445,000 of legal settlement expense.

  In  September  2001,  the Company and the EPA  entered  into  a
Consent  Agreement  and  Final Order  ("CAFO").   The  settlement
agreement required the Company to pay a civil penalty of $100,000
plus interest, requiring a payment of $56,000, which was paid  in
September  2002,  and  $53,000  due  on  September  30,  2003,  a
reduction from the previously assessed fine of $445,000.  For the
purpose  of this CAFO, the Company admitted to the jurisdictional
allegations  set  forth,  and neither  admitted  nor  denied  the
alleged violations.  On September 28, 2001, the CAFO was approved
and  ordered  by  the regional judicial officer.  Accordingly,  a
gain of $345,000 was reflected in the statement of income for the
year  ended  March  31, 2002, to reflect the adjustment  to  this
settlement.

  On   March   19,  2002,  Novartis  Animal  Health  U.S.,   Inc.
("Novartis") filed a complaint against the Company and two  other
defendants  in U.S. District Court for the Southern  District  of
Florida.  Novartis purports to assert seven claims related to the
Company's alleged sale of pet medications produced for a Novartis
Australian  sister company: Count I: Infringement  of  Registered
Trademark  Under Section 32 of the Lanham Act, 15  U.S.C.   1114;
Count  II: Infringement of Unregistered Trademarks Under  Section
43(a)  of  the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C.  1125(a); Count  III:  False
Advertising  Under  Section 43(a) of the Lanham  act,  15  U.S.C.
1125(a); Count IV: Misleading Advertising Under Florida Statutory
Law;  Count V: Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Under Florida
Statutory  Law;  Count  VI: Injury to Business  Reputation  Under
Florida  Statutory Law; Count VII: Common Law Unfair Competition.
Subsequent to the year ended March 31, 2003, the Company  reached
a  final  settlement agreement with Novartis.  According  to  the
confidential  settlement  agreement  dated  April  7,  2003,  the
Company  has satisfactorily resolved the contested issues  raised
by  the complaint and the confidential settlement terms will  not
have  a material impact on the Company's operations and financial
results.

  The  Company  is  a  defendant in  a  lawsuit  in  Texas  state
district  court  seeking  injunctive and monetary  relief  styled
Texas  State  Board  of Pharmacy and State  Board  of  Veterinary
Medical Examiners v. PetMed Express, Inc. Cause No.GN-202514,  in
the  201st  Judicial District Court, Travis County, Texas,  which
was  filed  in August 2002.  The Company in its initial  pleading
denied  the  allegations  contained therein.   The  Company  will
vigorously  defend,  is  confident of  its  compliance  with  the
applicable law, and finds wrong-on-the-facts the vast majority of
the   allegations   contained  in  the   Plaintiffs'   supporting
documentation  attached to the lawsuit.  Discovery  has  recently
commenced.  At this early stage of the litigation it is difficult
to  assess any possible outcome or estimate any potential loss in
the event of an adverse outcome.


Routine Proceedings
-------------------

   The Company is a party to routine litigation incidental to its
business.  Management does not believe that the resolution of any
or  all  of such routine litigation is likely to have a  material
adverse effect on the Company's financial condition or results of
operations.


Item 4.  Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders.

     No matter was submitted to a vote of our shareholders during
the fourth quarter of the fiscal year ended March 31, 2003.




                                12



                             PART II

Item  5.   Market  for  Common  Equity  and  Related  Stockholder
           Matters.

       The Company's common shares are traded on the OTC Bulletin
Board  ("OTCBB") under the symbol "PETS".  The prices  set  forth
below  reflect the range of high and low closing prices per share
in  each  of the quarters of fiscal 2003 and 2002 as reported  by
the OTCBB.



                                High            Low
                                         
     Fiscal 2003:
     First Quarter              $1.75          $0.76
     Second Quarter             $2.53          $1.75
     Third Quarter              $2.30          $1.57
     Fourth Quarter             $2.36          $1.78

     Fiscal 2002:
     First Quarter              $2.11          $0.88
     Second Quarter             $1.45          $0.64
     Third Quarter              $1.15          $0.65
     Fourth Quarter             $1.25          $0.76


   There were 68 holders of record of our common stock at May 31,
2003,  and  we  estimate there were approximately 950  beneficial
shareholders  on  that date.  The closing  sales  price  for  the
common  stock  on  June 13, 2003  as reported on  the  OTCBB  was
$4.00  per  share.   In  October 2002,  the  Company submitted an
application for listing  on the American Stock Exchange ("AMEX").
In June  2003, the   Company's  Board  of  Directors  decided  to
withdraw its application for listing on the AMEX, while all other
options  are explored,  which includes reapplying to the AMEX for
listing at  a later  date.   No  assurances  can be made that the
Company  will qualify  or  be  accepted  for  listing  on a major
exchange.

A special note about penny stock rules

   The  Company's  common stock is covered by an  SEC  rule  that
imposes  additional sales practice requirements on broker-dealers
who  sell  such  securities  to persons  other  than  established
customers   and   accredited  investors,  which   are   generally
institutions with assets in excess of $5,000,000, or  individuals
with net worth in excess of $1,000,000 or annual income exceeding
$200,000 or $300,000 jointly with their spouse.  For transactions
covered  by  the  rule, the broker-dealer  must  make  a  special
suitability determination for the purchaser and transaction prior
to  the  sale.  Consequently, the rule may affect the ability  of
broker-dealers  to sell our securities, and also may  affect  the
ability  of purchasers of our stock to sell their shares  in  the
secondary  market.  It may also cause less broker-dealers  to  be
willing  to make a market in our common stock, and it may  affect
the level of news coverage we receive.

Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities

  In April 2002, we issued 300,000 shares of the Company's common
stock  to  our  president  upon the exercise  of  options  at  an
exercise  price  of  $.16 per share.  These 300,000  shares  were
subsequently registered for resale under the August 2, 2002  Form
SB-2.   Additionally, in April 2002, we issued 300,000 shares  of
the  Company's  common stock to one individual upon the  exercise
of options at an exercise price of $.37 per share.

   In  June 2002, we issued 10,500 shares of the Company's common
stock  to  one  individual upon the exercise  of  options  at  an
exercise  price  of  $1.25 per share.  These 10,500  shares  were
subsequently registered for resale under the August 2, 2002  Form
SB-2.

   In  July 2002, we issued 12,500 shares of the Company's common
stock  to  two  individuals upon the exercise of  options  at  an
exercise price of $.20 per share.

   In  May 2003, we issued 12,500 shares of the Company's  common
stock  to  one  individual upon the exercise  of  options  at  an
exercise price of $.20 per share.

   All  of  these issuances were made in reliance on an exemption
from registration under the Securities Act of 1933 in reliance on
Section 4(2) thereof.  There were no underwriters involved in any
of these issuances and we did not pay any commissions. In each of
the foregoing transactions, the recipients were either accredited
investors or non-accredited investors who had such knowledge  and
experience  in  financial, investment and business  matters  that
they  were  capable of evaluating the merits  and  risks  of  the
prospective investment in our securities. No general solicitation
or  advertising  was used in connection with these  transactions,
the participants had access to business and financial information
concerning  our  company, and the certificates that  were  issued
representing these shares bore the appropriate legend restricting
their  transfer  absent  registration of such  shares  under  the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended.



                                13



Dividend Policy

  The  Company has never paid cash dividends on our common stock.
We presently intend to retain future earnings, if any, to finance
the expansion of our business and do not anticipate that any cash
dividends  on  our common stock will be paid in  the  foreseeable
future.   The future dividend policy will depend on our earnings,
capital  requirements, expansion plans, financial  condition  and
other relevant factors.

Securities  Authorized  for  Issuance under  Equity  Compensation
Plans

   The  following  table  sets  forth securities  authorized  for
issuance  under  equity compensation plans, including  individual
compensation arrangements, by us under our 1998 Stock Option Plan
and  any compensation plans not previously approved by our  board
of directors as of March 31, 2003:

              EQUITY COMPENSATION PLAN INFORMATION




                                  Number of securities
                                   to be issued upon          Weighted average
                                 exercise of outstanding      exercise price of      Number of securities
                                    options, warrants       outstanding options,     remaining available
     Plan category                     and rights           warrants and rights      for future issuance
                                           (a)                      (b)                      (c)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                            

1998 Stock Option Plan                   2,639,600              $      1.06                2,360,400

Equity compensation plans not
approved by security holders(1)             91,500              $      1.33                        -
                                       -----------                                      ------------
Total                                    2,731,100                                         2,360,400
                                       ===========                                      ============


(1)  Represents non-plan options to purchase an aggregate of
     91,500 shares of our common stock issued to a member of
     our management.



























                                14




Item  6.   Management's  Discussion  and  Analysis  or  Plan   of
           Operation.

Overview
--------

   PetMed  Express was incorporated in the state  of  Florida  in
January  1996.   The  Company began selling pet  medications  and
products in September 1996, and in the fall of 1997 we issued our
first catalog.  This catalog displayed approximately 1,200 items,
including prescription and non-prescription pet medications,  pet
health  and  nutritional  supplements and  pet  accessories.   In
fiscal   2001,   the  Company  focused  its   product   line   to
approximately  600 of the most popular pet medications  for  dogs
and  cats.   The Company also markets products on its  web  site,
where we currently generate approximately 50% of all sales,  over
the  previous  12  months we generated 44% of all  sales.   Since
October 1997, the Company has advertised its products on national
television  and  through  the  direct  mailing  of  catalogs  and
postcards.

   The  Company's sales consist of products sold to mainly retail
consumers  and  minimal  wholesale  customers.   Typically,   the
Company's  retail customers pay by credit card or  check  at  the
time  the  order is shipped.  The Company usually  receives  cash
settlement  in one to three banking days for sales  paid  for  by
credit  cards,  which minimizes the accounts receivable  balances
relative to the Company's sales.  Certain wholesale customers are
extended  credit terms, which usually require payment  within  30
days of delivery.  For the fiscal year ended March 31, 2003,  the
Company's sales returns average was approximately 1.6% of  sales,
and the average purchase was approximately $71.

   The following should be read in conjunction with the Company's
Consolidated  Financial Statements and the related notes  thereto
included elsewhere herein.

Results of Operations
---------------------

   The  following  table  sets forth, as a percentage  of  sales,
certain items appearing in the Company's statements of income.



                                                      Fiscal Year
                                            --------------------------------
                                            March 31, 2003    March 31, 2002
                                            --------------    --------------
                                                        
 Net sales                                           100.0 %           100.0 %
 Cost of sales                                        57.3              59.0
                                            --------------    --------------
 Gross profit                                         42.7              41.0
                                            --------------    --------------

 Operating expenses:
      General and administrative                      14.5              19.0
      Advertising                                     21.2              17.9
      Severance charges                                 -                0.6
      Depreciation and amortization                    0.7               1.2
                                            --------------    --------------
 Total operating expenses                             36.4              38.7
                                            --------------    --------------

 Income from operations                                6.3               2.3
                                            --------------    --------------

 Other income (expense):
      Adjustment of estimate for legal
        settlement                                      -                1.1
      Gain (loss) on disposal of property
        and equipment                                  0.1              (1.0)
      Interest expense                                (0.1)             (0.1)
      Interest income                                   -                0.1
      Other, net                                        -                0.2
                                            --------------    --------------
 Total other income (expense):                          -                0.3
                                            --------------    --------------

 Income before provision for income taxes              6.3               2.6

 Provision for income taxes                            0.4                -
                                            --------------    --------------
 Net income                                            5.9               2.6
                                            ==============    ==============





                                15



Fiscal 2003 Compared to 2002

Sales
-----

   Sales  increased by approximately $22,949,000,  or  71.7%,  to
approximately  $54,975,000 for the fiscal year  ended  March  31,
2003,  from  approximately $32,026,000 for the fiscal year  ended
March 31, 2002.  The increase in sales was primarily attributable
to  the  positive effects of increased advertising and  increased
retail  reorders,  partially offset by a  decrease  in  wholesale
sales.   Advertising as a percentage of sales increased to  21.2%
in  fiscal  2003  from  17.9% in fiscal 2002.   The  Company  has
committed   certain   amounts  specifically  designated   towards
television   advertising  to  stimulate   sales,   create   brand
awareness,  and  acquire new customers.  Retail new  order  sales
have  increased  by  approximately  $10,143,000,  or  54.0%,   to
approximately  $28,915,000 for the fiscal year  ended  March  31,
2003,  from  approximately $18,772,000 for the fiscal year  ended
March   31,  2002.   Retail  reorder  sales  have  increased   by
approximately    $15,575,000,   or   151.9%,   to   approximately
$25,827,000  for  the  fiscal year ended  March  31,  2003,  from
approximately  $10,252,000 for the fiscal year  ended  March  31,
2002.    Wholesale   sales   have  decreased   by   approximately
$2,769,000,  or 92.3%, to approximately $233,000 for  the  fiscal
year ended March 31, 2003, from approximately $3,002,000 for  the
fiscal  year  ended March 31, 2002.  The Company has discontinued
its wholesale operations to concentrate on retail sales.

   The majority of our product sales are affected by the seasons,
due  to  the  seasonality of mainly heartworm and flea  and  tick
medications.  Industry seasonality trends, according to  Fountain
Agricounsel  LLC,  Management Consultants  to  Agribusiness,  are
divided  into percentage of industry sales by quarter.   For  the
quarters  ended March 31, June 30, September 30, and December  31
industry  sales  are 19%, 37%, 28%, and 16%,  respectively.   The
Company cannot accurately predict future sales, however, based on
current  circumstances the Company does not expect a  significant
variance compared to the industry trends in the first quarter  of
fiscal 2004.

Cost of sales
-------------

  Cost of sales increased by approximately $12,623,000, or 66.8%,
to  approximately $31,518,000 for the fiscal year ended March 31,
2003,  from  approximately $18,895,000 for the fiscal year  ended
March  31,  2002.   The  increase in cost of  sales  is  directly
related  to  the  increase  in retail sales  in  fiscal  2003  as
compared  to 2002.  However, as a percent of sales, the  cost  of
sales  was  57.3% in fiscal 2003, as compared to 59.0% in  fiscal
2002.   This  percentage  reduction  can  be  attributed  to  the
Company's  continued  efforts to purchase medications  in  larger
quantities, by bulk, to take advantage of any and all  purchasing
discounts available.

Gross profit
------------

   Gross profit increased by approximately $10,326,000, or 78.6%,
to  approximately $23,457,000 for the fiscal year ended March 31,
2003  from  approximately $13,131,000 for the fiscal  year  ended
March 31, 2002.  Gross profit as a percentage of sales for fiscal
2003  and 2002 was 42.7% and 41.0%, respectively, reflecting  the
positive  impact of purchasing medications in larger  quantities,
receiving  purchasing discounts.  In February 2003,  the  Company
initiated a free shipping program on all orders exceeding $40  in
total.   The  Company  expects increased  sales  from  this  free
shipping  promotion,  however, this  promotion  will  reduce  the
Company's gross profit percentage in the first quarter of  fiscal
2004.

General and administrative expenses
-----------------------------------

   General  and administrative expense increased by approximately
$1,862,000, or 30.6%, to approximately $7,957,000 for the  fiscal
year  ended March 31, 2003 from approximately $6,095,000 for  the
fiscal  year  ended  March 31, 2002.  General and  administrative
expense  as  a  percentage of sales was 14.5% and 19.0%  for  the
fiscal  years  ended March 31, 2003 and 2002, respectively.   The
increase in general and administrative expense for the year ended
March  31,  2003 is primarily due to the following: a  $1,428,000
increase  to  payroll  expenses which can be  attributed  to  the
addition  of  new employees in the customer service and  pharmacy
departments,  which enabled the company to sustain its  continued
growth, a $493,000 increase to bank service and credit card  fees
which  is directly related to the increase in fiscal 2003  sales,
the  $250,000 increase in property and insurance expenses,  which
includes  utilities  and rental expenses, can  be  attributed  to
leasing additional space to support our expansion in fiscal 2003,
offset  with  a  $285,000  decrease to professional  fees  and  a
$24,000 decrease to various other expenses.

Advertising expenses
--------------------

   Advertising expenses increased by approximately $5,933,000, or
approximately 103.8%, to approximately $11,650,000 for the fiscal
year  ended March 31, 2003 from approximately $5,717,000 for  the
fiscal  year  ended March 31, 2002.  The significant increase  in
advertising expense for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2003  was
due  to the Company's plan to commit certain amounts specifically
designated  towards  television advertising to  stimulate  sales,
create  brand awareness, and acquire new customers.  The  Company
expects this trend in advertising to continue into the first  and
second quarters of 2004.

Severance charges
-----------------

   Severance charges for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2002  of
$195,000   relate  to  severance  due  to  two  former  executive
officers, the CFO and COO, of the Company.  No comparable charges
were made in fiscal 2003.




                                16



Depreciation and amortization
-----------------------------

    Depreciation  and  amortization  decreased  by  approximately
$9,000,  or  2.4%, to approximately $368,000 for the fiscal  year
ended  March 31, 2003 from approximately $377,000 for the  fiscal
year  ended  March 31, 2002.  The slight decrease to depreciation
and  amortization expense for fiscal 2003 can be attributed to  a
depreciation  expense  reduction  related  to  the  sale  of  our
facilities  in  fiscal  2002, offset by an increase  to  property
additions in fiscal 2003.

Adjustment of estimate for legal settlement
-------------------------------------------

   In fiscal 2002, the Company recognized income of $345,000 on a
reversal  of  a  legal assessment estimate, which was  originally
booked in the fiscal year ended March 31, 2001.  On September 28,
2001,  the  Company and the EPA entered into a Consent  Agreement
and  Final Order.  The settlement agreement required the  Company
to  pay  a  civil penalty of $100,000 plus interest, a  reduction
from the original $445,000 fine.

Gain or loss on disposal of property and equipment
--------------------------------------------------

   In  fiscal  2003, the Company recorded a gain on  disposal  of
computer  equipment  of $15,000.  The fully depreciated  computer
equipment  was sold to an unrelated third party and  the  Company
received  gross  proceeds of $15,000.  During  fiscal  2002,  the
Company  recorded  a  loss on disposal of land  and  building  of
$314,000.   An $185,000 loss was the result of the  sale  of  the
corporate office building, which includes the principal executive
offices  and warehouse, to an unrelated third party.  The Company
received  gross  proceeds of $2,150,000, of  which  approximately
$1,561,000  was  used  to  pay off the mortgage.   The  remaining
$129,000  loss  relates to the impairment  of  outdated  computer
equipment, which was no longer utilized by the company.

Interest Expense
----------------

   Interest expense decreased by approximately $18,000, or 37.2%,
to approximately $31,000 for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2003
from  approximately $49,000 for the fiscal year ended  March  31,
2002.   The $18,000 decrease can be attributed to a reduction  in
interest expense relating to the mortgage payoff of the Company's
principal executive offices in the first quarter of fiscal  2002.
Interest expense may increase further in future quarters, due  to
the  Company's plan to utilize its $2,000,000 line of  credit  to
increase inventory levels during promotion periods.

Provision for income taxes
--------------------------

   The  Company  had  incurred significant net losses  since  its
inception  in  1996,  through the quarter ended  June  30,  2001.
These  losses  have resulted in net operating loss carryforwards,
which   have  been  used  by  the  Company  to  offset  its   tax
liabilities.   For  the fiscal year ended  March  31,  2002,  the
Company  recorded a full valuation allowance against the deferred
income  tax assets, created by net operating losses, since future
utilization of these assets was subject to the Company's  ability
to  generate taxable income.  For the fiscal year ended March 31,
2003,  the  Company  recognized a deferred income  tax  asset  of
approximately  $581,000, due to the fact  that  the  Company  had
demonstrated the ability to generate taxable income.   There  are
no guarantees that the Company will be able to utilize all future
net  operating  loss carryforwards, unless the Company  generates
taxable  income.  For the fiscal years ended March 31,  2003  and
2002,   the   Company  recorded  an  income  tax  provision   for
approximately $223,000 and $0, respectively.  There was no income
tax  provision for fiscal 2002, due to the utilization  of  prior
net  operating losses which offset taxable income for the period.
The  effective tax rate for fiscal 2003 of 6.4% is lower than the
federal tax rate of 34%, this is primarily due to the recognition
of  the  deferred  tax asset.  Upon recognition of  the  $581,000
deferred  income tax asset, the Company reduced  its  income  tax
provision   by  the  same  amount.   This  income  tax  provision
reduction was a tax benefit, which increased net income.

Net income
----------

  Net income increased by approximately $2,433,000, or 294.7%, to
$3,258,000  net income for the fiscal year ended March  31,  2003
from  $825,000  net income for the fiscal year  ended  March  31,
2002.   The significant increase was mainly attributable  to  the
Company's profitable operations and the recognition of a deferred
tax asset of $581,000.

Liquidity and Capital Resources

       The  Company's  working capital  at  March  31,  2003  was
$3,018,000,  as compared to the $691,000 at March  31,  2002,  an
increase  of approximately $2,327,000.  The increase  in  working
capital  was primarily attributable to the profitable  operations
of  the  Company which resulted in net cash provided by operating
activities of $970,000 and $476,000 for the years ended March 31,
2003   and  2002,  respectively.   Net  cash  used  in  investing
activities  was $1,095,000 for the year ended March 31,  2003  as
compared  to  net  cash  provided  by  investing  activities   of
$1,461,000  for  the year ended March 31, 2002,  primarily  as  a
result  of  increased property and intangible asset additions  in
fiscal  2003, compared to the proceeds received from the sale  of
the  corporate office building and land in fiscal 2002.  Net cash
provided  by financing activities increased to $371,000  for  the
year  ended  March  31, 2003, as compared to  net  cash  used  in
financing  activities of $1,609,000 for the year ended March  31,
2002.   This increase relates directly to proceeds received  upon
the exercise of stock options and warrants offset by repayment of
the   line  of  credit  in  fiscal  2003,  as  compared  to   the
satisfaction of the mortgage in fiscal 2002.



                                17



   Since  inception, the Company has primarily funded its  growth
through the private placement of securities.  In April 1998,  the
Company  raised an additional $888,000 of net proceeds  from  the
private  placement  of  250,000 shares of  Convertible  Preferred
Stock.   In  February  1999,  the  Company  raised  approximately
$819,000  of  net  proceeds from the sale of  330,333  shares  of
common  stock.   In  November 2000 the Company raised  $2,000,000
from  the  private  placement  of  10,000,000  shares  of  equity
securities.   The   Company   had  financed   certain   equipment
acquisitions  with  capital leases, as  of  March  31,  2003  the
Company had no outstanding lease commitments.

   On May  31,  2001, the Company sold their 50,000  square  foot
office  building, which houses the Company's principal  executive
offices  and warehouse, to an unrelated third party.  The Company
received  gross  proceeds of $2,150,000, of  which  approximately
$1,561,000  was  used to pay off the mortgage,  and  the  Company
recognized  a  loss on the sale of approximately  $185,000.   The
Company  then  entered into a five-year term lease agreement  for
20,000  of  the 50,000 square foot Pompano Beach office building.
On  February 22, 2002, the Company entered into a lease  addendum
which  added approximately 12,000 square feet, effective June  1,
2002, to accommodate the Company's warehouse expansion.

   On  July  22,  2002, the Company executed an  agreement  which
increased  the  line of credit from $150,000 to  $1,000,000.   On
March  18,  2003,  the  Company  increased  the  line  of  credit
agreement  from $1,000,000 to $2,000,000, effective through  July
22,  2004.   The  interest rate is at the  published  thirty  day
London  Interbank Offered Rates ("LIBOR") plus  2.65%  (3.92%  at
March  31,  2003), and contains various financial  and  operating
covenants.   At March 31, 2003, there was no outstanding  balance
under the line of credit agreement.

   On March 12, 2002, the Company entered into a $205,000,  three
year  term loan agreement with a bank, with interest accruing  at
the  lending institution's base rate plus 1% (5.25% at March  31,
2003).   The  loan  proceeds were used  to  purchase  a  $250,000
computer  server.  The aggregate loan maturities are $68,000  per
year  for three years.  The line of credit and the term loan  are
secured by substantially all of the Company's assets.

   Presently, the Company has approximately $650,000 planned  for
capital  expenditure commitments to further the Company's  growth
and the addition of backup computer equipment to sustain business
during  an  outage,  during fiscal 2004,  which  will  be  funded
through  cash  from operations.  Other than working  capital  and
credit  line,  the  Company presently has  no  other  alternative
source  of  working capital.  For the year ended March 31,  2001,
the  Company had incurred significant operating losses  and  cash
flow  deficiencies.  However, for the year ended March  31,  2003
and  2002  the Company had net income of $3,258,000 and $825,000,
and  has  sustained profitability for seven consecutive quarters.
The Company may seek to raise additional capital through the sale
of  equity  securities.   No assurances can  be  given  that  the
Company  will be successful in obtaining additional  capital,  or
that  such capital will be available in terms acceptable  to  the
Company.   At this time, the Company has no commitments or  plans
to   obtain  additional  capital.   Further,  there  can  be   no
assurances that even if such additional capital is obtained  that
the Company will sustain profitability or positive cash flow.

Recent Accounting Pronouncements

   The Company does not believe that any recently issued, but not
yet  effective, accounting standards, if currently adopted,  will
have  a  material effect on the Company's consolidated  financial
position, results of operations or cash flows.


Item 7.    Financial Statements.

   The  financial statements of the Company and the related notes
are set forth at pages F-1 through F-16 attached hereto.

Item  8.   Changes  In  and  Disagreements  with  Accountants  on
           Accounting and Financial Disclosure.

   On January 22, 2001, PetMed appointed Lopez Levi & Associates,
LLC, as its independent auditor and Lopez Levi & Associates,  LLC
accepted  such appointment.  PetMed has not consulted with  Lopez
Levi   &   Associates,  LLC  on  the  application  of  accounting
principles  to any completed or proposed transaction  or  on  the
type  of  audit opinion that might be given.  On April 24,  2001,
the Company terminated the engagement of Lopez Levi & Associates,
LLC  as  the Company's independent auditor.  There have  been  no
disagreements with Lopez Levi & Associates, LLC on any matters of
accounting   principles   or   practices,   financial   statement
disclosure,  or  auditing  scope and  procedures  which,  if  not
resolved  to  the  satisfaction of Lopez Levi & Associates,  LLC,
would  have caused Lopez Levi & Associates, LLC to make reference
to the matter in their report on PetMed's financial statements.

   On April 24, 2001, PetMed  appointed  Goldstein  Golub Kessler
LLP as its independent auditor and Goldstein  Golub  Kessler  LLP
accepted  such  appointment.   PetMed  had  not  consulted   with
Goldstein  Golub  Kessler LLP prior to their  engagement  as  our
independent auditors, on the application of accounting principles
to  any completed or proposed transaction or on the type of audit
opinion that might be given.  The decision to change audit  firms
was approved by our Board of Directors.



                                18



                            PART III

Item 9.  Directors,  Executive  Officers,  Promoters, and Control
         Persons; Compliance with Section 16(a)  of the  Exchange
         Act.

  Set forth below is information regarding the board of directors
and executive officers of the Company:




      Name                           Office                    Age
-----------------------   ---------------------------------    ---
                                                         
Marc  A. Puleo, M.D.      Chairman of the Board,
                          President and Corporate Secretary     40

Menderes Akdag            Chief Executive Officer               42
Bruce S. Rosenbloom       Chief Financial Officer and           34
                          Treasurer
Guven Kivilcim            Director                              30
Robert C. Schweitzer      Director                              56
Ronald J. Korn            Director                              63
Gian Fulgoni              Director                              55


  MARC  PULEO, M.D., age 40, has served as Chairman of our  Board
of  Directors since our inception in January 1996.  From  January
1996  until  March 2000, Dr. Puleo also served as our  President,
from January 1996 until March 2001, Dr. Puleo served as our Chief
Executive  Officer, from January 1996 until  May  2000,  and  Dr.
Puleo served as our Treasurer from January 1996 to May 2001.  Dr.
Puleo  has  also  been the President of South Florida  Anesthesia
Professionals,  an  entity located in Fort  Lauderdale,  Florida,
since founding that company in January 1996.  Dr. Puleo was  Vice
President  of Dynamic Press, Inc., an offset printing and  direct
marketing company, from June 1997 until June 1998.  Dr. Puleo, an
anesthesiologist,  was  employed  with  Anesthesia   Professional
Association,   North  Ridge  Medical  Center  and   North   Ridge
Outpatient  Surgery  Center from December 1994  through  December
1995.   Dr.  Puleo was an anesthesia resident with the University
of  Illinois  Hospitals and Clinics, the Michael Reese  Hospital,
the Westside Veteran's Administration Hospital, the University of
Illinois  Eye and Ear Infirmary, the Nathan Cummings Surgicenter,
and  the University of Illinois Pain Clinic, all located  in  the
Chicago,  Illinois  area,  from  July  1991  through  June  1994.
Dr.  Puleo  received his medical degree from  the  University  of
Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois.

  MENDERES AKDAG,  age 42, was appointed Chief Executive  Officer
on  March  16,  2001.   Prior  to joining  PetMed  Express,  from
November  2000  until  March  2001, Mr.  Akdag  served  as  Chief
Executive Officer of International Cosmetics Marketing Co.  d/b/a
Beverly Sassoon & Co., a publicly held (OTCBB: ICMK) direct sales
company  distributing skin care and nutritional  products.   From
May  1991  until  August 2000, Mr. Akdag  was  employed  by  Lens
Express,  Inc.,  a direct sales company distributing  replacement
contact  lenses,  serving as its President from  May  1996  until
August 2000, Chief Executive officer and a member of the Board of
Directors  from  August 1992 until May 1996, and Chief  Financial
Officer  and  a  member of the Board of Directors from  May  1991
until  August  1992.   On  December  14,  1998,  Netel  Inc.,   a
corporation in which Mr. Akdag served as a member of the Board of
Directors,  filed  a Petition for Chapter 11  bankruptcy  in  the
United States Bankruptcy Court Southern District of Florida.  The
proceeding  was styled IN RE: NETEL, INC., CASE NO. 98-28929-BKC-
PGH.  On  July  19, 1999, the Bankruptcy Court entered  an  Order
Confirming an Amended Chapter 11 Plan. On December 21, 1999,  the
Bankruptcy  Court entered a Final Decree, Discharge  of  Trustee,
and  closed  the  case.  Mr. Akdag holds a  Bachelor  of  Science
degree  in  Business Administration with a major in finance  from
the University of Florida where he graduated with high honors.

  BRUCE ROSENBLOOM, age 34, was appointed Chief Financial Officer
on May 30, 2001.  Mr. Rosenbloom served as the Manager of Finance
and  Financial Reporting of Cooker Restaurant Corporation, a $147
million, 65 location, publicly held (OTCBB: CGRT) restaurant,  in
West Palm Beach, Florida, from December 2000 until May 2001.  Mr.
Rosenbloom's duties included all internal and external  reporting
including all SEC filings and Annual Report to Shareholders.  Mr.
Rosenbloom  was a senior audit accountant for Deloitte  &  Touche
LLP,  an international accounting firm, West Palm Beach, Florida,
from  January  1996  until  December 2000.   Mr.  Rosenbloom  was
responsible  for  planning and conducting all  aspects  of  audit
engagements  for clients in various industries, including  direct
marketing, healthcare, manufacturing, financial institutions, and
professional service firms.  From August of 1992 to May of  1995,
Mr.    Rosenbloom    was   an   Account   Executive    for    MCI
Telecommunications.    Mr.   Rosenbloom,   a   certified   public
accountant,  received a Bachelor of Science degree in  Accounting
from Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida in 1996 and
a  Bachelor  of  Arts degree in Economics from the University  of
Texas, Austin, Texas in 1992.

  GUVEN  KIVILCIM, age 30, has  been a member  of  our  Board  of
Directors since November 2000. Since December 1997, Mr.  Kivilcim
has  been President and Director of Radiant Telecom, Inc., a long
distance telecommunications company.  Mr. Kivilcim is a member of
Tricon  Holdings, LLC, which is the principal shareholder of  the
Company.  From 1995 to present, Mr. Kivilcim has been employed as
a   Vice  President  with  Tel3.com  and  a  managing  member  of
Intelligent   Switching  and  Software,   Inc.,   long   distance
telecommunications companies.  Mr. Kivilcim is also Secretary and
Treasurer of Next Communications, Inc. and Secretary and Director
of Ntera, Inc.

  ROBERT  C.  SCHWEITZER, age 56, was the Regional  President  of
Union  Planters  Bank for Broward and Palm Beach  County  Florida
markets from April 1999 to December 2002.  Prior to joining Union
Planters, Mr. Schweitzer served as the Executive VP and  Head  of
Commercial  Banking for Barnett Bank/NationsBank in Jacksonville,
Florida from 1993 to 1999.  Other positions held include Director
and  Head  of  Real Estate Consulting for Coopers  &  Lybrand  in
Washington, D.C.; Senior VP and Manager of Central North  America
Real  Estate for the First National Bank of Chicago, and  Manager
of Domestic Credit Process Review; Senior VP & Manager of Central
North  American Banking for Wachovia Bank.  Mr. Schweitzer  holds
an  MBA from the University of North Carolina, and a Bachelor  of
Science degree from the United States Naval Academy.



                                19



   RONALD J. KORN, age 63, has been the President of Ronald  Korn
Consulting, a business consulting firm, since 1991.  He served as
the  Managing  Partner of KPMG, LLP's Miami office from  1985  to
1991.   Mr.  Korn held various positions including  Partner  with
KPMG, an international accounting firm, from 1961 until 1991.  He
has  served  as  a Director of TOUSA Homes, Inc. (formerly  Engle
Homes,  Inc.) since 1992, and a Director, Chairman of  the  Audit
Committee, and member of the Loan Committee of Horizon Bank,  FSB
since 1999. Mr. Korn previously served as a Director and Chairman
of  the  Audit  Committee  of Vacation  Break  U.S.A.,  Inc.  and
Magicworks Entertainment Corporation, and Non-Executive  Chairman
of  Carole Korn Interiors, Inc.    Mr. Korn holds a Juris  Doctor
degree from the New York University Law School and a Bachelor  of
Science  degree in Economics from the University of Pennsylvania,
Wharton School.

   GIAN FULGONI,  age  55,  has been the  Executive  Chairman  of
ComScore  Networks, Inc. since 1999.  From 1981 until  1998,  Mr.
Fulgoni  served  as  president and  chief  executive  officer  of
Information Resources, Inc. (IRIC: NASDAQ).  He was a  member  of
our  Board  of Directors from August 1999 through November  2000.
Mr.  Fulgoni  currently  serves as  a  member  of  the  Board  of
Directors  of Easter Seals, Chicago.  Mr. Fulgoni served  on  the
Board  of  Directors of Platinum Technology, Inc.  from  1990  to
1999,  U.S.  Robotics, Inc. from 1991 to 1994,  and  Yesmail.com,
Inc.  in 1999.  Educated in the U.K., Mr. Fulgoni holds a Masters
degree  in  Marketing  from the University  of  Lancaster  and  a
Bachelor  of  Science degree in Physics from  the  University  of
Manchester.

   On  November  13,  2002, Messrs. Kenneth  Jacobi  and  Huseyin
Kizanlikli,  members  of the Board of Directors  of  the  Company
resigned.   The  resignations were not related to a  disagreement
with   the  Company  on  any  matter  related  to  the  Company's
operations, policies or practices.  On November 14, 2002  through
November  19, 2002, the Company appointed four new board  members
to  its  Board  of  Directors.  Joining the  Company's  Board  of
Directors are Messrs. Robert C. Schweitzer, Ronald J. Korn,  Gian
Fulgoni,  and  the  Company's Chief Executive  Officer,  Menderes
Akdag.   Each  independent Board of Director will be  compensated
$10,000  annually, and were granted 30,000 stock options,  at  an
exercise  price  of  $1.90 per share, to purchase  the  Company's
Common Stock, which will vest equally over a three year period.

   There  are  no  familial  relationships  between  any  of  the
executive  officers and directors, however, Mr.  Kivilcim  is the
nephew  of  the  majority  shareholder,  Mustafa Yesil, who  owns
Tricon  Holdings, LLC.  Each director is elected  at  our  annual
meeting  of  shareholders and holds office until the next  annual
meeting  of  our shareholders, or until his or her  successor  is
elected  and qualified.  The bylaws permit the board of directors
to  fill  any vacancy and that director may serve until the  next
annual  meeting of stockholders or until his successor is elected
and qualified.

Committees of the Board of Directors

   The Board of Directors has established an audit committee  and
a  compensation  committee, both of which are comprised  of  non-
employee   independent  directors.   The  compensation  committee
establishes   guidelines   and   standards   relating   to    the
determination   of  executive  compensation,  reviews   executive
compensation  policies and recommends to our board  of  directors
compensation for our executive officers and other employees.  Our
compensation committee also administers our stock incentive  plan
and  determines the number of shares covered by,  and  terms  of,
options  to be granted to executive officers and other  employees
under this plan.

   The audit  committee recommends independent auditors,  reviews
internal   financial  information,  reviews  audit  reports   and
management  letters,  participates in the  determination  of  the
adequacy  of the internal accounting control system, reviews  the
results  of audits with independent auditors, oversees  quarterly
and   yearly   reporting,  and  is  responsible   for   policies,
procedures,  and  other matters relating to  business  integrity,
ethics   and  conflicts  of  interests.   The  members   of   the
compensation  and audit committees are Messrs. Schweitzer,  Korn,
and Fulgoni.

Compliance With Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act

   We  became a  reporting company under the Securities  Exchange
Act  of  1934  (the "Exchange Act") in March 2000.  Based  solely
upon  a  review of Forms 3 and 4 and amendments thereto furnished
to  us under Rule 16a-3(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
("Exchange  Act") through the fiscal year ended March  31,  2003,
the  Company is not aware of any person that failed to file on  a
timely  basis, as disclosed in the aforementioned forms,  reports
required  by Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act during the  fiscal
year ended March 31, 2003, except as follows:

   *   Tricon Holdings, LLC, ("Tricon") our majority shareholder,
       failed  to  file  a  Form 4 for  exercising  the  right to
       2,500,000 shares of our common stock in each  of the three
       months,  December 2000,  January 2001,  and February 2001.
       Additionally,  Tricon  failed  to  file a Form 4  for  the
       distribution  of 1,860,000 shares  of our common stock and
       540,000 warrants in November 2002  to  the  indirect
       beneficial owner,  Guven
       Kivilcim, a  director of  the  Company.   Such  delinquent
       reports were subsequently filed.

   *   Guven Kivilcim, a director of the  Company, failed to file
       a  Form 4  for  receiving  the  distribution  of 1,860,000
       shares  of our  common stock  and  540,000  warrants  from
       Tricon  in  November 2002.    Additionally,  Mr.  Kivilcim
       failed  to file  a Form 4  for  exercising  the  right  to
       500,000  shares of  our  common stock in each of the three
       months,  December 2000,  January 2001,  and February 2001,
       reflecting  the indirect  ownership of Tricon.   Also, Mr.
       Kivilcim  failed  to  file a Form 4  for his  purchase  of
       11,000 shares  of our  common stock in March 2001  and his
       spouse's   purchase  of a  total  of  26,000 shares of our
       common stock in  March, August, and September  2001.  Such
       delinquent reports were subsequently filed.



                                20



   *   Creslin Limited, ("Creslin"), our majority shareholder who
       holds  and  controls Tricon, failed  to file a Form 4  for
       exercising the  right  to  2,000,000 shares  of our common
       stock in each of the  three months, December 2000, January
       2001, and February 2001, reflecting the indirect ownership
       of Tricon.   Additionally, Creslin failed to file a Form 4
       for  the  following:  the sale  of 500,000  shares of  our
       common stock by Tricon in  September 2002, the issuance of
       300,000  shares of  our  common stock upon the exercise of
       stock  options  by  Tricon in September 2002, the  sale of
       225,000 shares  of our common stock by Tricon  in  October
       2002,  the distribution  of 1,860,000 shares of our common
       stock  and  540,000  warrants  in  November  2002  to  the
       indirect beneficial owner,  Guven Kivilcim, a director  of
       the  Company,  the  sale  of  125,000 shares of our common
       stock  by Tricon in March 2003, the sale of 200,000 shares
       of our common stock by Tricon in June 2003, reflecting the
       indirect  ownership  of Tricon.   Such  delinquent reports
       were subsequently filed.

   *   Marc Puleo, the Company's president, failed to file a Form
       4 upon  the  grant  of  600,000  options to  purchase  the
       Company's  common  stock  in  May 2000.   This  delinquent
       report was subsequently filed.


Item 10.    Executive Compensation.

  The  following  table  sets  forth  the  annual  and  long-term
compensation paid by us for services performed on our behalf  for
the  last three completed fiscal years ended March 31, 2003, 2002
and  2001, with respect to our chief executive officer and  other
executive  officers  serving  as  such  who  earned  compensation
greater than $100,000 in these fiscal years:

                   SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE



                                        Annual Compensation           Long-Term Compensation
                                   ----------------------------  -------------------------------
                                                                   Awards     Payouts
                                                     Other       Securities            All Other
                                                     Annual      Underlying    LTIP     Compen-
     Name and                                        Compen-      Options/    Payouts   sation
 Principal Position       Year     Salary    Bonus   sation ($)   SARs (#)      ($)       ($)
------------------------  ----     -------   ------  ----------  ----------   -------  ---------
                                                                  
Marc Puleo, M.D.,         2003  $  100,000   50,000    -           240,000       -         -
 Chairman of the Board    2002      88,462     -       -              -          -         -
 President                2001      85,000   15,000    -           200,000       -         -

Menderes Akdag,           2003     200,000     -       -              -          -         -
 Chief Executive Officer  2002     176,923     -       -              -          -         -
                          2001       6,000     -       -           750,000       -         -

Bruce S. Rosenbloom,      2003     100,000      500    -              -          -         -
 Chief Financial Officer  2002      77,962     -       -            75,000       -         -
                          2001        -        -       -              -          -         -


Employment Agreements

   On  March  16,  2001, the Company entered into  an  employment
agreement  with  Menderes Akdag to serve as the  Company's  Chief
Executive  Officer.  Under the terms of this three-year agreement
the  Company will pay Mr. Akdag an annual salary of $150,000  for
the  first six months of the agreement, and thereafter his annual
salary  will be increased to $200,000.  The Company can terminate
the  employment  of Mr. Akdag either upon mutual consent  or  for
cause.   If the Company should terminate Mr. Akdag for cause,  or
if Mr. Akdag should terminate the agreement without "good reason"
as  described in the employment agreement, no severance  benefits
shall be paid.  If the Company should terminate Mr. Akdag without
cause,  the  Company must give Mr. Akdag three months notice  and
continue  to  compensate him under the terms of  this  employment
agreement  during those three months.  At the end of  the  three-
month  period, the Company must pay Mr. Akdag severance  benefits
equal  to  the  annual  base salary of  the  executive,  and  any
previously  granted but unvested options shall immediately  vest.
The  agreement can be terminated upon the mutual consent  of  the
parties, or upon 90 days notice by the Company during which  time
the  Company shall continue to compensate him under the terms  of
his  employment  agreement.  The Company also granted  Mr.  Akdag
options to purchase 750,000 shares of its common stock under  the
Company's 1998 Stock Option Plan at an exercise price of $.32 per
share, which vest at the rate of 187,500 options on each of March
16,  2001, 2002, 2003 and 2004, exercisable for a period of three
years  from  the  date  of  vesting.   The  employment  agreement
contains customary non-disclosure provisions, as well as  a  non-
competition  restriction for a period of 18 months following  the
termination of the agreement.



                                21



   On   May 1, 2000,   the   Company  entered  into  a   two-year
employment  agreement with  Marc Puleo, M.D.,  as Chief Executive
Officer, which provided for  annual cash  compensation  to him of
$150,000.   On November 8, 2000, Dr. Puleo's employment agreement
dated  May 1, 2000  was amended to  reflect a  salary  of $75,000
annually.   Under the terms of the employment agreement Dr. Puleo
received an annual salary of $75,000, subject to increase no less
frequent than  an annual  review by  our board of directors.  Dr.
Puleo's  salary  was  increased to $100,000  in Fiscal 2002,  and
than increased to $150,000 in May 2003. The Company can terminate
the employment of  Dr. Puleo  either  upon mutual  consent or for
cause.  If the Company should  terminate Dr. Puleo for  cause, or
if Dr. Puleo should terminate the agreement without "good reason"
as described  in the employment  agreement, no severance benefits
shall be paid.  If the Company should terminate Dr. Puleo without
cause, the  Company  must give Dr. Puleo  three months notice and
continue to compensate  him under the  terms of  this  employment
agreement  during  those three months.  At the  end of the three-
month period, the Company  must pay Dr. Puleo  severance benefits
equal  to  the annual  base  salary  of the  executive,  and  any
previously  granted but unvested options  shall immediately vest.
If the Company  should terminate  Dr. Puleo for cause, as defined
in  employment agreement,  no severance  benefits shall  be paid.
The  agreement can be  terminated upon the mutual consent  of the
parties, or upon 90 days  notice by the Company during which time
the Company shall continue  to compensate him  under the terms of
his employment agreement, or his contract will renew annually.

Stock Options
-------------

Non-Plan Options Agreements

   As  of June 13, 2003, options to purchase 91,500 shares of our
common  stock,  at  an  exercise price of $1.33  per  share,  was
outstanding.

1998 Stock Option Plan

   The Plan, adopted July 1998, provides for the grant of options
to  purchase  up to 5 million shares to key employees,  including
officers,  and  to  non-employee directors and  consultants.  The
purpose of this plan is to attract and retain persons eligible to
participate  in  the plan, motivate participants to  achieve  our
long-term goals by further aligning the interests of participants
with  those  of  our  stockholders through compensation  that  is
directly  linked  to  the  profitability  of  our  business   and
increases  in  stockholder value. These options are  intended  to
qualify  either as incentive stock options within the meaning  of
Section  422  of  the Internal Revenue Code, or as  non-statutory
stock  options, which are options that are not intended  to  meet
the requirements of that section of the Internal Revenue Code.

   The  plan is administered by the compensation committee. Under
the  plan,  our  compensation  committee  has  the  authority  to
determine:  the  persons to whom options  will  be  granted,  the
number of shares to be covered by each option, exercise price  of
each  option,  whether the options granted  are  intended  to  be
incentive  stock options, the manner of exercise, and  the  time,
manner and form of payment upon exercise of an option.

   Incentive  stock options granted under the  plan  may  not  be
granted at a price less than the fair market value of our  common
stock  on the date of grant (or less than 110% of the fair market
value  in the case of employees holding 10% or more of our voting
stock). Non-statutory options may be granted at an exercise price
established  by our board of directors, but cannot be  less  than
par  value per share ($.001) of our common stock. Incentive stock
options granted under the plan must expire not more than 10 years
from  the  date of grant, and not more than five years  from  the
date  of  grant  in the case of incentive options granted  to  an
employee who holds 10% or more of our voting stock.

   As  of June 13, 2003, options to purchase 2,158,434 shares  of
our  common stock, at exercise prices ranging from $.32 to  $4.50
per share, were outstanding under the Plan.

  The  following table sets forth certain information  concerning
grants  of  options  to the Named Executive Officers  during  the
fiscal year ended March 31, 2003.



                                22



        OPTION GRANTS FOR FISCAL YEAR ENDED MARCH 31, 2003


                      Individual Grants
                          Number of             Percent of
                         Securities            Total Options
                         Underlying               granted       Exercise or
                       Options Granted         to Employees     Base Price    Expiration
      Name                (shares)            in Fiscal Year     ($/share)       Date
-------------------   -----------------       --------------   ------------  ------------
                                                                 
Marc Puleo, M.D.          240,000       (a)          100%      $   1.05      May 20, 2006

Menderes Akdag               -          (b)           -             -              -

Bruce S. Rosenbloom          -          (b)           -             -              -



  (a)  The Company granted Mr. Puleo options to purchase 240,000
       shares of its common stock on May 20, 2002, under the Company's
       1998 Stock Option Plan: 240,000 options at an exercise price of
       $1.05 per share which vest at the rate of 80,000 options on each
       of May 20, 2003, 2004, and 2005.

  (b)  No options were issued during fiscal 2003.


  The  following  table  sets forth, as of March  31,  2003,  the
number  of  stock  options  and the value  of  unexercised  stock
options held by the Named Executive Officers and the exercises of
stock  options during the year ended March 31, 2003 by the  Named
Executive Officers.


  AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES AND FISCAL YEAR-END STOCK OPTION VALUES



                                                    Number of Securities               Value of Unexercised
                        Shares                     Underlying Unexercised              In-the-Money Options
                     Acquired on    Value       Options at Fiscal Year End (#)    Options at Fiscal Year End($)(1)
      Name           Exercise (#)  Realized($)  Exercisable     Unexercisable     Exercisable     Unexercisable
-------------------  ------------  -----------  -----------     -------------     -----------     -------------
                                                                                

Marc Puleo, M.D.       300,000     $ 207,000      1,400,000           240,000     $ 1,734,000     $     314,400

Menderes Akdag         375,000       648,750        187,500           187,500         382,500           382,500

Bruce S. Rosenbloom       -             -            25,000            50,000          24,333            48,667


(1)  Represents the difference between the closing price  ($2.36)
     of the Company's Common stock on March 31, 2003, the last trading
     day of the Company's 2003 fiscal year, and the exercise price of
     the options.



                                23



Item  11.    Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners  and
             Management.

  As  of  June  13,  2003, there were 19,105,044  shares  of  the
Company's  common stock issued and outstanding.  These securities
represent  all  of  the Company's issued and  outstanding  voting
securities.  The following table sets forth, as of the  close  of
business  on June 13, 2003, (a) the name and number of shares  of
each  person known by us to be the beneficial owner of more  than
5%  of  the class of stock; and (b) the number of shares of these
securities owned by each executive officer and director, (c)  and
all  executive  officers and directors as a group, together  with
their  respective percentage holdings of such shares.  Beneficial
ownership is determined in accordance with the rules of the  SEC,
and generally includes voting or investment power with respect to
securities, and includes any securities, which the person has the
right to acquire within 60 days after June 13, 2003, through  the
conversion or exercise of any security or other right.  Except as
otherwise  specifically set forth herein,  the  following  tables
give  no  effect to the exercise of any outstanding stock options
or  warrants.  Unless otherwise indicated, the address  for  each
person is 1441 SW 29 Avenue, Pompano Beach, Florida 33069.




       Name                     Number of Shares        Percent of Shares
of Beneficial Owner             Beneficially Owned         Outstanding
-------------------             ------------------      -----------------
                                                   

Tricon Holdings, LLC                     9,550,000  (a)       44.9%
Marc Puleo, M.D.                         2,934,250  (b)       14.7%
Guven Kivilcim                           2,346,000  (c)       11.9%
International Consultants, LLC           1,111,000  (d)        5.8%
Menderes Akdag                             562,500  (e)        2.9%
Bruce S. Rosenbloom                         43,767  (f)         *
Robert C. Schweitzer                         2,000  (g)         *
Ronald J. Korn                                -     (g)         -
Gian Fulgoni                                  -     (g)         -
All executive officers and
  directors as a group
  (seven persons)                        5,888,517            28.4%

----------------

* Less than 1% of the issued and outstanding shares.

   (a) Tricon   Holdings,  LLC,   ("Tricon")   holdings   include
       2,160,000 shares issuable  upon  exercise  of  warrants at
       $.33  per  share,  until November 2005.  Guven Kivilcim, a
       director  of  the  Company,  and  Ken  Jacobi and  Huseyin
       Kizanlikli,  former  directors  of  the  Company, are  the
       members  of  Tricon.  Creslin  Limited  ("Creslin") is the
       sole shareholder  of  Tricon.   Mr.  Robert  G.  Guest  is
       the  officer,  and  Mr. Guest and Christopher J.  Pitaluga
       are the  directors of Creslin.  Creslin Limited Trust owns
       99% of Creslin.   Abacus Trustees (Gibraltar) Limited   is
       the trustee and Mustafa Yesil  is the  beneficiary  of the
       Creslin Limited Trust.    The  address for  Tricon is 1020
       N.W. 163rd Drive,  Miami, FL 33169.

   (b) Dr.  Puleo's  holdings  include  2,054,250  shares  of our
       common stock held by Marpul Trust, a trust established  by
       Dr.  Puleo under an agreement dated September 3, 1999  and
       of   which   he   is  the  beneficiary.   Southpac   Trust
       International,  Inc. is a trustee of  Marpul  Trust.   Dr.
       Puleo's holdings also include vested options held  by  him
       to  purchase 600,000 shares of common stock at  $1.25  per
       share  until May 2008, 200,000 shares of common  stock  at
       $.35  per  share  until March 2006, and 80,000  shares  of
       common  stock  at  $1.05 per share  until  May  2006,  but
       exclude  options to purchase an additional 160,000  shares
       of common stock at $1.05, which have not vested yet.

   (c) Mr. Kivilcim  is a member  of Tricon, his holdings include
       540,000 shares  issuable upon  the excerise of warrants at
       $.33 per share, until November, 2005.

   (d) As  reflected  on  the schedule 13G, which  was  filed  on
       September   25,   2002.   The  address  for  International
       Consultants,  LLC is 45 Grand Bay Drive, Key Biscayne,  FL
       33149.

   (e) Mr. Akdag's  holdings include vested options  to  purchase
       187,500  shares  of common stock at $.32 per  share  until
       March  2006, but exclude options to purchase an additional
       187,500  shares of common stock at $.32 per  share,  which
       has not yet vested.

   (f) Mr. Rosenbloom's  holdings  include  options  to  purchase
       16,667  shares  of common stock at $1.65 per  share  until
       May  2005,  16,667  shares of common stock  at  $1.65  per
       share until May 2006, and 8,333 shares of common stock  at
       $.86  per  share until March 2006, but exclude options  to
       purchase  an additional 16,666 shares of common  stock  at
       $1.65  per  share, 16,667 shares of common stock  at  $.86
       per  share, and 15,000 shares of common stock at $3.45 per
       share which has not yet vested.

   (g) Mr. Schweitzer's,  Mr. Korn's, and Mr. Fulgoni's  holdings
       exclude  options to purchase an additional  30,000  shares
       of  common  stock at $1.90 per share, which have  not  yet
       vested.



                                24



Limitation of Liability and Indemnification Matters

   Our  amended  and  restated articles of incorporation  contain
provisions  which  eliminate  the  personal  liability   of   our
directors  to  us  or our stockholders for monetary  damages  for
breach  of  their  fiduciary duty as a director  to  the  fullest
extent permitted by the Florida Business Corporations Act, except
for  liability: for any breach of their duty of loyalty to us  or
our stockholders; for act or omissions not in good faith or which
involve intentional misconduct or a knowing violation of law; for
unlawful  payments of dividends or unlawful stock repurchases  or
redemptions;  or  for  any transaction from  which  the  director
derived an improper personal benefit.

   These  provisions do not affect a director's  responsibilities
under  any other laws, including the federal securities laws  and
state and federal environmental laws.



Item 12.    Certain Relationships and Related Transactions.

  Guven  Kivilcim, a member of Tricon Holdings, LLC and a  member
of   the  Company's  board  of  directors,  has  an  interest  in
Intelligent  Switching  &  Software  LLC,  and  Numind   Software
Systems,  Inc.,  with which the Company conducted  business  with
during   the  fiscal  years  ended  March  31,  2003  and   2002.
Intelligent  Switching & Software LLC provided the  Company  with
long  distance  telecommunication services, and  Numind  Software
Systems,  Inc.  provided the Company with  Internet  and  website
design  and  hosting  services.  The Company  paid  $154,000  and
$64,000 to Intelligent Switching & Software LLC, and $45,000  and
$0  to  Numind  Software Systems, Inc., for services  during  the
fiscal  years  ended March 31, 2003 and 2002, respectively.   The
Company  owed  $5,000  and  $64,000 to  Intelligent  Switching  &
Software LLC, and $14,000 and $37,000 to Numind Software Systems,
Inc.,  which  were  included  in the Company's  accounts  payable
balance as of March 31, 2003 and 2002, respectively.  As  of  the
date,  hereof, the Company no longer conducts business with these
companies.

   The  Company  believes that transactions  with  our  officers,
directors and principal stockholders have been made upon terms no
less  favorable  to  us than we might receive  from  unaffiliated
third  parties.   The  Company has adopted a policy  whereby  all
transactions between us and one or more of our affiliates must be
approved in advance by a majority of our disinterested directors.



















                                25




Item 13.    Exhibits and Reports on Form 8-K.

(a) Documents filed as part of this Form 10-K.

  (1)  Consolidated Financial Statements

 The following exhibits are filed as part of this Form 10-K.

  (3)  Articles of Incorporation and By-Laws.

  3.1     Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation (1)

  3.2     By-Laws of the Corporation (1)

  (4)  Instruments Defining the Rights of Security Holders.

  4.1      Form   of  Warrant   issued  to  Noble   International
           Investments, Inc. (1)

  4.2      Specimen common stock certificate (1)

  (10) Material Contracts  (*Management contract or  compensatory
       plan or arrangement.)

  10.1     Second  Amended  and  Restated  Employment   Agreement
           with   Marc A. Puleo  (incorporated  by  reference  to
           Exhibit 10.1 of the Registrant's Annual Report on Form
           10-KSB  for  the  fiscal  year  ended  March 31, 2000,
           Commission File No. 000-28827).

  10.2     1998 Stock Option Plan (1)

  10.3     Line of Credit Agreement with SouthTrust Bank, N.A.(1)

  10.4     Employment Agreement with Menderes Akdag (incorporated
           by reference to  Exhibit 10 of the  Registrant's  Form
           8-K on March 16, 2001, Commission File No. 000-28827)*

  10.5     Agreement  for the Sale  and Leaseback  of the Land and
           Building. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.1 of
           the Registrant's  Form 8-K on June 14, 2001, Commission
           File No. 000-28827).

  10.6     Line of  Credit Renewal Agreement with SouthTrust Bank,
           N.A. (1).

  10.7     Loan Agreement with SouthTrust Bank, N.A. (1).

  10.8     Second  Line  of  Credit ($1,000,000)  Agreement  with
           SouthTrust Bank, N.A. (1)

  10.9     Third  Line  of  Credit  ($2,000,000)  Agreement  with
           SouthTrust Bank, N.A. (filed herewith).

  (16)     Letter regarding Change in Certifying Accountant.

  16.1     Letter from Lopez, Levi, & Associates  LLC,  regarding
           change  in  certifying  accountants.  (incorporated by
           reference  to Exhibit 16 of the Registrant's  Form 8-K
           on April 24, 2001, Commission File No. 000-28827).

  (21) Subsidiaries of Registrant.

  21.1     Subsidiaries of Registrant (filed herewith).

  (99) Certifications.

  99.1     Certification of  Principal Executive Officer Pursuant
           to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350 (filed herewith).

  99.2     Certification of  Principal Financial Officer Pursuant
           to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350 (filed herewith).

-----------------------------

(1)  Incorporated  by reference to  the Registration Statement on
     Form 10-SB,  File No. 000-28827,  as amended,  as filed with
     the Securities and Exchange Commission.



                                26



(b)       Reports on Form 8-K.

(1)  On November 20, 2002 the Company filed a report under Item 5
     disclosing other events relating to the addition and resignation
     on certain members of the Board of Directors.  (incorporated by
     reference of the Registrant's Form 8-K on November 20, 2002,
     Commission File No. 000-28827).


Item 14.    Controls and Procedures.

  The Company's management, including our Chief Executive Officer
and  Chief Financial Officer, have conducted an evaluation of the
effectiveness  of  our  disclosure controls  and  procedures  (as
defined  in  Rule 13a-14(c) promulgated under the Securities  and
Exchange  Act  of  1934, as amended) as of  June  13,  2003  (the
"Evaluation  Date") within 90 days prior to the  filing  date  of
this  report.  Based  upon that evaluation, our  Chief  Executive
Officer  and  Chief  Financial Officer have concluded,  that  our
disclosure  controls  and  procedures are  effective  for  timely
gathering,  analyzing  and  disclosing  the  information  we  are
required  to  disclose in our reports filed under the  Securities
Exchange  Act of 1934, as amended. There have been no significant
changes  made  in our internal controls or in other factors  that
could  significantly affect our internal controls  subsequent  to
the Evaluation Date.





























                                27



                           SIGNATURES

  In accordance with Section 13 or 15(d) of the Exchange Act, the
registrant  caused this report to be signed on its behalf by  the
undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.


Dated: June 13, 2003         PETMED EXPRESS, INC.
                             (the "Registrant")

                             By: /s/ Menderes Akdag
                                -------------------------------
                                 Menderes Akdag
                                 Chief Executive Officer
                                 (principal executive officer)



  In accordance with the Exchange Act, this report has been
signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant
and in the capacities and on June 13, 2003.

    SIGNATURE                     TITLE



/s/ Menderes Akdag            Chief Executive Officer
--------------------------    (principal executive officer)
Menderes Akdag                Officer and Director



/s/ Marc Puleo, M.D.          Chairman of the Board and President
--------------------------    Officer and Director
Marc Puleo, M.D.



/s/ Bruce S. Rosenbloom       Chief Financial Officer and
--------------------------    Treasurer
Bruce S. Rosenbloom           (principal financial and accounting
                              officer)
                              Officer


/s/ Guven Kivilcim            Director
--------------------------
Guven Kivilcim




/s/ Robert C. Schweitzer      Director
--------------------------
Robert C. Schweitzer




/s/ Ronald J. Korn            Director
--------------------------
Ronald J. Korn




/s/ Gian Fulgoni              Director
--------------------------
Gian Fulgoni






                                28



                          CERTIFICATION

     I, MENDERES AKDAG, certify that:

     1.   I have reviewed this annual report on Form 10-KSB
          of PetMed Express, Inc.;

     2.   Based  on  my knowledge, this annual report  does
          not  contain any untrue statement of  a  material
          fact  or  omit to state a material fact necessary
          to  make  the  statements made, in light  of  the
          circumstances  under which such  statements  were
          made,  not misleading with respect to the  period
          covered by this annual report;

     3.   Based  on my knowledge, the financial statements,
          and  other financial information included in this
          annual  report,  fairly present in  all  material
          respects  the  financial  condition,  results  of
          operations  and cash flows of the  registrant  as
          of, and for, the periods presented in this annual
          report;

     4.   The registrant's other certifying officers and  I
          are  responsible for establishing and maintaining
          disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in
          Exchange  Act  Rules 13a-14 and 15d-14)  for  the
          registrant and have:

          a.   designed   such  disclosure   controls   and
               procedures    to   ensure   that    material
               information   relating  to  the  registrant,
               including its consolidated subsidiaries,  is
               made  known  to  us by others  within  those
               entities, particularly during the period  in
               which this annual report is being prepared;

          b.   evaluated   the   effectiveness    of    the
               registrant's    disclosure   controls    and
               procedures as of a date within 90 days prior
               to  the  filing  date of this annual  report
               (the "Evaluation Date"); and

          c.   presented   in   this  annual   report   our
               conclusions about the effectiveness  of  the
               disclosure controls and procedures based  on
               our evaluation as of the Evaluation Date.

     5.   The registrant's other certifying officers and  I
          have   disclosed,  based  on  our   most   recent
          evaluation, to the registrant's auditors and  the
          audit  committee  of  the registrant's  board  of
          directors  (or persons performing the  equivalent
          functions):

          a.   all  significant deficiencies in the  design
               or  operation  of  internal  controls  which
               could   adversely  affect  the  registrant's
               ability  to  record, process, summarize  and
               report  financial data and  have  identified
               for  the  registrant's auditors any material
               weaknesses in internal controls; and

          b.   any  fraud,  whether or not  material,  that
               involves  management or other employees  who
               have  a significant role in the registrant's
               internal controls; and

     6.   The registrant's other certifying officers and  I
          have  indicated  in  this annual  report  whether
          there   were  significant  changes  in   internal
          controls   or   in  other  factors   that   could
          significantly affect internal controls subsequent
          to  the  date  of  our  most  recent  evaluation,
          including  any corrective actions with regard  to
          significant deficiencies and material weaknesses.

     Date: June 13, 2003


     By: /s/ Menderes Akdag
        ---------------------------
        Menderes Akdag
        Chief Executive Officer




                                29



                          CERTIFICATION

     I, BRUCE S. ROSENBLOOM, certify that:

     1.   I have reviewed this annual report on Form 10-KSB
          of PetMed Express, Inc.;

     2.   Based  on  my knowledge, this annual report  does
          not  contain any untrue statement of  a  material
          fact  or  omit to state a material fact necessary
          to  make  the  statements made, in light  of  the
          circumstances  under which such  statements  were
          made,  not misleading with respect to the  period
          covered by this annual report;

     3.   Based  on my knowledge, the financial statements,
          and  other financial information included in this
          annual  report,  fairly present in  all  material
          respects  the  financial  condition,  results  of
          operations  and cash flows of the  registrant  as
          of, and for, the periods presented in this annual
          report;

     4.   The registrant's other certifying officers and  I
          are responsible for establishing for establishing
          and    maintaining   disclosure   controls    and
          procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-
          14 and 15d-14) for the registrant and have:

          a.   designed   such  disclosure   controls   and
               procedures    to   ensure   that    material
               information   relating  to  the  registrant,
               including its consolidated subsidiaries,  is
               made  known  to  us by others  within  those
               entities, particularly during the period  in
               which this annual report is being prepared;

          b.   evaluated   the   effectiveness    of    the
               registrant's    disclosure   controls    and
               procedures as of a date within 90 days prior
               to  the  filing  date of this annual  report
               (the "Evaluation Date"); and

          c.   presented   in   this  annual   report   our
               conclusions about the effectiveness  of  the
               disclosure controls and procedures based  on
               our evaluation as of the Evaluation Date.

     5.   The registrant's other certifying officers and  I
          have   disclosed,  based  on  our   most   recent
          evaluation, to the registrant's auditors and  the
          audit  committee  of  the registrant's  board  of
          directors  (or persons performing the  equivalent
          functions):

          a.   all  significant deficiencies in the  design
               or  operation  of  internal  controls  which
               could   adversely  affect  the  registrant's
               ability  to  record, process, summarize  and
               report  financial data and  have  identified
               for  the  registrant's auditors any material
               weaknesses in internal controls; and

          b.   any  fraud,  whether or not  material,  that
               involves  management or other employees  who
               have  a significant role in the registrant's
               internal controls: and

     6.   The registrant's other certifying officers and  I
          have  indicated  in  this annual  report  whether
          there   were  significant  changes  in   internal
          controls   or   in  other  factors   that   could
          significantly affect internal controls subsequent
          to  the  date  of  our  most  recent  evaluation,
          including  any corrective actions with regard  to
          significant deficiencies and material weaknesses.

     Date: June 13, 2003


     By: /s/ Bruce S. Rosenbloom
        ------------------------------
         Bruce S. Rosenbloom
         Chief Financial Officer




                                30



_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________




                          UNITED STATES

               SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

                     Washington, D.C. 20549


                     _______________________



                      PETMED EXPRESS, INC.


                     _______________________



                    Form 10-KSB ANNUAL REPORT


                   FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED:

                         MARCH 31, 2003



                     _______________________


                CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                     _______________________






_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________





              PETMED EXPRESS, INC AND SUBSIDIARIES

           INDEX TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                                                        Page


Independent Auditor's Report..........................   F-2

Consolidated Balance Sheet as of March 31, 2003.......   F-3

Consolidated Statements of Income for the fiscal
  years ended March 31, 2003 and March 31, 2002.......   F-4

Consolidated Statements of Changes in
Shareholders' Equity for the fiscal years ended
March 31, 2003 and March 31, 2002.....................   F-5

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the
fiscal years ended March 31, 2003 and
March 31, 2002 .......................................   F-6

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements............ F-7-F-16














                               F-1




                  INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT


To the Board of Directors and Shareholders
PetMed Express, Inc. and Subsidiaries

We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheet of
PetMed Express, Inc. and Subsidiaries (the "Company") as of March
31, 2003, and the related consolidated statements of income,
changes in stockholders' equity and cash flows for each of the
two years in the period then ended.  These financial statements
are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our
responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial
statements based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with auditing standards
generally accepted in the United States of America.  Those
standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are
free of material misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a
test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in
the financial statements.  An audit also includes assessing the
accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement
presentation.  We believe that our audits provide a reasonable
basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above
present fairly, in all material respects, the consolidated
financial position of PetMed Express, Inc. and Subsidiaries at
March 31, 2003, and the results of their operations and their
cash flows for each of the two years in the period then ended, in
conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the
United States of America.





                                    /s/Goldstein Golub Kessler LLP
May 10, 2003                        ------------------------------
New York, New York                   Goldstein Golub Kessler LLP














                               F-2






               PETMED EXPRESS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                     CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET


                                                             March 31,
                                                                2003
                                                            -----------
                                ASSETS
                                ------

Current assets:
   Cash and cash equivalents                                $   984,169
   Accounts receivable, less allowance for
      doubtful accounts of $16,644                              651,883
   Inventories                                                4,268,146
   Prepaid expenses and other current assets                    478,108
                                                            -----------
          Total current assets                                6,382,306

   Property and equipment, net                                1,496,979
   Deferred income taxes                                        581,356
   Intangible asset                                             365,000
   Other assets                                                 200,155
                                                            -----------
Total assets                                                $ 9,025,796
                                                            ===========

               LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
               ------------------------------------

Current liabilities:
   Accounts payable and accrued expenses                    $ 3,296,223
   Current portion of loan obligation                            68,442
                                                            -----------
          Total current liabilities                           3,364,665

Loan obligation, less current portion                            68,443
                                                            -----------

Total liabilities                                             3,433,108
                                                            -----------

Commitments and contingencies

Shareholders' equity:
   Preferred stock, $.001 par value, 5,000,000
     shares authorized; 2,500 convertible shares
     issued and outstanding with a liquidation
     preference of $4 per share                                   8,898
   Common stock, $.001 par value, 40,000,000
     shares authorized; 18,460,878 shares issued
     and outstanding                                             18,461
   Additional paid-in capital                                 7,279,207
   Accumulated deficit                                       (1,713,878)
                                                            -----------
          Total shareholders' equity                          5,592,688
                                                            -----------

Total liabilities and shareholders' equity                  $ 9,025,796
                                                            ===========



   See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements




                               F-3



                 PETMED EXPRESS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME



                                              Year Ended March 31,
                                            -------------------------
                                               2003           2002
                                            -----------   -----------
                                                    
 Sales                                    $  54,974,916    32,025,931
 Cost of sales                               31,517,639    18,894,493
                                            -----------   -----------
 Gross profit                                23,457,277    13,131,438
                                            -----------   -----------

 Operating expenses:
   General and administrative                 7,956,786     6,094,493
   Advertising                               11,649,811     5,717,242
   Severance charges                               -          195,000
   Depreciation and amortization                367,673       376,763
                                            -----------   -----------
 Total operating expenses                    19,974,270    12,383,498
                                            -----------   -----------

 Income from operations                       3,483,007       747,940
                                            -----------   -----------

 Other income (expense):
   Adjustment of estimate for legal
     settlement                                    -          345,000
   Gain (loss) on disposal of property
     and equipment                               15,000      (314,332)
   Interest expense                             (30,658)      (48,835)
   Interest income                                6,973        18,582
   Other, net                                     6,084        77,058
                                            -----------   -----------
 Total other income (expense)                    (2,601)       77,473
                                            -----------   -----------

 Income before provision for income taxes     3,480,406       825,413

 Provision for income taxes                     222,841          -
                                            -----------   -----------
 Net income                               $   3,257,565       825,413
                                            ===========   ===========

 Net income per common share:
   Basic                                  $        0.19          0.05
                                            ===========   ===========
   Diluted                                $        0.16          0.04
                                            ===========   ===========

 Weighted average number of common
 shares outstanding:
   Basic                                     17,300,130    16,360,010
                                            ===========   ===========
   Diluted                                   20,749,515    19,739,493
                                            ===========   ===========



   See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements




                               F-4




                PETMED EXPRESS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY

          Fiscal years ended March 31, 2003 and March 31, 2002




                                  Convertible               Common           Additional
                                Preferred Stock             Stock             Paid-In     Accumulated
                             Shares        Amounts     Shares      Amounts    Capital       Deficit        Total
                             ---------------------   ---------------------   ----------   -----------    ---------
                                                                                    
Balance, March 31, 2001       2,500          8,898   16,360,010     16,360    6,528,885    (5,796,856)     757,287

  Net income                   -              -           -           -           -           825,413      825,413
                              -----        -------   ----------     ------    ---------   -----------    ---------
Balance, March 31, 2002       2,500          8,898   16,360,010     16,360    6,528,885    (4,971,443)   1,582,700

  Issuance of common
    stock from exercise of
    stock options              -              -       1,018,833      1,019      304,360          -         305,379
  Issuance of common
    stock from exercise of
    warrants                   -              -       1,082,035      1,082      274,375          -         275,457
  Tax benefit related to
    stock options exercised    -              -           -           -         171,587          -         171,587
  Net income                   -              -           -           -           -         3,257,565    3,257,565
                              -----        -------   ----------     ------    ---------   -----------    ---------
Balance, March 31, 2003       2,500          8,898   18,460,878     18,461    7,279,207    (1,713,878)   5,592,688






  See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements







                               F-5

             PETMED EXPRESS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
             CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS


                                                                       Year Ended March 31,
                                                                    -----------------------
                                                                      2003          2002
                                                                    ---------    ----------
                                                                           
 Cash flows from operating activities:
    Net income                                                    $ 3,257,565       825,413
    Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash
     provided by operating activities:
        Depreciation and amortization                                 367,673       376,763
        Tax benefit related to stock options exercised                171,587          -
        Amortization of deferred membership fee revenue                  -         (140,048)
        (Gain) loss on disposal of property and equipment             (15,000)      314,332
        Bad debt expense                                               15,027         6,862
        Deferred income taxes                                        (581,356)         -
        (Increase) decrease in operating assets and liabilities:
             Accounts receivable                                     (375,397)     (135,907)
             Inventories                                           (1,961,526)   (1,675,226)
             Prepaid expenses and other current assets               (329,500)     (126,494)
             Other assets                                            (150,000)      (42,500)
             Accounts payable and accrued expenses                    571,228     1,072,829
                                                                    ---------    ----------
 Net cash provided by operating activities                            970,301       476,024
                                                                    ---------    ----------

 Cash flows from investing activities:
    Net proceeds from the sale of property and equipment               15,000     2,016,921
    Purchases of property and equipment                              (744,596)     (555,645)
    Purchase of intangible asset                                     (365,000)         -
                                                                    ---------    ----------
 Net cash (used in) provided by investing activities               (1,094,596)    1,461,276
                                                                    ---------    ----------

 Cash flows from financing activities:
    Payments on mortgage payable                                         -       (1,566,833)
    Payments on capital lease obligations                                -         (247,209)
    (Payments) borrowings on loan agreement                           (68,442)      205,327
    Payments on line of credit agreement                             (141,214)         -
    Proceeds from the exercise of stock options and warrants          580,836          -
                                                                    ---------    ----------
 Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities                  371,180    (1,608,715)
                                                                    ---------    ----------

 Net increase in cash and cash equivalents                            246,885       328,585
 Cash and cash equivalents, at beginning of year                      737,284       408,699
                                                                    ---------    ----------
 Cash and cash equivalents, at end of year                        $   984,169       737,284
                                                                    =========    ==========


 Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information:

    Cash paid for interest                                        $    30,675        29,150
                                                                    =========    ==========
    Cash paid for income taxes                                    $   508,000          -
                                                                    =========    ==========




     See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements




                               F-6


           NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

(1)  Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

     Organization

     PetMed Express, Inc. and its subsidiaries, d/b/a 1-800-
     PetMeds, (the "Company") is a leading nationwide pet
     pharmacy.  The Company markets prescription and non-
     prescription pet medications, along with health and
     nutritional supplements, for cats and dogs direct to the
     consumer.

     The Company markets its products through national
     television, on-line and direct mail advertising campaigns,
     which aim to increase the recognition of the "1-800-PetMeds"
     brand name, increase traffic on its web site at
     www.1800PetMeds.com , acquire new customers, and maximize
     repeat purchases. The majority of all of the Company's sales
     are to residents of the United States.  The Company's
     executive offices are located in Pompano Beach, Florida.

     During the fiscal year ended March 31, 2001, the Company
     formed two wholly owned subsidiaries.  One company was
     formed to assist in the purchasing of products and the other
     for advertising.  The Company's fiscal year end is March 31.
     References herein to fiscal 2003 or 2002 refer to the
     Company's fiscal years ended March 31, 2003 and 2002,
     respectively.

     Principles of Consolidation

     The consolidated financial statements include the accounts
     of the Company and its wholly owned subsidiaries.  All
     significant intercompany transactions have been eliminated
     in consolidation.

     Revenue Recognition

     The Company generates revenue by selling pet medication
     products primarily to retail consumers and minimally to
     wholesale customers.  The Company's policy is to recognize
     revenue from product sales upon shipment, when the rights of
     ownership and risk of loss have passed to the consumer.
     Outbound shipping and handling fees are included in sales
     and are billed upon shipment.  Shipping and handling
     expenses are included in cost of sales.

     The majority of the Company's sales are paid by credit cards
     and the Company usually receives the cash settlement in one
     to three banking days.  Credit card sales minimize our
     accounts receivable balances relative to our sales.  The
     Company maintains an allowance for doubtful accounts for
     losses that the Company estimates will arise from the
     customers' inability to make required payments, arising from
     either credit card charge-backs or insufficient fund checks.
     The Company determines its estimates of the uncollectibility
     of accounts receivable by analyzing historical bad debts and
     current economic trends.  At March 31, 2003 the allowance
     for doubtful accounts was approximately $17,000.

     Cash and Cash Equivalents

     The Company considers all highly liquid investments with
     maturity of three months or less when purchased to be cash
     equivalents.  Cash and cash equivalents at March 31, 2003,
     consist of the Company's cash accounts, overnight repurchase
     agreements, and short-term investments with a maturity of
     three months or less.  The carrying amount of cash
     equivalents approximates fair value.

     The Company maintains its cash in bank deposit accounts
     which, at times, may exceed federally insured limits.  The
     Company has not experienced any losses in such accounts.

     Use of Estimates

     The preparation of consolidated financial statements in
     conformity with generally accepted accounting principles in
     the United States of America requires management to make
     estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts
     of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent
     assets and liabilities at the date of the consolidated
     financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues
     and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results
     could differ from those estimates.


                               F-7




(1)  Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

     Inventories

     Inventories consist of prescription and non-prescription pet
     medications that are available for sale and are priced at
     the lower of cost or market value using a weighted average
     cost method.  The Company writes down its inventory for
     estimated obsolescence.  At March 31, 2003 the inventory
     reserve was approximately $87,000.

     Property and Equipment

     Property and equipment are stated at cost and depreciated
     using the straight-line method over the estimated useful
     lives of the assets.  The furniture, fixtures, equipment and
     computer software are depreciated over periods ranging from
     three to seven years.  Leasehold improvements and assets
     under capital lease agreements are amortized over the
     shorter of the underlying lease agreement or the useful life
     of the asset.

     Long-lived Assets

     Long-lived assets are reviewed for impairment whenever
     events or changes in circumstances indicate that the
     carrying amount may not be recoverable.  Recoverability of
     assets is measured by a comparison of the carrying amount of
     the asset to net future cash flows expected to be generated
     from the asset.

     Intangible Asset

     The intangible asset consists of a toll free telephone
     number, which the Company obtained in the quarter ended
     September 30, 2002.  The Company paid $365,000, to reimburse
     previously expended advertising costs relating to obtaining
     the rights to the toll free number.  In accordance with the
     Statement of Financial Accounting Standards ("SFAS") No.
     142, Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets, the intangible
     asset is not being amortized, and is subject to an annual
     review for impairment.

     Advertising

     The Company's advertising expense consists primarily of
     television advertising, internet marketing, catalog and
     postcard production, and mailing costs.  Television costs
     are expensed as the ads are televised and catalog and
     postcard costs are expensed when the related catalog and
     postcards are produced, distributed or superseded.

     Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation

     The Company accounts for employee stock options using the
     intrinsic value method as prescribed by Accounting
     Principles Board Opinion ("APB") No. 25, Accounting for
     Stock Issued to Employees.  The Company follows the
     disclosure provisions of SFAS No. 123, Accounting for Stock-
     Based Compensation, for employee stock options.  Had the
     Company determined employee compensation cost based on the
     fair value at the grant date for its stock options under
     SFAS No. 123, the Company's net income would have been
     decreased to the pro forma amounts indicated below:




Year Ended March 31,                        2003            2002
--------------------                      ---------       ---------
                                                 
Reported net income:                   $  3,257,565    $    825,413

Deduct: total stock-based employee
  compensation expense determined
  under fair-value based method
  for all awards, net of related
  tax effects                               285,258         129,465
                                          ---------       ---------
Proforma net income:                      2,972,307         695,948
                                          =========       =========

Reported basic net income per share:   $       0.19    $       0.05
                                          =========       =========

Proforma basic net income per share:   $       0.17    $       0.04
                                          =========       =========

Reported diluted net income per share: $       0.16    $       0.04
                                          =========       =========

Proforma diluted net income per share: $       0.14    $       0.04
                                          =========       =========



                               F-8


(1)  Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

     The per share weighted-average fair value of stock options
     granted during fiscal 2003 and 2002 was $1.28, and $.70,
     respectively, on the date of grant using the Black Scholes
     option-pricing model, as prescribed by SFAS No. 123, with
     the following weighted-average assumptions: dividend yield
     0.0 percent and 0.0 percent; risk-free interest rates of 4.0
     percent and 6.0 percent; expected lives of 3-5 years and 3-5
     years, and expected volatility of 62 percent and 60 percent,
     respectively.

     Fair Value of Financial Instruments

     The carrying amounts of the Company's cash and cash
     equivalents, accounts receivable and accounts payable
     approximate fair value due to the short-term nature of these
     instruments. The carrying amount of the loan payable
     approximates fair value as their interest rates approximate
     current market rates.

     Comprehensive Income

     The Company has adopted SFAS No. 130, Reporting
     Comprehensive Income, which requires that all items that are
     recognized under accounting standards as components of
     comprehensive income be reported in a financial statement
     that is displayed with the same prominence as other
     financial statements. The items of other comprehensive
     income that are typically required to be displayed are
     foreign currency items, minimum pension liability
     adjustments and unrealized gains and losses on certain
     investments in debt and equity securities. There were no
     items of other comprehensive income for any periods
     presented herein.

     Income Taxes

     The Company accounts for income taxes under the provisions
     of SFAS No. 109, Accounting for Income Taxes, which
     generally requires recognition of deferred tax assets and
     liabilities for the expected future tax benefits or
     consequences of events that have been included in the
     consolidated financial statements or tax returns. Under this
     method, deferred tax assets and liabilities are determined
     based on differences between the financial reporting
     carrying values and the tax bases of assets and liabilities,
     and are measured by applying enacted tax rates and laws for
     the taxable years in which those differences are expected to
     reverse.

     Recent Accounting Pronouncements

     The Company does not believe that any recently issued, but
     not yet effective, accounting standard, if currently
     adopted, will have a material effect on the Company's
     consolidated financial position, results of operations or
     cash flows.

 (2) Property and Equipment

     Major classifications of property and equipment consist of
the following:


                                                    March 31,
                                                      2003
                                                   -----------

     Leasehold improvements                            289,901
     Computer software                                 327,197
     Furniture, fixtures and equipment               1,606,484
     Equipment and software under capital lease        113,398
                                                   -----------
                                                     2,336,980
 Less: accumulated depreciation and amortization      (840,001)
                                                   -----------
           Property and equipment, net            $  1,496,979
                                                   ===========

     Amortization expense for equipment and software under
     capital leases was $24,123 and $93,169 for fiscal 2003 and
     2002, respectively.



                               F-9



(3)  Mortgage Payable, Line of Credit Agreement and Loan
     Obligation

     On May 31, 2001, the Company sold their 50,000 square foot
     office building, which houses the Company's principal
     executive offices and warehouse, to an unrelated third
     party.  The Company received gross proceeds of $2,150,000,
     of which approximately $1,561,000 was used to pay off the
     mortgage, and the Company recognized a loss on the sale of
     approximately $185,000.  The Company then entered into a
     five-year term lease agreement for 20,000 of the 50,000
     square foot Pompano Beach office building.  On February 22,
     2002, the Company entered into a lease addendum which added
     approximately 12,000 square feet, effective June 1, 2002, to
     accommodate the Company's warehouse expansion.

     On July 22, 2002, the Company executed an agreement which
     increased the line of credit from $150,000 to $1,000,000.
     On March 18, 2003, the Company increased the line of credit
     agreement from $1,000,000 to $2,000,000, effective through
     July 22, 2004.  The interest rate is at the published thirty
     day London Interbank Offered Rates ("LIBOR") plus 2.65%
     (3.92% at March 31, 2003), and contains various financial
     and operating covenants.  At March 31, 2003, there was no
     outstanding balance under the line of credit agreement.

     On March 12, 2002, the Company entered into a $205,000,
     three year term loan agreement with a bank, with interest
     accruing at the lending institution's base rate plus 1%
     (5.25% at March 31, 2003).  The loan proceeds were used to
     purchase a $250,000 computer server.  The aggregate loan
     maturities are $68,000 per year for three years.

     The line of credit and the term loan are secured by
     substantially all of the Company's assets.

(4)  Shareholders' Equity

     On November 22, 2000, Tricon Holdings, LLC, a Florida
     limited liability corporation ("Tricon") a related party
     (see Note 7), acquired 10,000,000 shares of the Company's
     authorized and unissued shares of common stock and warrants
     to purchase 3,000,000 shares of the Company's authorized and
     unissued shares of common stock.  The warrants are
     exercisable at $.33 per share and expire on November 22,
     2005.  Tricon acquired the Company's shares and warrants in
     exchange for $2,000,000, which was paid in fiscal year 2001.

     On May 31, 2001, the Company's Board of Directors adopted an
     amendment to the Corporations Articles of Incorporation to
     provide for the increase in the authorized amount of shares
     of common stock from 20,000,000 to 40,000,000 and adopt an
     amendment to the Company's 1998 Stock Option Plan (the
     "Plan") to increase the number of shares of common stock
     issuable under the Plan from 3,000,000 to 5,000,000 shares.

     Preferred Stock

     In April 1998, the Company issued 250,000 shares of its
     $.001 par value preferred stock at a price of $4.00 per
     share, less issuance costs of $112,187. Each share of the
     preferred stock is convertible into approximately 4.05
     shares of common stock at the election of the shareholder.
     The preferred stock was recorded at $887,813, net of the
     value of the beneficial conversion feature of $771,525. The
     value of the beneficial conversion feature was computed as
     the difference between the closing market price of the
     Company's common stock ($1.75 per share) and the conversion
     price of the preferred stock ($.988 per share) on the date
     the preferred stock was sold. This amount was immediately
     recognized as a reduction to net income available to common
     stockholders. The shares have a liquidation value of $4.00
     per share and may pay dividends at the sole discretion of
     the Company. The Company does not anticipate paying
     dividends to the preferred shareholders in the foreseeable
     future. Each share of preferred stock is entitled to one
     vote on all matters submitted to a vote of shareholders of
     the Company. As of March 31, 2003, 2,500 shares of the
     convertible preferred stock remained unconverted and
     outstanding.







                              F-10




(5)  Income Taxes

     Deferred income taxes reflect the net tax effects of
     temporary differences between the carrying amount of assets
     and liabilities for financial reporting purposes and the
     amounts used for income tax purposes.  The tax effects of
     temporary differences that give rise to significant portions
     of deferred tax assets and deferred tax liabilities are as
     follows:



                                             March 31,     March 31,
                                               2003          2002
                                            -----------   -----------
                                                    
 Deferred tax assets:
    Bad debt and inventory reserves              39,041        30,946
    Deferred compensation (stock options)        59,814       231,400
    Intangible assets                              -            7,410
    Accrued expenses                             58,033       155,087
    Net operating loss carryforward           1,439,932     1,856,732
                                            -----------   -----------

 Deferred tax assets                          1,596,820     2,281,575
 Less: valuation allowance                     (938,766)   (2,204,877)
                                            -----------   -----------

 Total deferred tax assets                      658,054        76,698

 Deferred tax liabilities:
    Depreciation                                (76,698)      (76,698)
                                            -----------   -----------
 Total net deferred taxes                   $   581,356   $      -
                                            ===========   ===========



     The change in the valuation allowance for the year ended
     March 31, 2003, is approximately $1,266,000.  At March 31,
     2003, the Company had net operating loss carryforwards of
     approximately $3,800,000, of which $159,000 relate to the
     exercise of stock options that will result in an adjustment
     to equity when the benefit is realized.  The net operating
     loss carryforwards expire in the years 2013 through 2020.
     The use of such net operating loss carryforwards is limited
     to approximately $266,000 annually; due to the November 22,
     2000 change of control.

     The reconciliation of income tax provision computed at the
     U.S. federal statutory tax rates to income tax expense is as
     follows:



                                             March 31,     March 31,
                                               2003          2002
                                            -----------   -----------
                                                    
Income taxes at U.S. statutory rates        $ 1,183,338   $   280,640
State income taxes, net of federal tax
  benefit                                       126,339        29,962
Permanent differences                             1,512           877
Other                                           177,763          -
Change in valuation allowance                (1,266,111)         -
Utilization of net operating loss
  carryforwards                                    -         (311,479)
                                            -----------   -----------
                                            $   222,841   $      -
                                            ===========   ===========




                              F-11




(6)  Stock Options and Warrants

     Stock Options Granted to Employees

     The Company established the 1998 Stock Option Plan (the
     "Plan") effective July 31, 1998, which provides for the
     issuance of qualified options to officers, directors and key
     employees, and nonqualified options to consultants and other
     service providers.  The Company has reserved 5,000,000
     shares of common stock for issuance under the Plan.  The
     exercise prices of options issued under the Plan must be
     equal to or greater than the market price of the Company's
     common stock as of the date of issuance.  The Company had
     2,639,600 options outstanding under the Plan and 104,000 non
     plan options at March 31, 2003.  Options issued prior to
     July 31, 1998 are not included in the Plan.

     A summary of the status of stock options and certain
     warrants issued by the Company, together with changes during
     the periods indicated, is presented in the following table:




                                                     Weighted-
                                                      average
                                      Options      exercise price
                                    -----------    --------------
                                             
 Balance at March 31, 2002            4,544,700    $     1.24
    Options Granted                     387,500          1.26
    Options Canceled                   (695,100)         2.81
                                    -----------    ----------

 Balance at March 31, 2002            4,237,100          0.98
    Options Granted                     910,432          0.75
    Options and Warrants Exercised   (1,800,868)         0.36
    Options Canceled                   (603,064)         1.45
                                    -----------    ----------
 Balance at March 31, 2003            2,743,600    $     1.06
                                    ===========    ==========



     The following table summarizes information for options
     currently outstanding and exercisable at March 31, 2003:





                         Options Outstanding            Options Exercisable
                   ---------------------------------   ---------------------
                              Weighted-    Weighted-               Weighted-
                               average     average                 average
    Exercise                  Remaining    Exercise                Exercise
  Price Range      Number        Life       Price       Number      Price
--------------   -----------------------------------   ---------------------
                                                    
$ 0.20 - $0.86     862,500    4.35 years    $ 0.44       539,164   $   0.40
  1.05 -  1.76   1,756,500    4.74 years      1.28     1,503,200       1.28
  1.90 -  4.50     124,600    4.07 years      2.43        34,600       3.80
--------------   -----------------------------------   ---------------------
$ 0.20 - $4.50   2,743,600    4.58 years    $ 1.06     2,076,964   $   1.09
==============   ===================================   =====================



     At March 31, 2003 and March 31, 2002, the number of options
     exercisable was 2,076,964 and 2,752,803, respectively, and
     the weighted-average exercise price of those options was
     $1.09 and $.96, respectively.  Adjustments are made for
     options forfeited prior to vesting.

     Warrants

     At March 31, 2003, there were 2,775,000 warrants
     outstanding.  On November 22, 2000, Tricon Holdings, LLC, a
     Florida limited liability corporation ("Tricon"), acquired
     10,000,000 shares of the Company's authorized and unissued
     shares of common stock and warrants to purchase 3,000,000
     shares of the Company's authorized and unissued shares of
     common stock.  The warrants are exercisable at $.33 per
     share and expire on November 22, 2005, and were assigned a
     value of $601,260 using the Black Scholes option-pricing
     model, as prescribed by SFAS No. 123, with the following
     weighted-average assumptions: dividend yield 0.0 percent;
     risk-free interest rates of 6.00 percent; expected lives of
     3-5 years, and expected volatility of 91 percent.  On
     September 30, 2002, Tricon exercised 300,000 warrants at the
     exercise price of $.33 per share, and the Company received
     proceeds of $99,000.


                              F-12




(7)  Related Party Transactions

     Guven Kivilcim, a member of Tricon Holdings, LLC and a
     member of the Company's board of directors, has an interest
     in Intelligent Switching & Software LLC, and Numind Software
     Systems, Inc., with which the Company conducted business
     with during the fiscal years ended March 31, 2003 and 2002.
     Intelligent Switching & Software LLC provided the Company
     with long distance telecommunication services, and Numind
     Software Systems, Inc. provided the Company with Internet
     and website design and hosting services.  The Company paid
     $154,000 and $64,000 to Intelligent Switching & Software
     LLC, and $45,000 and $0 to Numind Software Systems, Inc.,
     for services during the fiscal years ended March 31, 2003
     and 2002, respectively.  The Company owed $5,000 and $64,000
     to Intelligent Switching & Software LLC, and $14,000 and
     $37,000 to Numind Software Systems, Inc., which were
     included in the Company's accounts payable balance as of
     March 31, 2003 and 2002, respectively.

(8)  Net Income Per Share

     In accordance with the provisions of SFAS No. 128, "Earnings
     Per Share," basic net income per share is computed by
     dividing net income available to common shareholders by the
     weighted average number of common shares outstanding during
     the period.  Diluted net income per share includes the
     dilutive effect of potential stock options exercises,
     calculated using the treasury stock method.  Outstanding
     stock options, warrants, and convertible preferred shares
     issued by the Company represent the only dilutive effect
     reflected in diluted weighted average shares outstanding.

     The following is a reconciliation of the numerators and
     denominators of the basic and diluted net income per share
     computations for the periods presented:




                                                  March 31,     March 31,
                                                    2003          2002
                                                 -----------   -----------
                                                         
Net income (numerator):

  Net income                                     $ 3,257,565   $   825,413
                                                 ===========   ===========

Shares (denominator)

  Weighted average number of common shares
    outstanding used in basic computation         17,300,130    16,360,010
  Common shares issuable upon exercise
    of stock options and warrants                  3,439,260     3,369,358
  Common shares issuable upon conversion
    of preferred shares                               10,125        10,125
                                                 -----------   -----------
  Shares used in diluted computation              20,749,515    19,739,493
                                                 ===========   ===========

Net income per common share:

  Basic                                          $      0.19   $      0.05
                                                 ===========   ===========
  Diluted                                        $      0.16   $      0.04
                                                 ===========   ===========



     At March 31, 2003, 124,600 shares of common stock options
     and warrants, with a weighted average exercise price of
     $2.43, were excluded from the diluted net income per share
     computation as their exercise prices were greater than the
     average market price of the common shares for the period.





                              F-13




(9)  Valuation and Qualifying Accounts

      Activity in the Company's valuation and qualifying accounts
consists of the following:



                                                      Year Ended March 31,
                                                     ------------------------
                                                        2003          2002
                                                     ----------    ----------
                                                          
Allowance for doubtful accounts:
   Balance at beginning of period                  $      7,475  $      9,740
   Provision for doubtful accounts                       14,759          (319)
   Write-off of uncollectible accounts receivable        (5,590)       (1,946)
                                                     ----------    ----------
   Balance at end of period                        $     16,644  $      7,475
                                                     ==========    ==========

Valuation allowance for deferred tax assets:
   Balance at beginning of period                     2,204,877     2,554,081
   (Deletions) / additions                           (1,266,111)     (349,204)
                                                     ----------    ----------
   Balance at end of period                        $    938,766  $  2,204,877
                                                     ==========    ==========



(10) Commitments and Contingencies

     Legal Matters

     Various complaints had been filed with the Florida Board of
     Pharmacy.  These complaints, the majority of which were
     filed by veterinarians who are in competition with the
     Company for the sale of pet prescription-required products,
     alleged violations of the Pharmacy Practice Act and
     regulations promulgated thereunder.  The vast majority of
     the complaints alleged that the Company, through its
     pharmacists, improperly dispensed prescription-required
     veterinary medication based on prescriptions verified
     through the Company's discontinued alternate veterinarian
     program.  The alternate veterinarian program used a
     veterinarian outside the state of Florida to verify
     prescriptions for certain pets outside the state of Florida.
     While the program was not used for pets residing in the
     state of Florida, the complaints had, for the most part,
     been filed with the Florida Board of Pharmacy.  Other
     complaints alleged the dispensing of medication without a
     valid prescription, the sale of non-conforming products and
     that the Company's pharmacy was operating at the same
     location as another pharmacy, with which it had a
     contractual relationship.  The Company contested all
     allegations and continued discussions in an attempt to reach
     a resolution of these matters.

     In February 2002, the Company voluntarily ceased the use of
     its alternate veterinarian program, and in March 2002 a
     business decision was made to enter into a settlement
     agreement with the Florida Board of Pharmacy, rather than to
     proceed with costly and lengthy litigation.  In April 2002,
     the Florida Board of Pharmacy approved the settlement
     agreement.  The Florida Board of Pharmacy did not reach any
     finding of fact or conclusion of law that the Company
     committed any wrongdoing or violated any rules or laws
     governing the practice of pharmacy.  According to the
     settlement agreement, the Company's pharmacy license was
     placed on probation for a period of three years and the
     Company, the Company's pharmacists and contracted pharmacy
     and pharmacist, paid approximately $120,000 in fines and
     investigative costs, in July 2002.  The Company remains
     licensed with the State of Florida and continues to operate
     its principal business in Florida.

     Additional complaints have been filed with other states'
     Pharmacy Boards.  These complaints, the majority of which
     were filed by veterinarians who are in competition with the
     Company for the sale of pet prescription-required products,
     allege violations of the Pharmacy Practice Act and
     regulations promulgated thereunder.  The vast majority of
     the complaints allege that the Company, through its
     pharmacists, improperly dispensed prescription-required
     veterinary medication based on prescriptions verified
     through the Company's alternate veterinarian program.  The
     Company contested all allegations and continued discussions
     in an attempt to reach a resolution of these matters.




                              F-14




(10) Commitments and Contingencies (Continued)

     In fiscal 2003, the Company reached settlement agreements
     with the Louisiana, Missouri, New Mexico, and Ohio State
     Pharmacy Boards.  According to the settlement agreements,
     the Company was required to terminate the alternate
     veterinarian program in the state and the Company's permit
     was placed on probation.  As of March 31, 2003, the Company
     had paid all fines in full to cover any or all
     administrative and investigative costs associated with these
     settlements.  At March 31, 2003, there was no accrual
     relating to these settlements.  There can be no assurances
     made that other states will not attempt to take similar
     actions against the Company in the future.

     In February 2000, the United States Environmental Protection
     Agency ("EPA") issued a Stop Sale, Use or Removal Order to
     the Company regarding the alleged distribution or sale of
     misbranded Advantage products in violation of the Federal
     Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act ("FIFRA"), as
     amended.  The order provides that the company shall not
     distribute, sell, use or remove the products listed in the
     order, which are allegedly misbranded.  The order further
     provides that the Company shall not commence any sale or
     distribution of those products without the prior written
     approval from the EPA.  The Stop Sale, Use or Removal Order
     does not assert any claim for monetary damages; rather, it
     is in the nature of a cease and desist order.  The Company
     denied any alleged violations.  On February 16, 2000, the
     Company submitted a written response to the order.  The EPA
     assessed a fine in the amount of $445,000.  In fiscal 2001
     the Company accrued $445,000 of legal settlement expense.

     In September 2001, the Company and the EPA entered into a
     Consent Agreement and Final Order ("CAFO").  The settlement
     agreement required the Company to pay a civil penalty of
     $100,000 plus interest, requiring a payment of $56,000,
     which was paid in September 2002, and $53,000 due on
     September 30, 2003, a reduction from the previously assessed
     fine of $445,000.  For the purpose of this CAFO, the Company
     admitted to the jurisdictional allegations set forth, and
     neither admitted nor denied the alleged violations.  On
     September 28, 2001, the CAFO was approved and ordered by the
     regional judicial officer.  Accordingly, a gain of $345,000
     was reflected in the statement of income for the year ended
     March 31, 2002, to reflect the adjustment to this
     settlement.

     On March 19, 2002, Novartis Animal Health U.S., Inc.
     ("Novartis") filed a complaint against the Company and two
     other defendants in U.S. District Court for the Southern
     District of Florida.  Novartis purports to assert seven
     claims related to the Company's alleged sale of pet
     medications produced for a Novartis Australian sister
     company: Count I: Infringement of Registered Trademark Under
     Section 32 of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C.  1114; Count II:
     Infringement of Unregistered Trademarks Under Section 43(a)
     of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C.  1125(a); Count III: False
     Advertising Under Section 43(a) of the Lanham act, 15 U.S.C.
      1125(a); Count IV: Misleading Advertising Under Florida
     Statutory Law; Count V: Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices
     Under Florida Statutory Law; Count VI: Injury to Business
     Reputation Under Florida Statutory Law; Count VII: Common
     Law Unfair Competition.  Subsequent to the year ended March
     31, 2003, the Company reached a final settlement agreement
     with Novartis.  According to the confidential settlement
     agreement dated April 7, 2003, the Company has
     satisfactorily resolved the contested issues raised by the
     complaint and the confidential settlement terms will not
     have a material impact on the Company's operations and
     financial results.

     The Company is a defendant in a lawsuit in Texas state
     district court seeking injunctive and monetary relief styled
     Texas State Board of Pharmacy and State Board of Veterinary
     Medical Examiners v. PetMed Express, Inc. Cause No.GN-
     202514, in the 201st Judicial District Court, Travis County,
     Texas.  The Company in its initial pleading denied the
     allegations contained therein.  The Company will vigorously
     defend, is confident of its compliance with the applicable
     law, and finds wrong-on-the-facts the vast majority of the
     allegations contained in the Plaintiffs' supporting
     documentation attached to the lawsuit.  Discovery has
     recently commenced.  At this early stage of the litigation
     it is difficult to assess any possible outcome or estimate
     any potential loss in the event of an adverse outcome.

     Routine Proceedings

     The Company is a party to routine litigation incidental to
     its business.  The Company's management does not believe
     that the resolution of any or all of such routine litigation
     is likely to have a material adverse effect on the Company's
     financial condition or results of operations.





                              F-15




(10) Commitments and Contingencies (Continued)

     Employment Agreement

     On March 16, 2001, the Company entered into an employment
     agreement with its Chief Executive Officer ("CEO").  Under
     the terms of this three-year agreement the Company will pay
     the CEO an annual salary of $150,000 for the first six
     months of the agreement, and thereafter his annual salary
     will be increased to $200,000.  The Company also granted the
     CEO options to purchase 750,000 shares of its common stock
     under the Company's 1998 Stock Option Plan at an exercise
     price of $.32 per share, which vest at the rate of 187,500
     options on each of March 16, 2001, 2002, 2003 and 2004.

     Operating Lease

     The Company leases their 32,000 square foot principal
     executive offices and warehouse, which expires in fiscal
     2007.   The Company is responsible for certain maintenance
     costs, taxes and insurance under this lease.  The future
     minimum annual lease payments as of March 31, 2003, are as
     follows:

     Years Ending March 31,
     ----------------------

     2004                   $   277,000
     2005                       288,000
     2006                       300,000
     2007                        50,000
                            -----------
     Total lease payments   $   915,000
                            ===========


     Rent expense was $253,000 and $149,000 for the year ended
March 31, 2003 and 2002, respectively.

(11) Subsequent Events

     Subsequent to fiscal 2003, the Company received net proceeds
     of $766,000 upon the exercise and issuance of 644,166 shares
     of common stock, of which 600,000 shares were exercised by
     the Company's president.

(12) Quarterly Financial Data (unaudited)

     Summarized unaudited quarterly financial data for fiscal
2003 and 2002 is as follows:



Quarter Ended:                June 30, 2002   September 30, 2002  December 31, 2002   March 31, 2003 (a)
                                                                          
Sales                         $  14,830,755   $       14,229,702  $      11,050,124   $   14,864,335
Income from operations        $   1,291,235   $          307,754  $         693,269   $    1,190,749
Net income                    $     902,329   $          204,887  $         434,710   $    1,715,639
Diluted net income per share  $        0.04   $             0.01  $            0.02   $         0.09




Quarter Ended:                June 30, 2001   September 30, 2001  December 31, 2001   March 31, 2002
                                                                          
Sales                         $   5,363,650   $        7,762,825  $       8,248,904   $   10,650,552
(Loss) income from operations $    (880,765)  $           56,246  $         368,433   $    1,204,026
Net (loss) income             $  (1,090,684)  $          393,378  $         353,348   $    1,169,371
Diluted net (loss) income
  per share                   $       (0.07)  $             0.02  $            0.02   $         0.07



(a)  The Company recorded a deferred tax asset of
     approximately $581,000, during the quarter ended March 31,
     2003, resulting in an increase of diluted net income of $.03
     per share.




                              F-16



_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________



                          UNITED STATES

               SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

                     Washington, D.C. 20549


                     _______________________



                       PETMED EXPRESS, INC


                     _______________________



                    Form 10-KSB ANNUAL REPORT


                   FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED:

                         MARCH 31, 2003



                     _______________________


                            EXHIBITS

                     _______________________










_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________





                          EXHIBIT INDEX
                          -------------


                                              Number of Pages   Incorporated
Exhibit                                         in Original          By
Number               Description                 Document+        Reference
                                                       

 10.9     Third Line of Credit ($2,000,000)
          Agreement with SouthTrust Bank,           20               **
          N.A.

 99.1     Certification of Principal
          Executive Officer Pursuant to 18           1               **
          U.S.C. Section 1350

 99.2     Certification of Principal
          Financial Officer Pursuant to 18           1               **
          U.S.C. Section 1350

 21.1     Subsidiaries of the Company                1               **




** Filed herewith