Background: Monitoring antibiotic use (AMU) is a key component of antimicrobial stewardship. Published AMU data in equine hospitals are limited. Objectives: Document AMU in equine hospitals. Study Design: Repeated point prevalence surveys. Methods: Prospective descriptive study. AMU recorded one day weeky for 12 months in 6 equine hospitals. Results: 1142 horses were prescribed antibiotics among 15031 horses (7.6%) hospitalised on 216 survey days. Commonest breeds were Thoroughbreds/crosses (34.7%) and warmbloods/crosses (22.5%). Median age of adults was 6 years (IQR 10, range 1-28 years) and 8 weeks for foals (IQR 14 weeks, range 1 day-50 weeks). Mean weight of 1127 horses 420kg (range 15-866kg). Commonest indications were complicated wounds (23.6%), gastrointestinal/abdominal disease (19.2%), surgical prophylaxis (15.0%) and simple wounds (11.8%); 81.4% were community-acquired conditions, 14.4% surgical prophylaxis, 3.6% healthcare-acquired. Culture and susceptability performed in 11.4%. The commonest antibiotics prescribed were procaine penicillin (41.8%), gentamicin (41.4%), potentiated sulfonamides (16.5%), oxytetracycline (10.2%), ceftiofur (9.2%) and doxycycline (8.2%). Enrofloxacin prescribed in 59 horses (5.2%) and marbofloxacin in 19 (1.7%). The mean antibiotic dosages (mg/kg) ( + SD) were: procaine penicillin 20.5 ( + 2.8), gentamicin 7.1 ( + 1.0), potentiated sulfonamides 30.4 ( + 3.0), oxytetracycline 5.9 ( + 1.0), ceftiofur 5.2 ( + 1.4), doxycycline 5.9 ( + 1.7), enrofloxacin 6.6 ( + 1.1) and marbofloxacin 3.7 ( + 1.4). Main Limitations: Systemic AMU only. The duration of antimicrobial courses not recorded. Some cases may have been double (or more)-counted if they were in the hospital on >1 survey days. Conclusions: Antimicrobials were prescribed in 7.6% of hospitalised horses. Commonest indications were complicated wounds, gastrointestinal/abdominal disease, surgical prophylaxis and simple wounds. Commonest antibiotics administered were procaine penicillin, gentamicin, potentiated sulfonamides, oxytetracycline, ceftiofur and doxycycline. Critically important antimicrobial use was uncommon. Dose rates were generally appropriate.