Real averages, the factors that quietly double your premium, what hip dysplasia coverage actually requires, and how to stop overpaying without gutting your coverage.
The numbers below come from North American Pet Health Insurance Association (NAPHIA) industry data and current market quotes. Your real price will shift based on your pet’s breed, age, location, and the coverage settings you choose.
Alaska and Massachusetts currently top the country as the most expensive states for pet insurance. Mississippi is the cheapest. Pet owners in Washington D.C., Colorado, and Washington state pay 25% to 50% above the national average for identical coverage. The same dog on the same policy can cost meaningfully more simply because vet care costs more where you live. Always get a quote with your actual ZIP code โ national averages can be misleading.
The question isn’t just “how much is pet insurance” โ it’s whether the cost makes sense for your specific animal, your financial situation, and the kind of vet bills you’re realistically trying to avoid. A $43-a-month policy looks very different if your dog is a healthy two-year-old mutt versus a senior Golden Retriever whose breed carries an 88% elevated risk for certain musculoskeletal conditions. The takeaways below cut through the averages and give you the practical answers โ including the ones people rarely think to ask until it’s too late.
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How much is pet insurance a month for a dog?
The national average for a standard accident and illness plan runs $43 to $62 per month, depending on the data source and coverage settings. For a $5,000 annual limit with a $250 deductible and 80% reimbursement, Forbes Advisor’s analysis landed at $56/month. Unlimited coverage averages $87/month. Your price will be higher for older dogs, purebred dogs prone to hereditary conditions, and addresses in high-cost states.
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2
How much is pet insurance a month for a cat?
Cats cost roughly half as much to insure as dogs. The accident and illness average runs $23 to $32 per month for a standard plan. A $5,000 annual limit plan averages around $24/month; unlimited coverage averages $37. Senior cats and breeds like Maine Coons and Persians (which carry elevated heart and kidney disease risks) will run higher, sometimes doubling the base rate for an older cat.
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3
How much is pet insurance for 2 cats?
At current averages, two cats on standard accident and illness plans would run roughly $46 to $64 per month combined before any discounts. Several insurers offer a 10% multi-pet discount when you add a second animal to the same policy, which can knock $5 to $7 off your monthly total. Some carriers like MetLife allow multiple pets on a single policy with a shared deductible, potentially simplifying both the cost and the paperwork.
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4
Does pet insurance cover hip dysplasia?
Yes โ but only if you enroll before symptoms appear. Hip dysplasia diagnosed or symptomatic before your policy starts is treated as a pre-existing condition and excluded permanently at most insurers. Most plans also impose a separate orthopedic waiting period of 6 to 12 months before hip-related claims can be paid. The best time to enroll a large breed dog with hip dysplasia risk is as a healthy puppy, long before any limping or joint stiffness develops. Hip replacement surgery can cost $6,000 to over $8,000 โ a single claim that easily justifies years of premiums.
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5
What does “full coverage” pet insurance actually include?
There’s no universal standard, but the most comprehensive plans cover: emergency care, surgery, hospitalization, prescription medications, hereditary and congenital conditions, cancer treatment, specialist visits, and alternative therapies like acupuncture or hydrotherapy. What’s almost never included in any plan: pre-existing conditions, routine vaccines, annual wellness exams, cosmetic procedures, and breeding costs. Wellness add-ons can cover vaccines and checkups but cost extra โ typically $22 to $24 more per month.
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6
How can I actually lower my premium without losing important coverage?
Three levers work reliably. First, raise your deductible โ jumping from $250 to $750 or $1,000 typically drops monthly premiums by 20% to 35%. Second, lower your annual limit from unlimited to $10,000 or $5,000 if your pet is low-risk for catastrophic conditions. Third, adjust the reimbursement rate from 90% down to 80% โ the difference in monthly cost is usually larger than the difference in what you’d actually collect on most claims. Avoid switching the deductible from annual to per-incident; that change sounds small but dramatically raises your out-of-pocket costs.
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How does pet age affect what I pay?
Significantly. Premiums rise with age because older animals develop more health problems โ and unlike human health insurance, pet insurance isn’t community-rated. A 2-year-old Labrador Retriever might cost $40/month; the same dog at age 10 could cost $120+ for the same policy. Some insurers stop accepting new enrollments for senior pets past a certain age โ commonly 8 to 14 years depending on the carrier. The best financial move is enrolling while your pet is young and healthy, before any condition can become a permanent exclusion.
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8
Is pet insurance actually worth it, or should I self-insure?
The math favors insurance most clearly in two scenarios: when you own a breed prone to expensive hereditary conditions, and when an emergency would require you to put vet bills on a high-interest credit card. A $52/month dog plan costs about $624 a year. One cruciate ligament repair โ the most common orthopedic surgery in dogs โ runs $3,000 to $7,000. Cancer treatment can exceed $10,000. Self-insuring works if you have $5,000 to $15,000 in liquid savings dedicated to pet emergencies and the discipline not to touch it. Most households don’t. The 37% of pet owners who went into debt from a single vet bill in a recent year didn’t have that cushion.
Every pet insurance quote is shaped by the same three settings. Knowing how each one affects your cost โ and your real out-of-pocket risk โ lets you build a plan instead of just picking a price.
Most plans use an annual deductible โ you pay it once per year, and then the insurer covers the rest of your claims at the reimbursement rate. Some plans use a per-incident deductible, meaning you pay that amount fresh for every new condition. Per-incident sounds fine until your dog develops two separate conditions in one year โ suddenly you’re paying the deductible twice. For pets with chronic conditions or older animals likely to have multiple health events in a year, annual deductibles almost always work out cheaper.
Pet insurance decisions look very different depending on who and what you’re insuring. Here’s plain talk for the situations that come up most.
Most insurers have a waiting period of around 14 days for illness coverage and 3 days for accidents. Some impose a longer orthopedic waiting period โ often 6 months โ before they’ll pay claims related to hips or joints. If you’re adopting a breed at elevated risk for hip dysplasia (German Shepherds, Labradors, Golden Retrievers, Rottweilers, French Bulldogs), enrolling as soon as the pet is home โ even as a young puppy โ starts that waiting period clock running before any limping or stiffness appears.
Start with accident and illness coverage and decide later about adding wellness. Many people add the wellness rider after the first year once they have a sense of what their actual vet bills look like. For puppies under six months, some insurers actually charge a slightly higher rate than for dogs 6โ12 months old, so confirm the exact rate before assuming the youngest enrollment date is the cheapest.
Pet insurance covers hip dysplasia as long as it isn’t a pre-existing condition โ meaning the diagnosis and all symptoms must appear after both the policy start date and the waiting period end date. Some carriers impose a 6-month orthopedic waiting period (waivable with an upfront vet exam at some providers). A few carriers โ Trupanion and Fetch among them โ cover hip dysplasia at any age with no special age cutoff, while others stop covering it at enrollment if the pet is past a certain age.
For high-risk breeds, seriously consider unlimited or at least $15,000โ$20,000 annual limits rather than the $5,000 standard plan. A single hip replacement can wipe out a $5,000 annual limit immediately, leaving the rest of the year uncovered. Paying $20โ$30 more per month for a higher limit can be the difference between having meaningful coverage and having a policy that maxes out on the first serious claim.
If your senior pet is in good health with no notable diagnoses, a standard accident and illness plan still makes financial sense โ especially since cancer and major organ diseases most commonly appear in middle age and beyond. The question to ask yourself isn’t “will my pet use this” but “can I absorb a $5,000 to $10,000 vet bill this year without financial stress?” If the honest answer is no, insurance at a higher premium is still usually better than credit card debt at 22% interest.
A few practical notes for senior enrollments: some carriers won’t accept new enrollments past age 8, 10, or 14 โ check the age cutoff before applying. Healthy Paws, for example, restricts hip dysplasia coverage when enrolling pets over age 6. Trupanion covers hip dysplasia at any age. Compare carriers specifically on how they handle senior enrollment, not just on monthly price.
For two cats at current averages: expect $46 to $64 per month combined before discounts on a standard accident and illness plan. If both cats are young adults, you can reasonably keep premiums down with a $500 deductible and 80% reimbursement without sacrificing meaningful coverage. For a household with both a dog and a cat, expect $65 to $100 per month combined before any multi-pet discount.
One thing to think through: each pet is still individually underwritten, so an older or high-risk pet will raise the overall household premium. If one pet is uninsurable or has so many pre-existing exclusions that coverage would be nearly meaningless, insuring only the other pet isn’t a bad strategy.
On a standard accident and illness plan, the three moves that reduce your monthly cost without eliminating coverage are: raise the annual deductible to $750 or $1,000; set reimbursement at 80% rather than 90%; and choose a $10,000 annual limit rather than unlimited. That combination can drop a $60/month premium to $35 to $45 depending on your pet’s profile and location, while still protecting against the majority of serious vet bills.
A few carriers worth comparing for budget-conscious households: Lemonade has streamlined its quoting process and tends to offer competitive base rates. Embrace allows flexible deductible and limit combinations and covers exam fees as an add-on. ASPCA doesn’t impose extended orthopedic waiting periods, which is unusual and valuable for large-breed dogs.
That said, insurance after a diagnosis can still provide significant value for everything else. A dog diagnosed with diabetes can still be insured โ and if that dog later develops a cruciate ligament tear, gets into the garbage and needs emergency surgery, or is diagnosed with cancer, the policy pays those claims normally. The diagnosed condition is excluded; new, unrelated conditions are not.
There is one exception worth knowing: ASPCA Pet Health Insurance and Spot Pet Insurance both cover “curable” pre-existing conditions if the pet has been symptom-free and treatment-free for 180 consecutive days. Conditions specifically excluded from this rule typically include knee and ligament issues, which is significant for large-breed dogs. If your pet had a condition that resolved fully, enrolling and waiting out the 180-day window may eventually bring that condition back under coverage.
If your pet has a chronic ongoing condition that requires monthly medication and management, do the math carefully. If the monthly medication costs $80โ$200/month and the insurer will always exclude that condition, the value of the policy has to come from the coverage of other future conditions โ which may or may not be worth the premium depending on breed, age, and your individual financial situation.
These are representative sample rates for a 2-year-old pet with a $250 deductible, 80% reimbursement, and $5,000 annual limit. Actual quotes will vary by location and insurer.
| Breed | Approx Monthly Cost | Key Health Risks | What to Watch For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chihuahua | ~$33/moOne of the cheapest breeds to insure | Dental disease, luxating patella | Small frame, big dental bills |
| Mixed Breed Dog | $38โ$45/moMid-range; lower hereditary risk | Generally healthier than purebreds | Still worth insuring for accidents |
| Labrador / Golden Retriever | $45โ$58/moMid-cost; hip and cancer risk | Hip dysplasia, cancer, joint issues | Consider higher annual limit |
| German Shepherd | $55โ$75/moHigher risk breed premium | Hip dysplasia, degenerative myelopathy | Enroll early โ ortho costs are real |
| French Bulldog | ~$90/moAmong the most expensive to insure | Respiratory (BOAS), spine, skin, hips | High lifetime vet costs likely |
| Domestic Shorthair Cat | $23โ$28/moLowest cost cat option | Urinary issues, dental disease | Often cheapest cat breed to insure |
| Maine Coon / Persian Cat | $32โ$42/moHigher genetic risk premium | Heart disease (HCM), kidney issues | Cardiac coverage worth checking |
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1
Check whether hereditary conditions are covered by default or as an add-on. Some cheaper plans exclude hereditary and congenital conditions unless you pay extra. For any purebred, this isn’t optional โ it’s the core of what you’re likely to claim someday.
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2
Find out the exact orthopedic waiting period before you choose a carrier. Most impose 6 to 12 months before hip, knee, or ligament claims are payable. ASPCA currently doesn’t impose an extended orthopedic waiting period โ worth knowing if you need coverage to begin sooner.
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3
Understand whether the deductible is annual or per-incident. Annual deductibles are almost always better for pets with chronic conditions or older animals likely to have more than one health event in a year.
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Ask whether the insurer pays the vet directly or reimburses you. Trupanion offers direct vet payment at participating clinics, which means you don’t have to front a $5,000 surgery bill and wait for a reimbursement check. For households without a large emergency fund, that distinction matters.
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Get at least three quotes for your specific pet and ZIP code โ not national averages. The same coverage can vary by 40% or more between carriers for identical pets. Comparison tools exist for this; use them rather than trusting a single quote from a carrier’s website.
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Read the policy’s pre-existing condition definition before enrolling. Some carriers define a pre-existing condition as anything in your pet’s records before the policy start date; others include the waiting period too. Bring your pet’s complete vet records and ask the carrier explicitly what would be excluded based on those records before you pay the first premium.
Use the buttons to update the map. Always get a personalized quote directly from pet insurance carriers before purchasing โ average costs don’t predict your actual price.
Modern veterinary medicine now routinely offers CT scans, advanced cancer treatment, specialist referrals, and orthopedic surgeries once limited to human hospitals. A surgery that cost $2,000 in the 1990s can now approach $10,000 after imaging, anesthesia, and post-operative care. Multiple vets interviewed in recent coverage described the same pattern across their practices: insured pet owners approve diagnostics and proceed with treatment faster, because the financial panic drops the moment they realize coverage applies. The hardest moment in a vet clinic, several described, is standing between a sick animal and a family trying to decide whether they can afford to save it. Pet insurance changes that conversation โ not always, and not for every household, but more often than most people expect when they first buy a policy.
Pet insurance premiums, coverage terms, exclusions, waiting periods, and reimbursement rules vary significantly by provider, your pet’s species, breed, age, health history, and location. Figures shown here reflect national averages from NAPHIA industry data and market research as of mid-2026 and are provided for general informational purposes only. Your actual quote will differ. Always read a policy’s full terms before purchasing, and consult your veterinarian about your pet’s specific health risks before choosing a coverage level. This page has no affiliation with any pet insurance carrier, veterinary organization, or government agency.