Cost Guide • Updated for 2025

Cost of Pet Insurance (2025): What You’ll Pay & How to Lower It

This page is a quick, practical guide to typical pet insurance prices for dogs and cats, why prices vary, and what to compare before you buy.

Quick answer

Pet insurance prices vary a lot by pet and plan, but many published estimates put typical monthly costs around $40–$60+ for dogs and $20–$32+ for cats for accident & illness coverage. Your rate depends mainly on your pet’s age, breed, location, deductible, reimbursement rate, and coverage limits.

Why the range? Different sources use different datasets (quotes vs policies in-force), and plan settings can change premiums significantly.

Dogs

Typical monthly range (published estimates):

  • $42/month (Insurify average)
  • $52/month (MarketWatch guide average)
  • $56/month (Insurance Information Institute summary of NAPHIA averages)
  • $60/month (MetLife estimate)

Use these as ballpark benchmarks, not a guarantee of your price.

Cats

Typical monthly range (published estimates):

  • $23/month (Insurify average)
  • $28/month (MarketWatch guide average)
  • $32/month (Insurance Information Institute summary of NAPHIA averages)
  • $32/month (MetLife estimate)

Cats are often cheaper to insure, but age and breed still matter.

Monthly vs annual cost (easy math)

Monthly premium Annual premium What that feels like
$25/mo $300/yr Often a lower-coverage cat plan or higher deductible
$40/mo $480/yr Common mid-range plan settings
$60/mo $720/yr Common for many dog quotes; richer coverage increases cost
$90/mo $1,080/yr Older pets, certain breeds, low deductible, higher limits

What affects the cost the most

Most policies reimburse you after you pay the vet. Always read the policy for definitions, waiting periods, and exclusions.

How to lower your pet insurance premium

Tip: Keep deductible, reimbursement %, and annual limit the same when comparing—otherwise you’re comparing different products.

FAQ

Is pet insurance worth it?

It depends on your budget and risk tolerance. Pet insurance can help smooth out large, unexpected vet bills, but you’ll still pay premiums and a deductible. Many owners compare insurance vs building a dedicated pet emergency fund.

What’s the cheapest type of pet insurance?

Accident-only plans are typically cheaper than accident & illness plans. The trade-off is that accident-only won’t cover most illnesses (and those can be expensive).

Does pet insurance cover pre-existing conditions?

Many policies exclude pre-existing conditions. Always read the policy definitions and waiting periods before buying.

Sources (so you can verify)

Note: numbers vary by source and by plan settings. Treat averages as a starting point for getting your own quotes.