Cats

Is pet insurance worth it for cats?

Answer

For most US cats, insurance is worth it if enrolled before age 5. Chronic disease (CKD, HCM, diabetes, IBD) drives most lifetime costs, often exceeding $5,000 over 3 to 8 years. Breed matters: Maine Coon, Ragdoll, Sphynx, and British Shorthair carry documented cardiac risk that gets harder to insure once diagnosed.

Have a dog too? See the dog owner guide and breed risk profiles.

Cat breeds

10 covered

Feline conditions

10 covered

urinary

Feline lower urinary tract disease

Umbrella term covering feline idiopathic cystitis, urethral obstruction, and bladder stones. Common in young to middle-aged male cats.

Lifetime cost: $1,500 to $8,000

renal

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) in cats

Leading cause of death in senior cats. Progressive loss of kidney function requiring lifelong dietary and medical management.

Lifetime cost: $3,000 to $12,000

cardiac

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) in cats

The most common heart disease in cats, causing thickening of the heart muscle. Elevated risk in Maine Coon, Ragdoll, British Shorthair, Sphynx.

Lifetime cost: $3,500 to $15,000

endocrine

Feline hyperthyroidism

Common condition in cats over 10 driven by benign thyroid adenoma. Highly treatable with medication, diet, or radioiodine therapy.

Lifetime cost: $1,500 to $6,000

endocrine

Feline diabetes mellitus

Growing prevalence in overweight indoor cats. Requires lifelong insulin therapy in most cases, though remission is possible with early tight control.

Lifetime cost: $4,000 to $15,000

dental

Feline dental disease and resorptive lesions

Periodontal disease and tooth resorption affect most adult cats. Annual professional cleaning is standard care.

Lifetime cost: $2,000 to $10,000

gastrointestinal

Feline inflammatory bowel disease

Chronic infiltration of the intestinal lining. Diagnosis usually requires imaging plus biopsy, and treatment is lifelong.

Lifetime cost: $3,000 to $12,000

respiratory

Feline asthma and lower airway disease

Chronic inflammatory airway disease. Prevalent in Siamese and Oriental breeds. Requires long-term inhaled corticosteroid therapy.

Lifetime cost: $1,500 to $8,000

infectious

Feline infectious peritonitis

Once nearly always fatal, FIP is now treatable with antiviral GS-441524. Treatment costs remain high but survival is realistic.

Lifetime cost: $3,000 to $10,000

orthopedic

Feline hip dysplasia

Elevated in Maine Coon and Norwegian Forest Cat. Often subclinical but can require surgical intervention in severe cases.

Lifetime cost: $2,000 to $8,000

Feline procedures

10 covered

dental

Feline dental cleaning

Anesthetic dental cleaning with dental x-rays. Most adult cats need this every 1 to 2 years, and Persians and Siamese more often.

$500 to $1,200

diagnostic

Abdominal ultrasound (cat)

Non-invasive imaging used for kidney, liver, intestinal, and mass workups. Standard first-line imaging for GI, urinary, and endocrine disease.

$400 to $850

diagnostic

Senior blood panel (cat)

CBC, chemistry, T4, urinalysis, and SDMA. Standard workup for older cats or any cat with new clinical signs.

$180 to $400

emergency

Urinary obstruction treatment

Emergency treatment for a blocked male cat. Requires hospitalization, urinary catheter, and intensive monitoring.

$1,500 to $3,500

soft-tissue

Mass removal (cat)

Surgical excision of skin or subcutaneous masses, most commonly to rule out or treat feline injection-site sarcoma or mast cell tumor.

$700 to $2,200

preventive

Spay or neuter (cat)

Elective sterilization surgery. Costs vary widely between low-cost clinics, general practices, and specialty practices.

$100 to $550

diagnostic

Cardiac workup (echo + proBNP)

Echocardiogram, chest x-rays, and proBNP blood test. Standard workup for suspected HCM and pre-anesthetic screening for at-risk breeds.

$700 to $1,500

endocrine

Insulin therapy setup (cat)

Diagnostic workup and initial insulin dosing for a newly diagnosed diabetic cat. Includes fructosamine, glucose curves, and starter insulin.

$600 to $1,400

endocrine

Radioiodine (I-131) therapy

Curative single-dose treatment for feline hyperthyroidism. Requires stay at a licensed facility for radiation clearance (typically 3 to 7 days).

$1,200 to $2,000

oncology

Feline chemotherapy

Multi-drug protocols (most commonly CHOP for lymphoma) or single-agent chemotherapy for solid tumors.

$4,500 to $8,500

Frequently asked

For most US indoor cats, the average annual claim is lower than for dogs, but a single serious diagnosis (HCM, chronic kidney disease, urinary obstruction, cancer) can produce $3,000 to $12,000 in lifetime costs. Insurance is best value if you enroll before age 5 and choose a plan without breed exclusions.