Pet Insurance: Is It Worth It? Honest Guide for Europe
Pet insurance is the most common financial protection for unexpected vet bills — but is it actually worth the monthly premium?
How Pet Insurance Works
You pay a monthly premium. When your pet needs treatment, you pay the vet, then claim back a percentage (typically 70–90%) from the insurer after an excess payment.
Types of Policy
- Accident only: cheapest, covers accidents but not illness
- Time-limited: covers a condition for 12 months from first treatment
- Maximum benefit: covers up to a set amount per condition, no time limit
- Lifetime: best coverage — renews condition limits each year. Most expensive.
When Insurance Pays Off
A single emergency — cruciate ligament surgery (£3,000–£6,000), cancer treatment (£2,000–£10,000+), diabetic management (ongoing) — can cost more than years of premiums. Insurance turns a potentially catastrophic cost into a manageable one.
When It May Not Pay Off
- Very healthy pets with no significant conditions
- If you have substantial savings specifically set aside for vet bills
- For older pets — premiums increase significantly with age and exclusions for pre-existing conditions apply
What to Look For
- Lifetime policy for best coverage
- High annual limit (minimum £5,000/€5,000)
- Low excess
- Hereditary and dental conditions covered
- Good claims reputation