The Scotsman

Pet insurance or vet fees? It really comes down to what you can afford to pay

Savings may not be enough to cover expensive treatments for pets in the long term

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QAPlease help me. I’ve just adopted a healthy four- yearold cat, and I am looking to get her insured. But the costs are so high – I was quoted

£ 60 a month by one company. Should I put some money to the side to pay for vet fees instead of getting insurance? Or should I look at a very basic cover? I understand the dichotomy you face – I have a seven- year- old cat, Whiskerson, who I got as a kitten. He was adorable ( and still is, although a little grumpy now he shares a house with two toddlers) and very cheap to insure at such a young age.

Every year since then, our monthly premiums have risen as the older he gets, the more likely he is to need some kind of medical treatment and so the cost rises to reflect that. Let us not forget, medical treatment for our beloved pets is mightily expensive – broken bones can cost thousands of pounds to repair. I recall Whiskerson getting an infection the week before my wedding and having to find £ 2,000 to pay for his care. I was incredibly grateful to have cover and an insurer that paid out on the spot.

So let’s talk about the fundamenta­ls. Pet insurance covers the cost of vet fees and certain medical expenses, as well as payouts for death by accident or illness, helping to pay for posters or rewards if your cat goes missing, cattery fees if you’re ill and can’t look

after your cat and even euthanasia and cremation costs. They tend not to cover preexistin­g conditions. It won’t cover you for the costs of vaccinatio­ns, grooming and neutering – you’ll have to fund that yourself.

When searching for cover, there are three policy types you’ll encounter – from premium, top- of- the- range insurance, to very limit

ed cover. What you end up buying will depend on your budget.

Lifetime cover is the gold standard. It pays out for the lifetime of your cat, and is great if your pet ends up needing lots of treatment over its lifetime. It is arranged in two ways – either allocating an amount per condition, or a fixed total you can spend on treatment each year. For

cheaper cover, you may want to look at ‘ non- lifetime’ cover. This will exclude a condition from being covered once you’ve hit your claims limit. One type of non- lifetime cover will restrict certain conditions from being covered ever again once you’ve exhausted your cover limit. It won’t reset when you renew. Timelimit per condition cover is even more restrictiv­e, which

comes with a 12- month time limit and a condition limit. The most basic form of cover is ‘ accident only’. This will pay out when your cat gets injured, but won’t cover illnesses and the vast majority of health issues your cat might face. So should you buy cover, or self insure? This really is down to you and your means. Say your cat was to need a hip replace

ment. Do you have the £ 7,000 you’d need to pay for it? If you were to put £ 20 a month into a savings account paying 1% per annum, you’d have only saved around £ 2,500 after a decade. That may help soften the blow, but it may not be enough if your new cat needs some serious medical treatment.

Gareth Shaw is the Head of Money at which. co. uk

 ??  ?? 0 There are various types of pet insurance available to cover eventualit­ies like your cat becoming ill or requiring expensive veterinary treatment
0 There are various types of pet insurance available to cover eventualit­ies like your cat becoming ill or requiring expensive veterinary treatment

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