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Heartnsoul
08-24-2023, 08:03 PM
I have a 5 yr old dog and never took insurance out. Do u recommend it and if so, who do u recommend I use?

Topspinmo
08-24-2023, 10:26 PM
I would read fine print before purchasing. IMO probably about as good and dental insurance.

BillY41
08-25-2023, 03:53 AM
The younger your pet is the cheaper the payments are at enrollment. Face it most of us will pay the cost to keep our dogs/cats healthy. I have Nationwide and am happy with them. Some home insurance now covers pets. I would do a google search. There are many out there. See which one fits for you. Good luck!

ThirdOfFive
08-25-2023, 07:44 AM
The younger your pet is the cheaper the payments are at enrollment. Face it most of us will pay the cost to keep our dogs/cats healthy. I have Nationwide and am happy with them. Some home insurance now covers pets. I would do a google search. There are many out there. See which one fits for you. Good luck!
We do indeed. Sometimes a lot. Dad would roll over in his grave if he knew that his #1 son (actually all his kids and grandkids) pays quite a lot to keep Rover or (in my case) Kitty healthy. Back in the day, if a pet got seriously sick or enfeebled by age, we just shot them. It was the way of the time: money was not plentiful and a ready supply of pets (nobody spent money for neutering critters back then) was always available from neighbors.

It is a different time now. Oh, I suppose pet insurance was available even back in the day but even if we had known about it, we never would have used it. Today, we routinely drop $400 - $500 on Rover or Kitty per year and think nothing of it.

Veterinary clinics seem to do quite well in TV.

tophcfa
08-25-2023, 08:51 AM
The younger your pet is the cheaper the payments are at enrollment. Face it most of us will pay the cost to keep our dogs/cats healthy. I have Nationwide and am happy with them. Some home insurance now covers pets. I would do a google search. There are many out there. See which one fits for you. Good luck!

Agree, much cheaper when pet is young. After much research we choose Trupanion. You can chose a monthly premium that increases as the “per event” deductible decreases. Premiums on a sliding scale based on deductible between $0 and $1,000 per event. Premiums also based on age and breed. Deductible is not annual, but per event, with a 10% co-pay after the deductible is met. They check all veterinarians records before writing policy to rule out pre-existing conditions and have a one month hold period after signing up to rule out people trying to sneak in pets with pre-existing conditions. Only covers health events, not wellness care or prescriptions. Most veterinarians accept it and they bill the veterinarian office directly for their portion of the bill. Hope that helps.

starflyte1
08-25-2023, 08:56 AM
Yes, vet clinics do well serving The Villages. I was given a written quote for over $900 to clean my dogs teeth.

I spend time in Port St. Lucie and went to a recommended vet there and paid just under $400.

retiredguy123
08-25-2023, 08:59 AM
How do you know the vet is not charging more because you have the insurance?

retiredguy123
08-25-2023, 09:05 AM
Yes, vet clinics do well serving The Villages. I was given a written quote for over $900 to clean my dogs teeth.

I spend time in Port St. Lucie and went to a recommended vet there and paid just under $400.
I owned two veterinary clinics in Georgia with my wife in the 1980's. The maximum charge we had for anything was $250 to pin a broken leg. A teeth cleaning was $40.

fdpaq0580
08-25-2023, 11:53 AM
We do indeed. Sometimes a lot. Dad would roll over in his grave if he knew that his #1 son (actually all his kids and grandkids) pays quite a lot to keep Rover or (in my case) Kitty healthy. Back in the day, if a pet got seriously sick or enfeebled by age, we just shot them. It was the way of the time: money was not plentiful and a ready supply of pets (nobody spent money for neutering critters back then) was always available from neighbors.

It is a different time now. Oh, I suppose pet insurance was available even back in the day but even if we had known about it, we never would have used it. Today, we routinely drop $400 - $500 on Rover or Kitty per year and think nothing of it.

Veterinary clinics seem to do quite well in TV.

You just "SHOT THEM"? HOLY COW!
Mine went "sleepy bye" with the help of compassionate veterinarian.
Milk Bone cleaned their teeth. Maybe we were lucky, but our pets were loved, but never treated like furry four-legged people, and they lived long, happy an healthy lives.

Velvet
08-25-2023, 12:09 PM
Yes! My grand-kitty, daughter’s cat, had to have a caudectomy. Kitty is only 3 years old and the amputation removed entire tail near the spine. Diagnosis and surgery etc etc approx $3000.00. My daughter didn’t think for a second about it. She has no pet insurance. Kitty is recovering very well and back to his incredibly sweet self.

BrianL99
08-25-2023, 02:05 PM
I have a 5 yr old dog and never took insurance out. Do u recommend it and if so, who do u recommend I use?

Get a couple of quotes. Bundle enough cash to pay the insurance bill.

Flush the bundle down the toilet. That will save you the expense of forwarding it to the Insurance company and you'll get the exact same value as you would get from the insurance policy.

Just like Dental Insurance, the insurance company is going to charge you approximately 1.3 - 1.5 times the average amount you would spend of vet care, in a year. The odds vastly favor not having insurance. That's how the insurance business works.

Blueblaze
08-25-2023, 03:02 PM
Insurance is why you can't afford your doctor or dentist (or roof) any more. Now they're trying to do the same with your pet. It's inevitable, but we should resist this as long as humanly possible.

The well-baby appointments for my two kids, 40 years ago were $15. That's not the co-pay, that was the entire bill. I was a degree'd IT professional at the time, making the enormous salary of $28K/year. I was wealthy -- I had "hospitalization" insurance through my Fortune-500 employer. But back during the sane centuries before the invention of the HOA, insurance was for disastrous expenses involving a hospital or a hurricane, not groceries or doctor bills (or a new roof for your house every 10 years).

The same thing happened with dentists. As recently as my retirement in 2016, a $75 trip to the dentist got you xrays, an exam, and a cleaning (as "deep" as you needed). My dentist often even did the cleaning himself. I still remember the rest of the price list. Fillings were $50, $100, $150, depending on how deep they were. Crowns were $500.

Then, they started billing the insurance company directly. Now a trip to the dentist burns through half your $1000/ year insurance benefit -- before they even find anything to fix (and we just paid $2000 AFTER INSURANCE for my wife's crown!).

It's all a scam to hide the true cost of services from you so they can bill the disinterested 3rd party with the deep pockets.

We can't stop idiots from believing in free stuff, but we can resist the urge to insure against groceries, car repairs, streaky roofs, and vet visits. For the sake of us all, please resist the urge,.

fdpaq0580
08-25-2023, 10:35 PM
Insurance is why you can't afford your doctor or dentist (or roof) any more. Now they're trying to do the same with your pet. It's inevitable, but we should resist this as long as humanly possible.

The well-baby appointments for my two kids, 40 years ago were $15. That's not the co-pay, that was the entire bill. I was a degree'd IT professional at the time, making the enormous salary of $28K/year. I was wealthy -- I had "hospitalization" insurance through my Fortune-500 employer. But back during the sane centuries before the invention of the HOA, insurance was for disastrous expenses involving a hospital or a hurricane, not groceries or doctor bills (or a new roof for your house every 10 years).

The same thing happened with dentists. As recently as my retirement in 2016, a $75 trip to the dentist got you xrays, an exam, and a cleaning (as "deep" as you needed). My dentist often even did the cleaning himself. I still remember the rest of the price list. Fillings were $50, $100, $150, depending on how deep they were. Crowns were $500.

Then, they started billing the insurance company directly. Now a trip to the dentist burns through half your $1000/ year insurance benefit -- before they even find anything to fix (and we just paid $2000 AFTER INSURANCE for my wife's crown!).

It's all a scam to hide the true cost of services from you so they can bill the disinterested 3rd party with the deep pockets.

We can't stop idiots from believing in free stuff, but we can resist the urge to insure against groceries, car repairs, streaky roofs, and vet visits. For the sake of us all, please resist the urge,.

The cost of billing the insurance company is likely the major reason care is so expensive.

fdpaq0580
08-25-2023, 10:53 PM
Get a couple of quotes. Bundle enough cash to pay the insurance bill.

Flush the bundle down the toilet. That will save you the expense of forwarding it to the Insurance company and you'll get the exact same value as you would get from the insurance policy.

Just like Dental Insurance, the insurance company is going to charge you approximately 1.3 - 1.5 times the average amount you would spend of vet care, in a year. The odds vastly favor not having insurance. That's how the insurance business works.

No more live pets for me. Teddy bears are the perfect pets. Never poop or pee in the house. Never snub the pet food. Never need to go "walkies" in the rain. Never wake me up to go out or to get fed. Never knock over things of their own accord. And they are always where you left them, just waiting to give you unlimited love and understanding.
But, one is getting a bit dirty and wrinkled. I wonder if I should buy insurance incase he needs to go to the doll hospital. Or should I give him a bath in the washing machine?

Rzepecki
08-26-2023, 05:05 AM
We signed up for the Banfield Wellness plan about 12 years ago and have been very happy with it. Check it out.

Limey
08-26-2023, 07:25 AM
I have a 5 yr old dog and never took insurance out. Do u recommend it and if so, who do u recommend I use?

We lost our last dog to cancer with no insurance. We spent $15,000 keeping him going for another two years which we don't regret doing. Our current dog we have insured with Trupanions. They pay 90% of bills other than yearly checks. It is $73.00 per month and they have several different plans. They are always quick to respond if you call.

IndianaJones
08-26-2023, 08:06 AM
I have a 5 yr old dog and never took insurance out. Do u recommend it and if so, who do u recommend I use?
We had ASPCA pet insurance - the billing & submission process is between you & them. I am not sure our Vet even knew we had it, so the idea they bill more because of insurance isn’t realistic. The process was simple & it really paid off well for the 2 major procedures & for end-of-like care. They have different levels of plan coverage, just see what fits for you & your pet.

retiredguy123
08-26-2023, 08:17 AM
We had ASPCA pet insurance - the billing & submission process is between you & them. I am not sure our Vet even knew we had it, so the idea they bill more because of insurance isn’t realistic. The process was simple & it really paid off well for the 2 major procedures & for end-of-like care. They have different levels of plan coverage, just see what fits for you & your pet.
So, if the veterinary office asks if you have insurance, what do you tell them?

airstreamingypsy
08-26-2023, 08:18 AM
I don't have pet insurance because I adopt older dogs and the price in prohibitive..... that said, a friend uses Banfield which is at Petsmart and she is very happy with it.

jmpate
08-26-2023, 05:27 PM
I have a 5 yr old dog and never took insurance out. Do u recommend it and if so, who do u recommend I use?

We've used VCA pet insurance for >20 years in 3 states & have been exceedingly pleased w/the quality of vets and coverage.

We're talking primary care, dental cleaning, labs, chest x-ray & BP checks. There are 3 levels of insurance depending on what u want to pay. Knowing that dental cleaning is important to decrease incidence of cardiac problems, we always chose that coverage for our 6 dogs.

Yes, the cost depends on the age of the animal but includes a great deal of coverage IMHO especially when I see what it would cost out of pocket.

Inpatient stays in a vet hosp are very expensive not unlike people stays, but we've had a $3600 bill fir a 36 hr stay in a Vet ICU for new diabetes management.

It's all about what works for you and ur pocket book. Our 4of 6 dogs lived to 15 yrs old while using vet insurance & we used all our benefits, like acute care visits (unlimited) vaccinations, dental clean annually.

Might be worth exploring.