When Is the Best Time to Get Pet Insurance?

PP
By The PawPet Insurance Team
Reviewed for accuracy · Updated June 2026

The honest answer most sites won’t give you straight: the best time to get pet insurance is now, while your pet is young and healthy. Here’s why timing matters so much.

The Short Answer: As Early as Possible

The single biggest factor in getting good value from pet insurance is enrolling before any health issues appear. A young, healthy pet means the lowest premium and zero pre-existing exclusions.

Our honest take: If you just got a puppy or kitten, today is the best day to insure them. Every month you wait is a month something could become “pre-existing” and uninsurable.

Why Waiting Costs You

  • Higher premiums — rates climb steadily with age.
  • Pre-existing exclusions — any condition that appears before you enroll is excluded for life.
  • Waiting periods — coverage doesn’t start instantly, so last-minute sign-ups don’t help in an emergency.

Is It Ever Too Late?

Not necessarily. Even older pets can be insured for new, unrelated conditions. The value is just lower because existing issues won’t be covered. If your pet is a senior, weigh insurance against a dedicated savings fund.

Best Time by Life Stage

Life stage Should you insure?
Puppy / kitten Yes — ideal time, lowest cost
Healthy adult Yes — still great value
Senior, healthy Worth it for new conditions
Senior with conditions Compare vs. a savings fund

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is my pet too old for insurance?

Some insurers have upper age limits for new policies, but many will still cover older pets for new conditions. It’s rarely truly ‘too late’ — the value just decreases.

Should I insure a puppy right away?

Yes. A puppy has no pre-existing conditions and gets the lowest premium. It’s the best possible time to enroll.

Does waiting a few months really matter?

It can. If a condition appears while you wait, it becomes pre-existing and is excluded for life. Enrolling early avoids that risk.

Sources: NAPHIA; Consumer Reports; provider guidance (2026).

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