What Does Pet Insurance Cover (and What It Doesn’t)

PP
By the PawPet Research Team
Reviewed for accuracy · Updated June 2026

Before you buy a policy, you need to know exactly what it does — and doesn’t — pay for. Pet insurance covers far more than people expect in some areas, and nothing at all in others. This guide lays out what pet insurance covers in 2026, clearly, so there are no surprises at claim time.

The short answerA comprehensive plan covers accidents, illnesses, surgery, diagnostics, hospitalisation, cancer and prescription medication. It does not cover pre-existing conditions, routine/preventive care (unless you add wellness), or elective procedures.

What pet insurance covers

Category Examples
Accidents Broken bones, swallowed objects, bite wounds, road accidents
Illnesses Infections, digestive disease, ear/eye conditions, UTIs
Serious conditions Cancer, heart disease, diabetes, kidney disease
Surgery & hospitalisation Operations, anaesthesia, overnight stays, ICU
Diagnostics Bloodwork, X-rays, MRI, ultrasound, biopsies
Medication Prescription drugs for covered conditions
Hereditary conditions On good plans — hip dysplasia, HCM, PKD (if not pre-existing)

What pet insurance does NOT cover

Not covered Why
Pre-existing conditions Anything showing before the policy or in the waiting period
Routine / preventive care Vaccines, checkups, flea/worm — unless you add wellness
Elective procedures Cosmetic, non-medical (e.g. declawing, tail docking)
Breeding & pregnancy Excluded on standard policies
Grooming & food Not medical treatment

More on pre-existing conditions here.

The wellness add-on

Most insurers offer an optional wellness/routine-care add-on covering vaccines, annual checkups, dental cleanings and flea/worm treatment. It’s not really insurance — you roughly get back what you pay in — but it spreads routine costs across the year and forces a budget for preventive care. Worth it for some owners, skippable for others.

A real claim example

Your dog tears a cruciate ligament. The bill: $4,200 (surgery, anaesthesia, X-rays, medication, follow-ups). On a comprehensive plan with a $500 deductible and 80% reimbursement, you’d pay the $500, then get 80% of the remaining $3,700 back = $2,960. Your net cost: about $1,240 instead of $4,200. More on ACL cover here.

What to check before buying

Confirm the plan covers hereditary conditions (vital for purebreds), has a high annual limit, includes diagnostics and specialist care, and check whether dental illness is included — it varies by insurer. Dental cover explained here.

Frequently asked questions

What does pet insurance actually cover?

A comprehensive plan covers accidents, illnesses, surgery, diagnostics, hospitalisation, cancer and prescription medication for covered conditions — minus your deductible, up to your annual limit.

Does pet insurance cover cancer?

Yes — on comprehensive plans, cancer diagnostics, surgery, chemotherapy and radiation are covered up to your annual limit, provided the cancer was not pre-existing.

Does it cover routine checkups and vaccines?

Only if you add a wellness/routine-care plan. Standard accident-and-illness cover excludes preventive care.

Are hereditary conditions covered?

On good plans, yes — hip dysplasia, HCM and similar are covered if not pre-existing. Cheaper plans sometimes exclude them, so check before buying a purebred.

Does pet insurance cover dental?

It depends. Some plans cover dental illness (disease, extractions), others only accidental damage. Always confirm, especially for breeds prone to dental disease.

This guide is for general educational purposes and is not financial advice. Always read the full policy terms before purchasing.

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