DATA-BACKED GUIDE · UPDATED JULY 2026
Cruciate surgery recovery and cost UK: budgeting for the aftercare
The surgeon's fee for cruciate repair is only half the story. The months of recovery that follow, with their rechecks, x-rays, painkillers and physiotherapy, quietly add to the total, and many owners are caught out by it. This guide breaks down the aftercare so you can budget for the whole journey, using the real bills below.
The quick version
- Cruciate surgery is followed by roughly three months of restricted recovery, and that aftercare has its own costs.
- Follow-up x-rays, medication and physiotherapy are often not included in the surgical quote.
- The whole episode, surgery plus recovery, can approach the £5,000 the CMA cites for this kind of work.
- Doing the rehab properly protects the surgery, so cutting corners here can cost more later.
What people actually paid
The gap: advertised vs actually paid (medians)
People reported paying 5% less than the advertised list price for cruciate / tplo.
List prices are advertised prices; paid figures are what people reported, often for different cases and from a small sample so far. Treat the gap as a signal, not a quote.
Real prices, in people's own words
- £2,000“Our dog (45kg Newfoundland) had a TTA for her completely ruptured cruciate, which was about £2,000”
- £2,700“Mines was £2700 with 1 video call & 1 face to face follow up”
- £3,500“the surgery was £3.5k, vet carried out the surgery and we took out a payment plan”
- £3,750“For a dog over 25kg it was £3,750”
- £3,750“For a dog over 25kg it was £3,750... covered everything”
- £5,000“TPLO surgery for our cat was £5k”
Genuine amounts posted publicly. We publish the price and the quote, never the person.
Why the price varies so much
The surgery is a fixed event, but recovery is a spectrum. A young, calm dog that heals cleanly needs little beyond the routine recheck x-ray and some pain relief. An older or heavier dog, or one that does too much too soon, may need extra imaging, longer courses of medication and several physiotherapy or hydrotherapy sessions. Whether your practice includes the six-week x-ray and rechecks in the original price makes a real difference, so two identical-looking quotes can end up hundreds apart once aftercare is counted. Complications, though uncommon, are the biggest wildcard.
How to pay less
- Ask up front exactly what the surgical quote covers and what recovery costs sit on top of it.
- Follow the rest and lead-only rules strictly. Reinjury from overdoing it is the most expensive mistake owners make.
- Ask whether structured physiotherapy you do at home can replace some paid hydrotherapy sessions.
- Check your insurance covers post-operative rehab and how much of your annual limit the surgery will already have used.
Common questions
How long does recovery from cruciate surgery take?
Usually around twelve weeks of gradually increasing controlled exercise, starting with strict rest and lead-only toilet breaks. Many dogs are walking well before then, but the bone and implant need the full period to settle. Rushing it risks the repair and a much larger bill.
What aftercare costs should I expect on top of surgery?
Typically a recheck x-ray at around six weeks, pain relief and anti-inflammatories, follow-up consultations, and often physiotherapy or hydrotherapy. None of these are huge alone, but together they add a meaningful amount, which is why the full episode can approach £5,000.
Is physiotherapy really worth paying for?
For many dogs it genuinely speeds recovery and helps them use the leg properly again, which protects the surgery you have already paid for. You can do a lot of the gentle exercises at home once shown how, so ask your vet or physio which sessions are essential and which you can manage yourself.