DATA-BACKED GUIDE · UPDATED JULY 2026
How to budget for a cat in the UK, including vet costs
Cats have a reputation for being cheap and low-maintenance, and the day-to-day costs are lower than a dog's, but the vet side can still bite hard. This guide sets out a realistic yearly cat budget covering food, litter, preventative care, insurance and the emergencies that people rarely plan for. The real prices below show what routine vet work costs where you live.
The quick version
- Everyday cat costs are modest, but vet bills are the wildcard. Blocked bladders, dental disease and road accidents can all run into serious money quickly.
- The average pet insurance claim was £685 in 2024, and around one in five insured treatments cost £500 or more, so the big-bill risk is real for cats too.
- Neutering, annual vaccinations and regular flea and worm treatment are predictable costs you can plan for, unlike accidents and sudden illness.
- Buying flea, worm and any long-term medicines online with a written prescription can be 50 to 60 per cent cheaper, saving many owners £200 to £300 a year.
What people actually paid
Why the price varies so much
Cat costs vary more than people expect. An indoor-only cat avoids many of the accident and fight-injury risks that an outdoor cat runs into, which affects both insurance premiums and how often you end up at the vet. Pedigree cats can be prone to specific inherited conditions that mean more monitoring and treatment over a lifetime. Location plays a big part too, since corporate-owned practices charge around 18.3 per cent more on average than independents, and prices in cities tend to sit above rural areas. Age is the steady driver, as older cats often develop kidney or thyroid conditions that need lifelong medication and repeat blood tests. The real prices below reflect your local market rather than a headline national figure.
How to pay less
- Compare a nearby independent practice against local corporate-owned practices before registering, because routine work like vaccinations and neutering can vary noticeably in price.
- For any long-term medication, ask for a written prescription and order from a registered online pharmacy to capture the 50 to 60 per cent saving.
- Neuter early and keep vaccinations up to date, since a neutered, vaccinated cat avoids a long list of expensive problems down the line.
- Keep a dedicated savings pot for emergencies so an out-of-hours vet trip for a blocked bladder or road accident does not land on credit.
Common questions
Do cats cost less than dogs to keep?
Generally yes on the day-to-day side, since cats eat less, need less kit and rarely need paid walking or boarding. But the vet side is not automatically cheaper, because conditions like urinary blockages, kidney disease and dental problems are common and expensive. Check the real prices below for local routine costs, and budget for emergencies the same way you would for a dog.
Is pet insurance worth it for an indoor cat?
It can still make sense, because indoor cats are not immune to illness, dental disease or swallowing something they should not. Insurance is really about covering the rare large bill, and with the average claim at £685 and roughly one in five treatments costing £500 or more, that risk exists indoors too. Weigh the premium against keeping a substantial savings pot, and remember you pay routine care and the excess yourself either way.
What vet costs should I plan for with a cat?
Plan for the predictable items first: an annual health check and vaccinations, neutering if not already done, and regular flea and worm treatment. Then build a separate buffer for the unpredictable, such as dental work, urinary emergencies and age-related conditions. From September 2026 the £21 prescription fee cap will help with repeat medicines, and buying those online with a written prescription helps more.