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DATA-BACKED GUIDE · UPDATED JULY 2026

Senior cat vet costs: what care really adds up to as your cat ages

Cats are famously good at hiding when something is wrong, which is exactly why older cats need closer veterinary attention and why costs tend to climb with age. Knowing what to expect lets you plan ahead and keep your senior cat comfortable and well. The real prices below reflect what UK owners are currently paying for common senior care.

The quick version

  • Blood tests are a cornerstone of senior cat care, picking up kidney disease, thyroid problems and diabetes early, often long before symptoms show.
  • Many vets suggest health checks every six months for older cats, which catches problems sooner and is worth the modest extra cost.
  • Chronic conditions such as kidney disease and an overactive thyroid are common in older cats and often need lifelong medication.
  • Vet prices climbed 63% between 2016 and 2023, so ongoing senior care is a genuine budgeting matter, and the real prices below show today's figures.

What people actually paid

List priceActually paid
£0£161£322£483list med £89paid med £429List priceActually paid

The gap: advertised vs actually paid (medians)

List price (advertised)£895 prices
£340 more
Actually paid (reported)£4292 prices

People reported paying 381% more than the advertised list price for blood tests.

List price£89Actually paid£429

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

  • £400“it was nearly £400 for bloods, injection, and two not very expensive meds”Anon · UK unspecified · 2025 · source
  • £457“blood tests, antibiotics and a pain relief injection cost me £457!!!”Anon · UK unspecified · 2025 · source

Genuine amounts posted publicly. We publish the price and the quote, never the person.

Why the price varies so much

Senior cat costs come down to your cat's individual health, where you live and the practice you choose. Kidney disease and thyroid problems are widespread in older cats, and whether your cat develops one of these determines whether you are paying for occasional check-ups or steady monthly medication and repeat blood tests. How often your vet recommends monitoring plays a big part too. Corporate-owned practices charge on average 18.3% more than independents, so your choice of clinic affects the running total as much as your cat's health does.

How to pay less

  • Ask for a written prescription for any long-term medication and buy it from an online pharmacy, where medicines are often 50 to 60% cheaper and save many owners £200 to £300 a year.
  • Look for a practice offering a senior cat health plan that spreads twice-yearly checks and routine blood tests across manageable monthly payments.
  • Compare independent clinics with corporate chains, as the same treatment is usually cheaper at an independent practice.
  • Stay on top of preventative care such as dental checks and weight monitoring, which helps avoid larger and more expensive problems down the line.

Common questions

When is a cat considered senior?

Cats are generally regarded as senior from around eleven years, and geriatric from around fifteen. From the senior stage onwards your vet will often recommend more frequent health checks and routine blood tests to keep an eye on kidney and thyroid function.

Why are blood tests so important for older cats?

Older cats commonly develop kidney disease, an overactive thyroid or diabetes, and blood tests reveal these early, frequently before your cat seems unwell. Early diagnosis usually means treatment is simpler, cheaper and more effective at keeping your cat comfortable.

How can I keep senior cat costs down?

Ordering long-term medicines online with a written prescription, joining a senior health plan, and choosing a competitively priced independent practice all help. It is also worth reviewing your pet insurance, since treating age-related conditions can otherwise lead to sizeable bills.

Sources and method

The prices in this guide come from 7 real data points for blood tests, each listed and linked on the blood tests page. Context is drawn from the Competition and Markets Authority's 2026 veterinary market investigation. We do not estimate prices, and no sponsor can influence a number. Last updated July 2026.

This guide is general information about UK pricing, not veterinary or financial advice. Always discuss your pet's care with your vet.