I'm just curious whether any of you have your Maine Coons insured? Was thinking about it but not sure whether to or not as he is an indoor cat, so he will be less likely to be injured or catch any diseases. :confused:
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I'm just curious whether any of you have your Maine Coons insured? Was thinking about it but not sure whether to or not as he is an indoor cat, so he will be less likely to be injured or catch any diseases. :confused:
I was wondering about that too Ria. Both my dogs are insured and I didn't know whether to with the kitten as he will be indoors but they can still have accidents indoors especially if you have young children or like me two boisterous dogs! and they can still get illnesses so it may be better to be safe. I had a dog once that was having a mad fit around the living room and ran head first into the patio windows :rush:- not sure a cat would be quite that stupid though? I am going to ring up my insurers and ask how much extra they will charge for adding on a kitten - can't think it would be that much especially if I tell them he will be an indoors cat - although not sure they would take that on word or perhaps they would only cover accidents that happened in the home or illnesses. I go with Healthy Pets as they quoted me the lowest when I first took it out. I have claimed with them and they were pretty sharp about paying up so had no hassle from them.
We were also thinking about it too and our breeder recommended it. We've been sitting on the fence so far. I think she gave us a figure of €12 p/m not sure what that is in sterling! Even though he is an indoor cat you just never know when a big vet bill might arise!
Ours have always been indoor cats and have always been insured. Despite being indoor cats, we have had:
1. Three with Cat Flu that they picked up in the last ever cattery that we used - their vaccinations were all up to date, but of course, that doesn't necessarily mean they won't get it. The bill for that little lot was around the £500-mark. They now stay home if we go away and we use a pet-sitting service.
2. Widget's diagnosis and subsequent treatment for HCM - that was a total of, I think, £750-800.
3. Spike's "mystery eye" complaint, where his left eye bulged alarmingly to the size of a ping-pong ball. Never did get to the bottom of that one, but that was a bill around £250.00
4. Gabby's kidney cancer - diagnosis, ultrasound, blood-work and palliative treatment (only for a week after diagnosis as she went down so quickly, we had no choice but to be kind and let her go) £600.00
5. Alice's illness, which is being diagnosed as FIP - so far, the bill is at £550.00, with blood tests, x-rays, abdominal fluid slides etc and of course, consultations.
Now, this all sounds really alarming, I know, but we have had six Maine Coons over fourteen years. HCM was starting to be recognised when Widget was diagnosed and now breeding lines are tested. Gabby was almost 14 when she was diagnosed with cancer - so, an older cat - heartbreaking but not unusual. Spike's weird eye lasted a couple of weeks and the Cat Flu incident was a real one-off. Mostly, our lot have only seen the vet for their annual check-up & boosters.
We have ours insured on the Insured for Life policy - there are multi-pet discounts available - so there is no cut-off age point (except for death by illness, of course). The excesses increase as the cat gets older, obviously.
My husband and I run a small company and there have been times over the years that we have had to take cuts in our income to ensure the company's survival. A significant vets bill at the "wrong" time could have been difficult to meet, so for us, there is no question - we continue to insure our indoor Coonies.
I have always insured mine for the first year as very often big problems can show themselves at that point,heredity etc,normally then stop,although with two babes at the moment Welly hares around & jumps half way up doors & spins round & off again so suspect he could do big injury so have given them a second year !
I then put the insurance premium for each into a seperate account & to begin with kept fingers crossed that nothing big occured before I had a tidy amount in there but with four others it is surprising how quick that mounted up. When you think a lot of the time a one off visit comes to less than you can claim on & as they get older the premiums go up & the excess you have to pay gets higher it all becomes a calculated risk but....!
I have to say that I am better off than if I had paid insurance premiums even covering the old girls monthly tablets her insurance premium would have been higher than they cost I have also got a nice nest egg for them so providing no more than two need big treatments at once we will be ok plus pot grows every month...
Daughter looks at it a different way,if something big goes wrong I will use credit card & pay that off.
Working at a vets I see both sides of the coin but I have chosen the tail side !
If they get the dreaded HCM it will cost thousands until they die so mine is insured.
We have Louie insured with the PDSA £7000 per condition per year life cover only £71 for the year BARGIN :smile:
I know he is a house cat but after our old MC broke his leg as a house cat :sad1: after I had just canceld his ins DOH! never again that was nearly £600 atleast 9 yrs ago.
I have both Sarah and Zack insured for about $27 each per month.
I wish I had insured my dog - she has cost about $13,000 AUS over the past 4 years with several unusual illnesses and a knee reconstruction.
Insurance sounds like a really good option, well certainly for Menolly.
Is there anything to watch out for which may not be covered by a general policy? Also, when is a cat most vulnerable to illness and is it most important while they are still kittens?