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How much do you spend on your pets?

(57 Posts)
Cabbie21 Mon 27-Mar-23 16:25:23

An acquaintance told me that last year she spent over
£6 000 on vets bills for her cats. I think she has two or three.
I was stunned, my jaw dropped.
I just thought about people who have nothing or very little to live on, those who are homeless, or the Ukrainian people.
I said nothing as it is not my business how she spends her money, but I can't get it out of my mind.
Now I wonder how much other people spend on their pets.

Twotontessy Tue 28-Mar-23 12:18:47

Cabbie21

An acquaintance told me that last year she spent over
£6 000 on vets bills for her cats. I think she has two or three.
I was stunned, my jaw dropped.
I just thought about people who have nothing or very little to live on, those who are homeless, or the Ukrainian people.
I said nothing as it is not my business how she spends her money, but I can't get it out of my mind.
Now I wonder how much other people spend on their pets.

Absolutely nothing to do with you how much people spend on their pets. What a ridiculous post.

Theexwife Tue 28-Mar-23 12:05:41

I don't have pets but when visiting those that do I have often bought a gift for their dog.

The feeling of love is the same feeling whether it is for a person or an animal. If somebody loves their pet then they will want to spend money on it.

I think that people can spend their money on whatever they like and it is really nobody else's business.

TerryM Tue 28-Mar-23 11:05:39

Probably an amount that would get huge gasps from many on gransnet
He is a special needs dog. He has been for....eight..nine years . He has a very rigid medication routine. Five different times a day. He has special dog food due to his health issues.
He gives so much incredible happiness to dh and I. In regards to it helps people's health when they have pets I may certainly subscribe to it.
He is almost 14 and is still ticking along ruling our home.

Germanshepherdsmum Tue 28-Mar-23 10:06:18

🤣

Yammy Tue 28-Mar-23 09:35:10

In the vain of most answers on Gransnet these days.
Nothing he is DH he eats the same meals I do, uses the NHS and actually shares my bed. He is included in the household insurance. Answer satisfies you?

Ladyleftfieldlover Tue 28-Mar-23 09:30:43

Our two cats are part of the family. We buy the best food for them and the best RSPCA approved bed! The Vet bills are expensive but so be it.

Smileless2012 Tue 28-Mar-23 09:25:44

Our house wouldn't be a home without our dogs, so we spend what we have too. When we moved here 6 years ago we discovered that our toy poodle couldn't tolerate the tap water, so buy bottled as even filtering it wasn't enough.

LRavenscroft Tue 28-Mar-23 09:06:40

Someone once said to me 'Everything is relative' and think, to some degree, they were right. Who knows why people spend money on different things, including their pets? We all have our own thoughts on these types of things and I have found that I just listen if people tell me how much they spend on their animals. Where I live they are bringing in street cats from Greece and Crete? I often wonder why people don't take on local animals from the UK. My first port of call for a rescue would be Torquay or Plymouth to re-home an elderly cat but I live on a main road so it would probably get killed so I support a local cat charity and animal shelter. Each to their own.

Iam64 Tue 28-Mar-23 09:02:43

Dogs are very expensive, preventive flea/tick/worm and annual injections just the start.
Several years ago I had vet bills of about £14,000 after my 10 year and six year old previously very healthy cross breeds became seriously sick. The insurance covered to lot. Previously, the 10 year old had 3 separate injuries needing overnight admission - all paid by insurance. She was a chaser of small furry animals, ripped her side, foot injury, thorn inside her toe - yes course recall became 100percrnt but she came to me as 4th owner in 5 months, very high prey urge

So my current two are insured. The 5 year old has hypothyroidism so life long meds. Bloods 3-6 monthly, all covered by insurance

Other than the dogs, I’m not spending much on eating iut or holidays. Like germanshepherds mum, my savings pay for my dogs. I worked hard to be able to continue to share my life with them in retirement

nanna8 Tue 28-Mar-23 08:49:47

Yes ,Fleur, to get our 2 I had to have an interview, meet them and show that we had taken to each other! They also asked many questions but our old puss lived to be 23 or 24 years old and he was a stray who wandered in one day ,so I think I passed ! I was pleased they took so much trouble.

Fleurpepper Tue 28-Mar-23 08:40:09

If you can't feed your kids or yourself- then what about the animals?

Fleurpepper Tue 28-Mar-23 08:39:14

Cabbie21

Thanks for replies. As I said, I was stunned: not having any pets, I had no idea.
Yes, my thoughts did immediately go to the many clients who are really struggling, that I have supported as a voluntary advice worker, hence my reaction. I guess my post might come across to some as judgemental, but my question was genuine, as I had no idea what the costs might be. I am sorry if it offended some people.

No offence from met. Since we adopted Yata 6 weeks ago, I have noticed our food bill has gone up significantly. A large bag of good quality pellets is very expensive, then I cook everyday, either small macaroni, Ebly or rice with green beans, carrots, peas, etc- none expensive. And either poached fish or chicken- a small portion added to her bowl every meal.

Then her GPS tracker and subscription, vet check and new passport (the one from Tunisia could be ackward when travelling as not from Europe). A medal for her collar with name and telephone numbers. It all adds up.

So many people are giving up the dogs they got during Covid- due to expense, and due to having to leave dog alone all day, back to work, and in unsuitable conditions (barking). So so sad.

I for one am very glad that rescues do take great care when placing dogs- obviously this was not so well done during Covid- and now the results are there to see- sadly.

nanna8 Tue 28-Mar-23 06:55:55

All I can say is- a lot. Vet bills are hideous, much more than human doctors and the food is pretty expensive, too. I don't think anyone here houses Ukrainian refugees, they don't come here as far as I've heard. Most of our refugees are from Asia and the Middle East with extended families who assist them.

Cabbie21 Mon 27-Mar-23 23:03:13

Thanks for replies. As I said, I was stunned: not having any pets, I had no idea.
Yes, my thoughts did immediately go to the many clients who are really struggling, that I have supported as a voluntary advice worker, hence my reaction. I guess my post might come across to some as judgemental, but my question was genuine, as I had no idea what the costs might be. I am sorry if it offended some people.

CanadianGran Mon 27-Mar-23 18:31:44

I agree that vet costs have really increased in the last 5 years or so, but there have been many medical advances for pets, and options for treatment that we wouldn't have considered in the past. For instance, my 6 year old has early signs of cataracts, and the vet asked if we would like a referral to a veterinary ophthalmologist. I didn't even realize that there were specialties in veterinarians, and the clinics to go along with them. For us, this would involve travel to a major city, and the cost of the exams, surgery and treatment. I have no idea what the cost might be, but we said we would watch her for the next year or two to see how she progresses. In the past, it would just mean a blind dog at a fairly young age.

Many young people do not consider the expenses when they decide to get a pet, but like many, they do not realize how expensive it can be. For responsible pet owners, it is an expense we accept.

NanaDana Mon 27-Mar-23 18:08:02

You're quite right Cabbie 21, it's not your business how anyone spends their money on anything, although by bringing the poor, the homeless and Ukraine into the equation you manage to sound rather judgemental about those who choose to spend on pets. We've been dog-lovers all of our adult lives, and still have two pooches, so I dread to think what we've spent on pet purchase, Vet's bills, food, kennel fees, and pet accoutrements over the years. That has been our choice, and it has not stopped us from contributing to charity, which is a point which others have already made, and which we not only do by three, separate monthly direct debits, but also contribute to specific Christmas and seasonal appeals. Not quite sure what you intended to achieve by this post. If it was to mildly annoy me, it worked...

Fleurpepper Mon 27-Mar-23 18:07:42

Of course, all injections and passports, and travel cost (driving back and forth). One dog, the only pure bred we had, rescued from a family member- became diabetic, so insulin, and at a later stage, a pram (yes! He loved it)- and in the end, pts at home- no car travel and stress of vet. Money so very well spent.

Whitewavemark2 Mon 27-Mar-23 18:01:18

We spend what is necessary.

Germanshepherdsmum Mon 27-Mar-23 17:54:23

They presumably have their annual injections and check ups though? Quite expensive but not covered by insurance.

Kate1949 Mon 27-Mar-23 17:53:30

We don't have pets but I do understand that people love their pets. My brother has recently spent over £4000 on a poorly dog and buys his dogs expensive food. It wouldn't be my choice but he loves his dogs and it's his money.

Fleurpepper Mon 27-Mar-23 17:51:20

We have always had rescues, that all lived very long lives, and never needed expensive treatment. We had all of them pts at home, in peace, and that is the only money we spent on them apart from good quality food. Never had insurance.

If anything happened to our new rescue, we have savings that will cover cost- much cheaper than insurance to put moeny aside every month.

Germanshepherdsmum Mon 27-Mar-23 17:48:24

foxie48

Cabbie21 Would you have had the same reaction if your friend had spent the same amount of money on a new car or a holiday? I have spent thousands of pounds over the years on my animals and they have given me huge pleasure. One of my dogs ruptured a cruciate ligament, the overall bill was well in excess of £4K but he made a good recovery and lived a healthy happy life for another eleven years . It was worth every single penny. I don't insure any of my animals and I've had dogs, cats and horses (all at the same time) but I've never regretted paying the vet they are much more important to me than holidays, clothes, cars or anything else I could spend my money on.

Same here foxie. One of my dogs ruptured a cruciate ligament and it was a very expensive procedure but so worthwhile. We’ve never insured our animals either - some vets have had bad experiences with some insurers and are reluctant to deal with them and I don’t want to compromise the standard of care my animals get. Also we usually adopt older animals, often with existing conditions, which wouldn’t be cheap to insure. I’m lucky that I don’t have to consider the cost but that luck comes courtesy of many years of hard graft, not via a silver spoon.

shysal Mon 27-Mar-23 17:41:48

I spend about £2000 per year for vet's bills, food and litter. One cat has an overactive thyroid, needing regular blood tests and medication. The second cat is now showing similar symptoms, so vet costs may be doubling from next week. I have never paid for insurance for them, apart from a VIP scheme which covers flea and worm treatments and gives discount on consultations.
I live alone and the cats have brought me years of pleasure, so I don't begrudge the cost at all. I don't drink, eat out or holiday so they are my only luxury and worth every penny.
I can still afford to give to charity, are you saying that you give thousands of pounds to the causes you mention Cabbie? You are obviously not a pet lover.

sodapop Mon 27-Mar-23 17:40:18

Responsible pet owners care for their pets Cabbie21 and pay whatever bills need paying. This doesn't mean they care less about people who are suffering or stop giving to charity.
As you say it's entirely up to your acquaintance how she spends her money.

Germanshepherdsmum Mon 27-Mar-23 17:39:35

My rescue dog is my luxury. She’s not insured and we’ve had some hefty vet bills since we adopted her plus medication for life. We knew what we were getting into. Few would have done it. And I spend more on her food (special diet) than I care to admit. Yes I feel guilty when I know how little some people have to manage on, but she’s my one indulgence, I don’t take holidays and very rarely eat out or buy clothes. I donate a fair bit to charity every month. I try to square giving her the life she didn’t have before, and deserves, with my conscience.