Pet Insurance FAQ

Straight answers about coverage limits, deductibles, hereditary conditions, and how pet insurance actually works.

Annual Limits & Coverage Amounts

What does "annual limit" mean? +
The annual limit is the maximum total the insurer will pay in reimbursements during a single policy year. After you hit the limit, you pay 100% of remaining costs until the policy renews. Unlimited annual coverage means there is no cap — the insurer will pay any amount of covered claims in a single year. Healthy Paws and Trupanion both offer unlimited annual coverage.
Is a $5,000 annual limit enough? +
For most pets most years, yes. However, orthopedic surgeries for large dogs (hip replacement, TPLO knee surgery) can run $4,000–$8,000 per surgery. Cancer treatment including chemotherapy and surgery can easily exceed $10,000–$15,000 in a single year. If you have a high-risk breed — Golden Retrievers, Rottweilers, Bernese Mountain Dogs, German Shepherds, or any brachycephalic breed — a $5,000 limit can be exhausted in a single incident.
Do annual limits reset every year? +
Yes. Annual limits reset when your policy renews, typically on your enrollment anniversary date. Each new policy year starts with a fresh limit. Note that your deductible also resets each year. If a condition was diagnosed in year one and reoccurs in year two, it is still a covered condition (not pre-existing) as long as the policy stayed active and the condition was covered to begin with.

Hereditary Condition Coverage

Which providers cover hereditary conditions? +
All 10 providers in our comparison table include hereditary condition coverage in their accident and illness plans, provided the condition is not pre-existing at enrollment. This includes common hereditary conditions like hip dysplasia, elbow dysplasia, heart disease, progressive retinal atrophy, and degenerative myelopathy.
What counts as a "pre-existing" hereditary condition? +
A hereditary condition is considered pre-existing if it was diagnosed, showed symptoms, or received any treatment before your policy's effective date (including the waiting period). This is why breed-specific enrollment timing matters — if your French Bulldog has never shown respiratory symptoms, brachycephalic syndrome is not yet pre-existing and can be covered. If a vet has noted a "Grade 1 heart murmur" before enrollment, that cardiac condition is pre-existing and excluded.
When should I enroll my pet for maximum hereditary coverage? +
As early as possible — ideally within the first 6–12 months of life. Most providers allow enrollment as early as 8 weeks. Enrolling before your pet has any veterinary records for the conditions your breed is prone to ensures the cleanest hereditary coverage. For high-risk breeds, every month you wait increases the risk that a condition will be noted in records and excluded as pre-existing.

Dental Coverage

Which providers include dental illness coverage? +
9 of the 10 providers we track include dental illness coverage: Trupanion, Embrace, ASPCA, Nationwide, Figo, Lemonade, Spot, Pumpkin, and MetLife. Healthy Paws does not cover dental illness. All providers cover dental accidents (broken teeth from external trauma), but dental illness — which includes periodontal disease and tooth extractions due to disease — requires a specific dental illness policy inclusion.
Does pet insurance cover routine dental cleanings? +
Not under standard accident and illness plans. Routine dental cleanings are considered preventive/wellness care and are only covered under wellness add-on plans (available from Embrace, ASPCA, Nationwide, Lemonade, Spot, Pumpkin, and MetLife). Annual professional dental cleanings for dogs and cats are strongly recommended by veterinarians and typically cost $300–$800 per cleaning, making a wellness add-on worth evaluating.

Deductibles & Reimbursement

What is the difference between an annual and per-incident deductible? +
An annual deductible applies once across all claims for the entire policy year. After meeting it, all further covered claims that year are reimbursed at the agreed percentage. A per-incident deductible (used by Trupanion) applies separately to each new condition — but crucially, once you've paid the deductible for a condition, that deductible is waived for that condition for the life of the policy. This makes Trupanion's model advantageous for pets with one major chronic condition, but potentially expensive for pets with many separate issues.
How does reimbursement percentage work? +
After your deductible is met, the insurer pays the reimbursement percentage of covered costs, and you pay the remainder. At 90% reimbursement on a $2,000 covered bill (after a $250 deductible): the insurer pays 90% of $1,750 = $1,575; you pay $425 total ($250 deductible + $175). Higher reimbursement percentages come with higher monthly premiums. Figo offers 100% reimbursement at the highest plan tier.
Do premiums increase as my pet ages? +
Yes, most providers adjust premiums annually based on your pet's age, your zip code, and overall veterinary cost inflation in your area. Premium increases are typically steepest for pets over age 8–10. Trupanion is unusual in that it does not increase premiums based solely on your pet's age (though premiums still adjust for other factors). Locking in coverage early generally results in lower long-term premiums.

Waiting Periods & Enrollment

What are waiting periods? +
After enrolling, your policy has a waiting period before coverage takes effect. Most providers have a 2-day waiting period for accidents and a 14-day waiting period for illnesses. Trupanion has a 30-day illness waiting period. Orthopedic conditions often have a 6-month waiting period for new enrollees over a certain age. Any condition that develops during the waiting period is considered pre-existing and excluded.
Can I insure an older pet? +
Most providers allow enrollment up to age 10–14 depending on species and breed. However, premiums are significantly higher for senior pets, and any conditions already on file are excluded as pre-existing. Once enrolled, most plans renew for life as long as premiums are paid. Insuring a senior pet is still worth considering for cancer, emergency, and major illness coverage for conditions not yet diagnosed.