Most expensive cats to insure
Chart: the six top-ranked cats by insurance/yr — taller bars rank higher on this metric.
What this ranking shows
Across 8 cats, insurance/yr ranges from $290 to $580 — a 2.0× spread, with a median around $385. The Maine Coon leads at $580, while the Domestic Shorthair sits at the far end. Rounding out the top three are the Persian ($500) and the Sphynx ($500). Most of the gap comes down to three things: body size (which sets how much a cat eats and its medication doses), breed health risk (which sets insurance premiums and likely vet bills), and lifespan (which multiplies every recurring annual cost). Use the sorter below to re-rank by your own budget, home size and grooming tolerance.
| # | Breed | Size | Insurance/yr | Lifetime cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Maine Coon | Large | $580 | $27,600 |
| 2 | Persian | Medium | $500 | $28,700 |
| 3 | Sphynx | Medium | $500 | $20,200 |
| 4 | Ragdoll | Large | $410 | $24,800 |
| 5 | Siamese | Medium | $360 | $21,400 |
| 6 | British Shorthair | Medium | $360 | $22,800 |
| 7 | Bengal | Medium | $360 | $20,400 |
| 8 | Domestic Shorthair | Medium | $290 | $18,100 |
Compiled by the PawCosts data team from breed standards, NAPHIA averages and AAFCO/vet nutrition formulas.
Frequently asked questions
Why are some cats costly to insure?
Breeds prone to costly chronic conditions carry higher premiums.
How is this ranking calculated?
From our sortable cost database: food via the vet RER/MER calorie formula, insurance from NAPHIA US averages by breed health-risk tier, and lifespan from published breed standards.
What is the typical insurance/yr for cats?
The median across 8 breeds is about $385.
Are these exact prices?
No — they are modelled US planning estimates; your real cost varies by region, provider and the individual animal.