Source-linked estimates
Built from published cost references
Understand what your pet will truly cost — from first vet visit to final year. Plan smarter with real numbers.
Pet costs are not one-size-fits-all. This free dog and cat lifetime cost calculator uses adjustable planning assumptions for breed, location, care style, lifespan, and inflation to estimate first-year, monthly, and lifetime spending. Start with the defaults, then fine-tune the result and review our published methodology.
Built from published cost references
Reviewed annually using published sources
Simple, transparent, and easy to understand
Your calculator choices stay in your browser
Inflation-adjusted future-dollar estimate based on your inputs. Midrange estimate · actual costs vary ±30% · adjusted for US Average.
Planning estimate informed by published reference benchmarks. Review sources and limitations.
Download a year-by-year cost plan with your estimate, category breakdown, and practical budgeting notes.
Browse focused guide cards instead of digging through long link lists. Compare popular breeds, see how location changes your totals, and jump straight into the guide you need.
Browse 38 breed cost guides and 15 detailed state guides. The calculator still models all 50 states + DC for quick estimates.
Figures shown as today's-dollar planning baselines.
Figures shown as today's-dollar planning baselines.
Six quick answers for the biggest budgeting questions.
These are practical planning estimates, not quotes or guarantees. The model starts with published reference benchmarks, then applies breed, state, care-level, lifespan, and inflation assumptions. Your actual spending will vary by household, provider, location, and pet health. Treat the result as a useful budget range, review the category breakdown, and adjust the inputs to reflect your choices.
No. The main estimate focuses on expected ownership costs and routine care so the result remains a realistic baseline. Unexpected illness, injury, specialist treatment, dental work, and end-of-life care can materially change your total. Keep a separate emergency fund, compare insurance options, and leave room in your monthly budget for costs that cannot be predicted in advance.
Size, food needs, grooming, routine care, typical lifespan, and common health risks all influence the planning baseline. A large or medically complex breed may cost substantially more over time than a smaller, lower-risk pet. Recurring costs also continue for each year of ownership. Use the breed guides and calculator sliders to compare assumptions before you adopt.
Care level adjusts the annual planning baseline across recurring categories. Budget models leaner spending choices, Standard reflects a typical US household, and Premium models more service-intensive care. It is not a judgment about responsible ownership. You can change the setting at any time and immediately see how food, routine care, services, and the lifetime total respond.
We review the calculator when major reference sources, pricing context, or model assumptions change. The methodology page lists the current sources, calculation steps, limitations, and review date. It also explains which values come from published material and which are editorial planning assumptions. Because household costs change over time, the calculator is intended for budgeting rather than exact forecasting.
Yes, as a starting point. Compare the monthly estimate with your available budget, housing situation, savings, and existing commitments, then leave room for surprise care. A responsible decision should consider both routine spending and a separate emergency plan. The affordability quiz can help you think through the wider decision after you review your calculator estimate.
We built the calculator to turn pet cost research into a realistic planning baseline, not a vague guess. The model blends national benchmarks with breed and location adjustments so the number feels useful before you adopt.