Summary of this article
India's relationship with pets has quietly transformed over the past decade. What once meant a bag of kibble and an annual vaccination has expanded into something far more involved: specialist consultations, diagnostic imaging, grooming memberships, premium boarding.
Veterinary care has kept pace. Orthopaedic surgeries. Cancer treatments. Emergency ICU care. Specialist hospitals in metros now offer facilities that would have seemed extraordinary even five years ago.
As India’s pet economy matures, awareness around pet healthcare, wellness and financial preparedness is expected to grow alongside it.
When Delhi-based Priya's four-year-old Labrador, Bruno, was diagnosed with a serious joint condition last year, the surgery estimate hit her like a wall. Nearly Rs 80,000. She paid it from savings she hadn't planned to touch, but something shifted in how she saw herself as a pet owner.
"I insure my car. I have health insurance for myself," she says, almost laughing at the irony. "But Bruno? It never even crossed my mind."
It's crossing a lot of minds now.
India's relationship with pets has quietly transformed over the past decade. What once meant a bag of kibble and an annual vaccination has expanded into something far more involved: specialist consultations, diagnostic imaging, grooming memberships, premium boarding. Urban pet parents today spend the way parents of human children do: a little anxiously, a lot lovingly, and increasingly, with a plan.
Veterinary care has kept pace. Orthopaedic surgeries. Cancer treatments. Emergency ICU care. Specialist hospitals in metros now offer facilities that would have seemed extraordinary even five years ago. The outcomes are better. So are the bills often running into several lakhs for complex conditions.
Which is where pet insurance enters the story.
It works the way health insurance does. You pay an annual premium; the insurer steps in when veterinary bills cross a threshold. Most plans cover accidents, illnesses, hospitalisations, surgeries, and a range of diagnostic tests. Some go further, with add-ons for vaccinations, routine check-ups, and preventive care.
"Insurance isn't meant to cover every visit to the vet," says Venkatesh Naidu, CEO at BajajCapital Insurance Broking Ltd. "It's meant to protect against costs that are large, unexpected, and capable of genuinely disrupting a family's finances. The same logic that applies to health insurance applies here."
The logic is increasingly hard to argue with. Because the harder truth is this: when veterinary care becomes advanced enough to save lives, the question of whether to pursue treatment stops being medical and becomes financial. For pet owners who think of their animals as family, and more and more of them do, that's an agonising place to be.
"The emotional bond has changed fundamentally," says Naidu. "When a pet is family, you start thinking about their healthcare the same way."
If you're considering a policy, a few things are worth understanding before you sign.
The sum insured matters more than the premium. A plan that looks affordable might leave you underprotected if your pet needs surgery in a city with high veterinary costs. Compare the coverage limit against realistic worst-case scenarios.
Most policies carry a waiting period, typically a few weeks after purchase during which claims won't be accepted. Buying insurance after your pet is already unwell won't help. Pre-existing conditions are almost universally excluded, and the definition of "pre-existing" can be broader than you'd expect. Read the fine print before you assume something is covered.
Breed matters too. Certain dogs are genetically predisposed to specific conditions like hip dysplasia in large breeds, for instance. Some insurers exclude these entirely. If you own a breed with known hereditary risks, this is a conversation to have before purchasing.
Finally, if cashless treatment is important to you, check whether your regular vet or nearby hospital is on the insurer's network. A cashless facility is only useful if it's actually accessible.
The Bigger Shift
As India’s pet economy matures, awareness around pet healthcare, wellness and financial preparedness is expected to grow alongside it. The rise of pet insurance is not just a story of a new financial product. It is a reflection of how Indian families are changing and how the definition of care continues to expand. For millions of pet parents, that evolution is already well underway.
















