How much does a Siberian Husky cost?
Medium dog · average lifespan 13 years (12–14)
Owning a Siberian Husky costs about $1,800 in the first year and roughly $1,400 a year after that for food, routine vet care, preventives and supplies. Over an average 13-year lifespan that adds up to an estimated $18,600 — a transparent figure (first year + $1,400 × 12 more years) that excludes major one-off medical events and inflation. Accident-and-illness pet insurance for this breed runs about $54.00/month. This is an estimate — your costs will vary.
Source: ASPCA (annual & first-year pet care costs); NAPHIA State of the Industry Report. Data as of June 2026.
Siberian Husky cost breakdown
| Cost | Typical amount | What it covers / source |
|---|---|---|
| First-year cost | $1,800 | Adoption/purchase, spay/neuter, vaccines, supplies, first year of food & care (ASPCA/APPA averages) |
| Annual recurring cost | $1,400/yr | Food, routine vet, preventives, grooming, supplies (ASPCA/APPA averages) |
| Pet insurance (accident + illness) | $54.00/mo (~$648/yr) | Breed-adjusted estimate around the NAPHIA national average ($56/mo dogs) |
| Estimated lifetime cost | $18,600 | Estimate: first year + $1,400 × 12 more years (avg lifespan 13 yrs) |
Source: ASPCA (annual & first-year pet care costs) · NAPHIA State of the Industry Report. Data as of June 2026.
Lifetime cost is an estimate using the formula on our methodology page: first-year cost + average annual cost × (average lifespan − 1). It does not include large unexpected medical bills — see the breed health note below.
Lifespan & insurance
Siberian Huskys live about 12–14 years (we use 13 as the average). At an accident-and-illness premium of about $54.00/month, insuring this breed for its whole life would total roughly $8,424 in premiums — money that is only "worth it" if you face a big claim. Compare the average premiums and how insurance works.
Breed health & cost risks
A hardy, long-lived working breed with relatively few hereditary issues (mainly eye conditions and hip dysplasia); high exercise and escape-proofing needs.
Major procedures this can lead to — and their typical price ranges — are on our vet-cost pages (for example ACL/TPLO knee surgery at $3,500–$5,000).
Estimate your own Siberian Husky budget
Every dog and household is different. Use the free pet cost calculator to plug in your own food, vet and insurance spending and get a personalised first-year, annual and lifetime estimate. Or compare this breed against others on the all-dogs cost list.
Frequently asked questions
How much does it cost to own a Siberian Husky for its whole life?
The estimated lifetime cost of a Siberian Husky is about $18,600, based on a published first-year cost of about $1,800 plus $1,400 a year for the remaining 12 years of an average 13-year lifespan. This is a transparent estimate (first year + annual × (avg lifespan − 1)); it excludes major one-off medical events and inflation, so your real total will vary.
How much does a Siberian Husky cost per year?
Owning a Siberian Husky costs roughly $1,400 a year in recurring expenses — food, routine veterinary care, preventives, grooming and supplies — based on ASPCA/APPA averages. Pet insurance, if you buy it, adds about $648 a year for an accident-and-illness policy.
How long do Siberian Huskys live?
Siberian Huskys typically live 12–14 years, with an average around 13 years. Longer-lived breeds cost more over a lifetime simply because there are more years to pay for.
Is pet insurance worth it for a Siberian Husky?
A hardy, long-lived working breed with relatively few hereditary issues (mainly eye conditions and hip dysplasia); high exercise and escape-proofing needs. Because of that, an accident-and-illness policy (about $54.00/month for this breed) can protect you against a large surprise bill. Whether it pays off depends on whether your dog has a major claim. See our pet-insurance guide for the trade-off.
Sources & accuracy
Annual and first-year costs are based on published averages from the ASPCA and APPA; insurance figures are anchored to the NAPHIA national average. The lifetime figure is a transparent estimate, not a quote. Estimate — your costs will vary. This is general information, not veterinary or financial advice. See our methodology.
Last updated: 2026-06-18