Pet insurance cost in Texas
In Texas, an accident-and-illness pet-insurance policy is estimated at about $56.33/month for a dog (~$676/yr) and $31.92/month for a cat (~$383/yr). That works out about the same as the US average. Large, diverse market with costs close to the national average; rural areas are cheaper, Austin/Dallas/Houston pull the average up. This is an estimate, not a quote — your costs will vary by breed, age and policy. Always compare real quotes.
Source: NAPHIA State of the Industry Report. Data as of June 2026.
Estimated Texas premiums
| Pet / plan | Est. monthly | Est. annual |
|---|---|---|
| Dog — accident + illness | $56.33/mo | $676/yr |
| Cat — accident + illness | $31.92/mo | $383/yr |
Source: NAPHIA State of the Industry Report (national average × labelled Texas adjustment). Data as of June 2026.
How this is built: the NAPHIA national average ($56.30/mo dog, $32.00/mo cat) × a 1.00 cost-of-care multiplier for Texas. The multiplier is a clearly-labelled adjustment, documented on the methodology page — it is illustrative, not a rate filing.
How to lower your premium in Texas
Premiums fall when you raise the deductible, lower the reimbursement percentage or cap the annual limit; an accident-only policy is the cheapest option. Compare several insurers' quotes for your specific breed and age. For the national picture and what's covered, see the pet insurance overview, and run your own numbers in the pet cost calculator.
Frequently asked questions
How much is pet insurance in Texas?
In Texas, an accident-and-illness policy is estimated at about $56.33/month for a dog and $31.92/month for a cat. That is an estimate — the NAPHIA national average ($56.30/mo dog, $32.00/mo cat) adjusted about the same as the national average for Texas. Large, diverse market with costs close to the national average; rural areas are cheaper, Austin/Dallas/Houston pull the average up. Get real quotes for your pet.
Why is pet insurance more expensive in some states?
Premiums track the local cost of veterinary care, which is driven by labor costs, real-estate/overheads and claim frequency. High-cost metros (especially in California and New York) push premiums up; lower-cost states sit below the national average.
Is the Texas figure a quote?
No. It is an illustrative estimate built from the national NAPHIA average and a transparent state cost adjustment, to show how Texas compares. Your actual premium depends on breed, age, deductible and reimbursement level — always compare real quotes.
Sources & accuracy
Based on the NAPHIA national average premium and a transparent Texas cost adjustment. Estimate, not a quote — your costs will vary. See our methodology and disclaimer.
Last updated: 2026-06-18