How Much Does It Cost to Own a Cat in 2026?

A typical cat costs $900 to $1,900 per year to keep, or roughly $75 to $160 per month – noticeably cheaper than a dog, but the first year and unexpected vet bills can still surprise new owners. Try the calculator below, then see the full breakdown.

Cat Cost Calculator

Estimated annual cost $0

Estimates use typical 2026 US prices and cover food, litter, routine vet care, insurance, sitting and supplies. Buying the cat, spay/neuter and emergency treatment are not included.

Average Annual Cat Costs

ExpenseTypical range (per year)
Food and treats$340-$900
Litter$150-$350
Routine vet care (exam, vaccines, parasite prevention)$250-$400
Pet insurance (accident and illness)$250-$450
Toys, scratching posts, supplies$100-$200
Cat-sitting (5 days)$100-$180

Indoor-outdoor cats usually cost more in vet care – more parasite prevention, higher injury and infection risk – which is also why insurers often charge more for them.

First-Year Costs

  • Adoption fee: $30-$200 (pedigree kittens from breeders: $500-$2,500+)
  • Spay or neuter: $100-$400
  • Initial vaccinations and microchip: $90-$220
  • Supplies: litter box, carrier, bed, scratcher – $100-$300

Plan for an extra $300-$1,000 in year one.

How to Keep Cat Costs Down

  1. Keep your cat indoors – it dramatically cuts injury and infection bills.
  2. Insure early; premiums for young cats start around $15-$20 per month.
  3. Brush teeth or use dental treats – dental disease is the most common expensive condition in cats over 5.
  4. Buy litter in bulk; consider a stainless litter box that lasts years.
  5. Keep weight in check – diabetes in overweight cats costs $1,200+ per year to manage.

Prices reflect typical 2026 costs in the United States and are for information only.