Planning for an Emergency in New York City
The $886 moderate emergency is the one to plan for. It's the most common scenario — not the broken bone, not the upset stomach that resolves in an hour. Your options:
Build an emergency fund
Set aside $354/year into a dedicated pet account. After 3 years you have a meaningful buffer. This works well for young, healthy pets where routine costs are low and emergencies are statistically rare. The downside: if a crisis hits in year one, you're not covered.
Get pet insurance
In New York City, accident-and-illness coverage runs $50–$90/month for a dog. The math works out for most pets by their third or fourth year of coverage — especially if you adopt a large breed or a brachycephalic dog with known health risks. Get it before anything is wrong, since pre-existing conditions aren't covered.
Know your nearest 24-hour ER now
Don't look up emergency vet options at 2am with a sick dog in your arms. Find the two nearest 24-hour clinics in New York City, save the numbers, and note their parking situation. The $236 exam fee is fixed — you can't shop around mid-emergency.