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Owning a pet in Pattaya

What it costs to own a pet in Pattaya

The good news for pet owners: routine pet care in Pattaya is generally affordable by Western standards. Here is where the money goes.

Last updated 21 May 2026

Rules change — verify before you act

Costs are general orientation gathered in May 2026 and vary by your pet, your choices and the provider. Use them to plan, not as fixed quotes.

The monthly running costs

A pet’s ongoing budget in Pattaya is mostly:

  • Food — the biggest regular cost. Supermarket brands are inexpensive; imported premium and prescription diets cost more.
  • Parasite prevention — year-round flea, tick and worm control, which in this climate is not optional.
  • Grooming — occasional for short-coated pets, regular for long coats.
  • Litter, treats and sundries.

The occasional costs

  • Vaccinations and check-ups — annual, and very reasonably priced at most Pattaya clinics.
  • Boarding — if you travel, a daily rate per pet.
  • Unexpected vet treatment — the wildcard. Routine care is cheap; a serious illness, surgery or a hospital stay is not, and this is where pet insurance or a savings buffer earns its place.

The honest summary

Day to day, keeping a healthy pet in Pattaya costs noticeably less than in most Western countries. The figure that derails budgets is never the kibble — it is an unplanned medical bill. Build a buffer, or insure, and the rest is comfortably manageable.

Frequently asked

Is vet care expensive in Pattaya?

Routine vet care — vaccinations, check-ups, basic treatment — is generally affordable by Western standards. Major treatment, surgery or a hospital stay is where costs climb, which is the case for planning a buffer or insurance.

Should I get pet insurance in Thailand?

It depends on your finances and your pet. The case for it is the rare big bill, not the routine costs. See our guide to pet insurance in Thailand.

Editorial and informational only. PattayaPets is not a veterinary practice and does not give veterinary advice. Pet import and export rules change without notice — always confirm the current requirements with the official source before you act. Always consult a qualified veterinarian about your pet’s health.