Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work for a vet and very few people seem to have insurance. You really have to gauge whether or not it might be valuable for you. Most use CareCredit- which gives you zero percent financing for a set amount of time. We hear from clients more often than not they have to fight it or are not covered for whatever reason. But sometimes they are! And that’s important to consider. I imagine an emergency vet would get more requests from insurance from a typical clinic though.
If you adopt or buy a breed that tends to have more difficulties (labs, goldens…) it might be a good idea to look into it.
Lemonade seems to be one we see pop up more often so people seem to be happy with that one.
Just another prescriptive.
How would you know if a client has insurance? It’s not like people insurance that pays up front. I pay the bill, then when I get home I photograph the receipt. Do they reach out to you to verify?
FWIW I have pets best and really like them. It can take 2-3 weeks to get payment for a claim, but they paid $12k when my puppy ate a bottle of pills, $2k when his tail got stuck on a door and had to be amputated, and pay $2k/year every year for my other dog’s vet behaviorist visit and all her psych meds.
Get it before there are any preexisting conditions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work for a vet and very few people seem to have insurance. You really have to gauge whether or not it might be valuable for you. Most use CareCredit- which gives you zero percent financing for a set amount of time. We hear from clients more often than not they have to fight it or are not covered for whatever reason. But sometimes they are! And that’s important to consider. I imagine an emergency vet would get more requests from insurance from a typical clinic though.
If you adopt or buy a breed that tends to have more difficulties (labs, goldens…) it might be a good idea to look into it.
Lemonade seems to be one we see pop up more often so people seem to be happy with that one.
Just another prescriptive.
How would you know if a client has insurance? It’s not like people insurance that pays up front. I pay the bill, then when I get home I photograph the receipt. Do they reach out to you to verify?
FWIW I have pets best and really like them. It can take 2-3 weeks to get payment for a claim, but they paid $12k when my puppy ate a bottle of pills, $2k when his tail got stuck on a door and had to be amputated, and pay $2k/year every year for my other dog’s vet behaviorist visit and all her psych meds.
Get it before there are any preexisting
Of course we know. You cannot get coverage without evidence. Insurance reaches out to us.
Again. It’s personal preference but most do not have it. Unless they have extra money to spend on insurance. We don’t advocate for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work for a vet and very few people seem to have insurance. You really have to gauge whether or not it might be valuable for you. Most use CareCredit- which gives you zero percent financing for a set amount of time. We hear from clients more often than not they have to fight it or are not covered for whatever reason. But sometimes they are! And that’s important to consider. I imagine an emergency vet would get more requests from insurance from a typical clinic though.
If you adopt or buy a breed that tends to have more difficulties (labs, goldens…) it might be a good idea to look into it.
Lemonade seems to be one we see pop up more often so people seem to be happy with that one.
Just another prescriptive.
How would you know if a client has insurance? It’s not like people insurance that pays up front. I pay the bill, then when I get home I photograph the receipt. Do they reach out to you to verify?
Yes. They require all records.
FWIW I have pets best and really like them. It can take 2-3 weeks to get payment for a claim, but they paid $12k when my puppy ate a bottle of pills, $2k when his tail got stuck on a door and had to be amputated, and pay $2k/year every year for my other dog’s vet behaviorist visit and all her psych meds.
Get it before there are any preexisting conditions.
Anonymous wrote:I work for a vet and very few people seem to have insurance. You really have to gauge whether or not it might be valuable for you. Most use CareCredit- which gives you zero percent financing for a set amount of time. We hear from clients more often than not they have to fight it or are not covered for whatever reason. But sometimes they are! And that’s important to consider. I imagine an emergency vet would get more requests from insurance from a typical clinic though.
If you adopt or buy a breed that tends to have more difficulties (labs, goldens…) it might be a good idea to look into it.
Lemonade seems to be one we see pop up more often so people seem to be happy with that one.
Just another prescriptive.