We have Healthy Paws coverage for our 7 year old and 7 month old golden retrievers. We too avoided health insurance for our dogs, thinking we'd put away a certain amount into an emergency fund each month, but in reality we ended up needing to hit that fund for veterinary treatment for our horses instead! The other reality is that we'd have to invest a lot of money into that fund every month in order to cover expenses that happened in the first couple years of "saving." If the expensive vet episode happened a long way down the road, we'd probably have had the funds to cover it, but if it happened earlier on, there wouldn't have been enough money in the savings account to cover the costs. With 2 dogs and 3 horses, there's no way we could set aside enough money each month to cover the potential catastrophic event for all of them.
Our 9 year old female golden, who we lost last February, had a sudden onset of blindness and internal bleeding precluding surgery. Literally, she was playing outside at 5:00 and in the veterinary ICU fighting for her life at 9:00. Two thousand dollars and two days later she was beyond hope and we had to euthanize her. Just the overnight stay was $800, and we had a two-page itemized list of charges without even any treatment beyond examinations...just the tests and overnight surveillance. If she had been a candidate for surgery, it would have also required a series of blood transfusions and the estimated cost would have been over $7000. Which if she'd had a chance of surviving, we would have paid for even though it would have been a huge financial hit for us. We decided we'd rather hedge against that happening with our other dogs and be covered in the worst case scenario. Healthy Paws was the only one, after a lot of research, I felt would be compatible for what we needed. We can somewhat control our risk vs. cost by choosing a greater or lesser percentage of reimbursement and lower or higher deductibles at Healthy Paws. I still worry about the horses, but at least if either of the dogs gets cancer or some other cost-prohibitive-to-treat condition, we will be able to pay for it.