Fetch covers over 450,000 pets and advertises up to 90% reimbursement. But between Reddit’s 8% positive sentiment and BBB complaint patterns around claim denials and premium jumps, the real picture is more complicated. This guide gives you the facts β what’s covered, what isn’t, what past customers actually experienced, and when Fetch makes sense versus when it doesn’t.
Fetch’s “up to 90% reimbursement” claim is accurate β but the path to that 90% runs through your annual deductible first. On the most popular plan ($300 deductible, 80% reimbursement, $10,000 annual limit), you pay the first $300 out of pocket, then get back 80 cents of every dollar above that. If your dog’s illness costs $400, your actual reimbursement is 80% of $100, not 80% of $400. This matters for routine and low-cost visits: Fetch is designed for big, unexpected bills β not frequent small ones. Understanding this math before you pick your deductible is the difference between a plan that delivers what you expect and one that disappoints.
This is the breakdown most review sites bury in small print. What Fetch covers is genuinely broad compared to competitors. What it excludes are the items that trip people up most.
- Accidents and new illnesses
- Cancer treatment
- Hereditary and breed-specific conditions
- All adult teeth β dental injuries and disease
- Behavioral therapy (up to $1,000/yr)
- 24/7 telehealth vet visits (up to $1,000/yr)
- Exam fees when your pet is sick
- Emergency vet and specialist visits
- Boarding if owner is hospitalized (up to $1,000)
- Lost pet advertising and reward (up to $1,000)
- Alternative therapies (acupuncture, chiro, hydro)
- MRI, X-rays, bloodwork, diagnostics
- Prescription medications
- Any licensed vet in the U.S. or Canada
- Pre-existing conditions
- Anything during the 15-day waiting period
- Orthopedic conditions in first 6 months
- Routine wellness (unless add-on purchased)
- Prescription food
- Cosmetic procedures (ear cropping, tail docking)
- Breeding and pregnancy
- Elective procedures
- Claims filed more than 90 days after treatment
- Euthanasia without vet recommendation
- Cremation and disposal of remains
- Dental cleaning (preventive β illness covered)
- Grooming, boarding (outside hospital scenario)
- Vitamins and supplements not vet-prescribed
Multiple BBB complaints and Reddit threads document a pattern: at annual renewal, Fetch has added new exclusions to individual policies based on claims made during the year. A dog treated for an ear infection in year one may find “ear conditions” newly excluded at renewal. While Fetch states that premiums cannot be raised based on individual claims history, policy exclusions at renewal appear to operate differently β and switching to another insurer at that point means the condition is now pre-existing everywhere. This is the practice drawing the most sustained criticism and is worth specifically asking Fetch to address in writing before enrolling if your pet is already receiving treatment for any ongoing condition.
The questions people actually search for when considering Fetch β answered plainly, before the longer context below each one.
-
1
Is Fetch a good pet insurance? For coverage breadth: yes β it’s among the most comprehensive plans in the U.S. For price, long-term premium stability, and Reddit-reported claims experience: the picture is significantly more complicated.Fetch genuinely includes things that competitors charge extra for or exclude entirely: sick-visit exam fees, dental disease for all adult teeth, behavioral therapy, and telehealth β all in the base plan. Forbes named it the best dental coverage in pet insurance. NerdWallet gives it 4.3 out of 5 overall. The concern is durability over time: customers who enroll puppies and stay for years consistently report dramatic annual premium increases and, in some cases, new exclusions added at renewal based on what conditions the pet experienced that year. The picture looks different depending on whether you’re six months into a policy or six years in.
-
2
Is Fetch pet insurance worth it? Worth it if your pet has a major unexpected illness or injury that costs thousands. Less worth it if your main use is routine visits and smaller claims β the deductible structure makes those situations expensive.Pet insurance math works like any insurance: you’re betting something expensive will happen; the insurer is betting it won’t. Fetch’s base plans have a $250β$700 annual deductible, meaning you pay the first chunk every year before any reimbursement starts. A typical $800 emergency vet visit after meeting a $300 deductible at 80% reimbursement means you get back $400, not $640. That’s still meaningful. For a $6,000 surgery or cancer treatment, the math changes dramatically in your favor. Fetch is worth it for owners who are prepared for a major expense and want protection against the truly catastrophic costs β cancer, emergency surgery, chronic disease management β rather than routine veterinary care.
-
3
What does Fetch not cover? Pre-existing conditions, anything during the 15-day waiting period, orthopedic conditions in the first 6 months, prescription food, cosmetic procedures, routine wellness (without the add-on), and claims submitted more than 90 days after treatment.The 90-day claim filing deadline is the one that catches people most off-guard β it’s easy to forget about an invoice from months ago, especially in the aftermath of a stressful medical situation. Set a reminder the day you leave the vet: submit within 90 days or you lose coverage. The orthopedic waiting period matters for large breeds: hip dysplasia, cruciate ligament issues, and elbow dysplasia are not covered for the first six months. Fetch can waive the knee injury waiting period if a veterinarian examines your pet within the first 180 days of the policy and confirms no pre-existing orthopedic condition β worth scheduling if you have a breed prone to joint problems.
-
4
Is PetPlan now Fetch? Yes. PetPlan was acquired and rebranded as Fetch. If you had a PetPlan policy, it transitioned to Fetch. Some customers report account errors during this transition that caused billing problems and coverage gaps.PetPlan was one of the oldest U.S. pet insurance providers before the acquisition. The transition to Fetch was not seamless for all customers β multiple BBB complaints specifically reference account errors during the rebrand where policies were incorrectly merged, cancelled, or billed incorrectly. If you’re a former PetPlan customer who is still experiencing issues from the transition, Fetch’s customer service team can be reached by phone or through the app. Document everything in writing during any account dispute: ask for confirmation emails of any changes and keep copies of your original policy terms.
-
5
How do I cancel Fetch pet insurance? Fetch requires a phone call to cancel β they do not offer online or app-based cancellation. Phone hours are limited. Several customer reviews specifically mention difficulty getting through and retention pressure during cancellation calls.This is one of Fetch’s most consistent pain points in customer reviews. To cancel, call Fetch customer service during business hours (not available 24/7). Be prepared for a retention conversation β agents are trained to offer alternatives before processing a cancellation. You have a right to cancel without explanation. Ask specifically for a cancellation confirmation number and request a written confirmation via email before you hang up. If you’re canceling because you found a better rate elsewhere, be aware that any condition your current pet was treated for under Fetch will be classified as pre-existing by your new insurer β this may affect your decision of when and whether to switch.
-
6
What is Fetch pet insurance’s phone number? 1-800-838-6928. Also reachable via the Fetch app, email at [email protected], and live chat on fetchpet.com. The app supports 24/7 access to telehealth vets, but customer service for billing and claims is not available around the clock.Claims can be submitted any time through the app or web portal β you don’t need to call for that. For billing questions, policy changes, cancellations, and disputes over denied claims, phone contact during business hours is required for many issues. Several BBB complaints note that the AI chat feature did not connect to a human agent even when requested β if you need a person, calling directly rather than starting with the chat feature appears to be more reliable based on customer reports.
-
7
How trustworthy is Fetch pet insurance? Fetch holds an A+ BBB rating and a 4.5-star Trustpilot average across 7,000+ reviews. Reddit runs significantly more negative. The divergence appears to reflect when reviews are written β enrollment-time reviews versus years-in-claims-experience reviews tell different stories.The statistical disconnect between Trustpilot (overwhelmingly positive) and Reddit (8% positive in analyzed samples) is genuine and worth examining. Trustpilot ratings appear disproportionately concentrated around the enrollment experience β helpful agents, clear policy explanations, smooth signup. Reddit complaints cluster around claims denials, renewal exclusion additions, and premium increases after years of coverage. Both experiences are real β they reflect different stages of the customer relationship. The most balanced reading: Fetch’s enrollment and customer service team receives consistently positive feedback; Fetch’s claims adjudication and renewal practices receive consistently critical feedback from long-term customers.
-
8
What discounts does Fetch offer? Up to 10% for AARP members, military veterans and active service members, shelter adoption within 30 days, therapy and support animal owners, and Walmart shoppers. Multi-pet discount available. Claim-free discount at renewal.AARP members should specifically ask about the discount during enrollment β it applies through Fetch’s partnership program and may not automatically populate in online quotes. The adoption discount is time-sensitive: you must enroll within 30 days of adopting from a shelter and the adoption must meet Fetch’s program requirements. The claim-free discount rewards policyholders who complete a year without submitting any claims β the exact percentage varies. Paying annually or quarterly instead of monthly also reduces the overall cost. If you have multiple pets, each requires a separate policy but the multi-pet discount applies across them.