ProHeart injections are priced by your dog’s weight, not by a flat rate. Enter your dog’s weight below and get a real estimate for both the 6-month and 12-month formulations โ plus the dosing chart, a plain-English safety guide, and answers to the questions most pet owners never think to ask before the appointment.
The American Heartworm Society released a new heartworm incidence map in April 2026 showing a significant geographic expansion of heartworm cases โ with hotspots shifting northward as mosquito habitat expands with changing weather patterns. Previously low-risk states including parts of the Midwest and Northeast are now reporting higher case counts. AHS veterinary specialists now recommend year-round prevention in all 50 states, calling seasonal prevention strategies “difficult to justify” given mosquitoes’ ability to survive indoors and in protected outdoor areas year-round. For dog owners, this makes a once-yearly injection like ProHeart 12 more relevant than ever โ no gaps in protection, no months to skip, and no pill to miss during the months when many owners historically let their guard down.
Enter your dog’s weight and select pounds or kilograms. The calculator returns the typical cost range for ProHeart 6 (6-month) and ProHeart 12 (12-month) at most U.S. veterinary clinics, plus the FDA-approved dose volume. Actual prices vary by clinic โ always confirm with your vet before your appointment.
These are the FDA-approved dose volumes from the official ProHeart 12 prescribing information (Zoetis, 2026). The active ingredient moxidectin is dosed at 0.5 mg per kilogram of body weight (0.23 mg/lb). ProHeart 6 uses the same weight-band system at one-third the moxidectin concentration.
| Dog Weight | Weight in kg | ProHeart 12 Volume | Typical Cost Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6โ25 lbs | 2.8โ11.3 kg | 0.5 mL | $60โ$120 |
| 25.1โ50 lbs | 11.4โ22.7 kg | 1.0 mL | $90โ$150 |
| 50.1โ100 lbs | 22.8โ45.4 kg | 2.0 mL | $115โ$175 |
| 100.1โ132 lbs | 45.5โ60 kg | 3.0 mL (split sites) | $140โ$210 |
| Over 132 lbs | Over 60 kg | Based on exact weight | $160โ$250+ |
Doses over 3 mL (dogs above ~132 lbs) are divided between two injection sites per the official Zoetis prescribing guidelines. The veterinarian determines exact injection volume based on the dog’s precise body weight at the time of administration.
The questions people search most about ProHeart pricing and safety โ answered without the promotional language from the manufacturer’s website or the vague “ask your vet” deflections that don’t actually help.
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How much does a ProHeart 12 shot cost? Typically $60โ$250+ depending on your dog’s weight ยท Small dogs (under 25 lbs): $60โ$120 ยท Medium dogs (25โ50 lbs): $90โ$150 ยท Large dogs (50โ100 lbs): $115โ$175 ยท These ranges are for the injection only and do not include exam fees or the required heartworm testProHeart 12 is priced by weight because the dose volume is calculated at 0.5 mg of moxidectin per kilogram of body weight โ so a larger dog simply requires more medication. The prices above reflect what real veterinary clinics charge based on publicly available fee schedules; they are not the manufacturer’s suggested price. Mobile and nonprofit veterinary clinics often run 20โ40% below standard clinic rates โ pop-up vaccination events have been documented charging as little as $60 for small dogs up to 25 lbs. Full-service veterinary hospitals in major metropolitan areas may charge significantly more, particularly if the injection is bundled with an annual wellness exam.
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Is ProHeart 12 cheaper than monthly heartworm pills? Over a full year, the total cost is usually comparable to 12 months of monthly chewables like Heartgard Plus or Sentinel ยท The math favors ProHeart when you factor in missed doses ยท Monthly chewables for a 50-lb dog run roughly $8โ$12/month = $96โ$144/year ยท ProHeart 12 for the same dog: $115โ$175 for the full year in one shot ยท No missed dose risk with ProHeartZoetis (ProHeart’s manufacturer) acknowledges directly on their website that the annual cost is “about the same” as 12 months of monthly preventative. What changes the math is compliance: a published study of over 4,600 U.S. veterinary practices found that dogs on ProHeart had significantly better heartworm prevention coverage than dogs on monthly chewables โ because owners miss monthly doses at predictable rates. The real cost of a missed monthly dose isn’t the pill price; it’s the risk of infection during that unprotected window, followed by a heartworm treatment costing $1,200โ$3,000 or more. For owners who travel frequently, have irregular schedules, or have dogs that resist taking pills, ProHeart’s all-in-one annual injection often works out to be cheaper in practice even if the sticker price is slightly higher.
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What is ProHeart 6, and is it different from ProHeart 12? Same active ingredient (moxidectin) ยท ProHeart 6: 6-month protection, approved for dogs 6 months and older ยท ProHeart 12: 12-month protection, approved for dogs 12 months and older ยท ProHeart 12 contains 3x the moxidectin concentration ยท ProHeart 6 costs less per injection but requires two injections per year vs. one ยท Same manufacturer: ZoetisProHeart 6 was the original long-acting moxidectin injectable, first approved in 2001, then voluntarily pulled in 2004 after serious adverse event reports, then re-approved in 2008 after safety improvements. ProHeart 12 received FDA approval in July 2019 using the same microsphere delivery technology with three times the moxidectin concentration. Both work by storing slow-dissolving microspheres of moxidectin in the dog’s adipose (fat) tissue, which then releases the drug gradually over either 6 or 12 months. A 6-month-old puppy can receive ProHeart 6, then switch to ProHeart 12 once they turn 12 months. The younger age eligibility for ProHeart 6 makes it the preferred choice for puppies who need heartworm protection before they’re old enough for the annual injection.
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What are the side effects of ProHeart 12? Reported in clinical trials: vomiting, lethargy, diarrhea, anorexia, mild injection site reactions (warmth, swelling, itching) ยท Rare but serious: anaphylaxis (severe allergic reaction) โ can be life-threatening ยท Highest risk: when given at the same visit as vaccines ยท Dogs must stay at the clinic for observation after the first injectionThe FDA’s approved prescribing information is direct about both the common and rare adverse events. Mild GI symptoms โ vomiting, loose stools, reduced appetite in the 24โ48 hours after injection โ occur in a small but documented percentage of dogs. Injection site reactions (localized warmth, minor swelling, brief itching) were observed in six dogs in clinical trials and resolved within 24 hours. The serious risk is anaphylaxis, which has been specifically documented when ProHeart is administered at the same time as routine vaccinations. The official prescribing information advises caution when combining ProHeart with vaccines and recommends veterinary observation after administration. A published safety study found ProHeart 12 was well-tolerated at up to 5x the recommended dose in beagles, which reflects a solid safety margin at standard dosing. The vast majority of adverse reactions that do occur are managed and resolved with veterinary care.
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Is ProHeart 12 safe for heartworm-positive dogs? No โ ProHeart 12 cannot be safely given to heartworm-positive dogs ยท It is NOT effective against adult heartworms ยท A required heartworm antigen test before administration is standard protocol ยท Dogs with heartworm must be treated with melarsomine (adulticide) first ยท Administering ProHeart to a dog with existing heartworm can cause serious adverse reactionsThis is the most critical safety question surrounding ProHeart, and the FDA prescribing information is unambiguous: a heartworm antigen test is required before the first ProHeart injection, and infected dogs must complete full adulticide treatment before ProHeart can be administered. The mechanism matters here: ProHeart 12 kills heartworm larvae (the tissue stage) but has no effect on adult worms already living in the heart and major vessels. Giving ProHeart to a heartworm-positive dog doesn’t treat the existing infection โ and in a laboratory study, dogs with 4 to 6-month-old heartworm infections who were given moxidectin microspheres (at a different dose) experienced vomiting, lethargy, and bloody diarrhea. For a dog that is behind on heartworm testing, the heartworm test is the first requirement before anything else happens at the vet appointment. This adds $25โ$45 to the total visit cost but is non-negotiable for safety.
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How do I calculate ProHeart dose for my dog’s weight in kg? The math: multiply your dog’s weight in kg ร 0.05 mL = the dose volume ยท Example: 20 kg dog ร 0.05 = 1.0 mL ยท Or use lbs: weight in lbs ร 0.023 mL = dose volume ยท The active ingredient dose is always 0.5 mg moxidectin per kg of body weight ยท This calculation is performed by the vet โ never self-administer ProHeartThe FDA-approved formula for ProHeart 12 dosing is 0.05 mL of constituted suspension per kilogram of body weight, which delivers 0.5 mg of moxidectin per kilogram. In pounds, the equivalent is 0.023 mL per pound. This is a subcutaneous injection that requires preparation โ the moxidectin microspheres are stored in a separate vial and must be constituted with a specially formulated sterile vehicle before use. This mixing step, and the precise weight-based calculation, is why ProHeart is a prescription-only, veterinarian-administered product. Dogs over approximately 132 lbs (60 kg) whose calculated dose exceeds 3 mL receive the injection split between two sites. The peak moxidectin blood levels occur 7โ14 days after injection, which is why protection begins immediately but reaches full blood concentration during that window.
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Can ProHeart 12 be given with vaccines at the same appointment? Technically yes, but the FDA specifically warns against it ยท Adverse reactions including anaphylaxis have been documented when ProHeart is given at the same time as vaccines ยท Best practice: schedule ProHeart at a separate appointment from vaccine boosters ยท Many veterinarians recommend a 2โ4 week gap between ProHeart and any vaccinationsThis is a genuinely uncovered practical concern that most ProHeart discussions skip entirely. The FDA prescribing information explicitly states: “Adverse reactions, including anaphylaxis, have been reported following the concomitant use of moxidectin microspheres and vaccinations.” This appears in the official Warnings section, not buried in fine print. In practice, many veterinary clinics routinely combine ProHeart with annual vaccines during the same wellness visit for convenience โ and most dogs do fine. But for a dog with any history of vaccine reactions, for senior dogs, or for dogs whose immune response to injections has been variable in the past, scheduling ProHeart and vaccines on separate visits is the safer approach worth discussing with your vet before the appointment rather than on the exam table.
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Who should NOT receive ProHeart 12? Dogs excluded by FDA prescribing information: sick dogs ยท debilitated dogs ยท underweight dogs ยท dogs with recent or ongoing weight loss ยท dogs previously hypersensitive to moxidectin ยท dogs under 12 months of age (use ProHeart 6 for dogs 6โ12 months) ยท heartworm-positive dogs (must treat first)The exclusion criteria for ProHeart 12 are broader than for standard monthly heartworm pills, and these are the specific situations where a different prevention option is genuinely safer. Dogs with a history of weight loss are specifically excluded because the drug is stored in adipose tissue โ and a dog losing weight is mobilizing fat stores, which could alter moxidectin release patterns in unpredictable ways. Debilitated or sick dogs may not metabolize the slow-release formulation normally. For any dog on the exclusion list, ProHeart 6 (6-month) is not automatically safer โ the same exclusions apply. In those cases, a monthly oral preventative like Heartgard Plus or Tri-Heart allows easy dose adjustments, immediate discontinuation if problems arise, and does not create a 12-month drug depot that cannot be reversed if the dog’s health changes. Your vet should review your dog’s current weight, health history, and any previous drug reactions before the first ProHeart injection.
ProHeart requires a prescription and must be administered by a licensed veterinarian. Use these to locate your nearest full-service vet, low-cost clinics, and pop-up vaccination events in your area.
- Step 1 โ Schedule the heartworm test first, or at the same visit. ProHeart cannot be administered without a confirmed negative heartworm antigen test. If your dog hasn’t been tested in over 12 months, that test comes before the injection, not after. Cost: $25โ$45 typically.
- Step 2 โ Tell your vet your dog’s current weight BEFORE the appointment. ProHeart is dosed by weight. Call or message ahead with your dog’s most recent accurate weight so the clinic can prepare the correct dose volume. Weigh your dog at home the morning of the visit.
- Step 3 โ Disclose any vaccine reactions your dog has had, and ask for ProHeart and vaccines to be at separate appointments. Combining ProHeart and vaccines on the same visit is documented in the FDA prescribing information as a risk factor for anaphylaxis. The inconvenience of a second visit is worth it for dogs with any previous injection sensitivity.
- Step 4 โ Ask the clinic whether they require a full exam for ProHeart administration. Some clinics bundle the exam fee into the injection price; others administer it without a separate exam if the dog is an established patient. Knowing this in advance prevents surprise charges at checkout.
- Step 5 โ Plan to stay at or near the clinic for 30โ60 minutes after the injection. Anaphylactic reactions, while rare, appear within minutes to hours of administration. Remaining observable during that initial window ensures that if any reaction occurs, it is caught and treated immediately rather than at home without veterinary resources available.
This guide and the pricing calculator above are for general informational purposes only and do not constitute veterinary or medical advice. ProHeart 6 and ProHeart 12 are prescription medications manufactured by Zoetis Inc. and regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Cost estimates reflect publicly available veterinary fee schedules and will vary by clinic, location, and dog weight. The dosing information reflects the official Zoetis prescribing information as of mid-2026 (copyright 2026 Zoetis Services LLC). A licensed veterinarian must examine your dog, conduct a heartworm test, and determine suitability for ProHeart before administration. This page has no financial relationship with Zoetis Inc. or any veterinary clinic mentioned.