Pet sitting insurance protects sitters and pet owners from financial fallout when things go wrong. This guide explains what policies should cover, from liability and property damage to veterinary emergencies, and highlights the exclusions every sitter must understand.
Key Takeaways
- Professional pet sitting insurance should include general liability, care, custody, and control (CCC) coverage, and property damage protection at a minimum.
- Veterinary emergency coverage is not always included by default and must be confirmed in writing before accepting any booking.
- Most policies exclude pre-existing conditions, breed-specific exclusions, and incidents involving animals not listed on the policy.
- Pet Sitters International (PSI) and the National Association of Professional Pet Sitters (NAPPS) both recommend that sitters carry dedicated business insurance separate from personal homeowner policies.
- Owners should request a certificate of insurance before hiring any professional sitter.
What Pet Sitting Insurance Involves: Scope and Expectations
Pet sitting insurance is a specialised form of business insurance designed to protect professional sitters, dog walkers, and overnight caregivers against financial losses that arise during the care of someone else's animal. Unlike personal pet insurance purchased by owners to cover veterinary bills, pet sitting insurance is a commercial policy that addresses liability to third parties, property damage, and incidents involving animals entrusted to the sitter's care.
According to Pet Sitters International (PSI), any professional who accepts payment for pet care services should carry, at minimum, a general liability policy and a bonding arrangement. NAPPS echoes this guidance and further recommends that sitters ensure their policy specifically addresses care, custody, and control scenarios, meaning situations where the animal is injured, escapes, or causes damage while under the sitter's supervision.
A comprehensive pet sitting insurance policy typically includes the following core components:
- General liability coverage: Protects against claims if a third party (a neighbour, delivery driver, or passerby) is bitten, scratched, or otherwise injured by the pet while in the sitter's care.
- Care, custody, and control (CCC) coverage: Covers veterinary costs or the agreed value of the animal if it is injured, becomes ill, or dies while under the sitter's direct supervision. This is the component most commonly misunderstood or missing from basic policies.
- Property damage coverage: Addresses damage to the client's home, furniture, or belongings caused by the sitter or by the pet during the sitting period.
- Commercial auto coverage (optional): Relevant for sitters who transport pets in their own vehicle to veterinary appointments, grooming sessions, or dog parks.
For owners considering how their own pet insurance interacts with a sitter's coverage, our guide on reading excess structures, co-pay clauses, and annual benefit limits provides essential context.
How to Find and Vet a Trustworthy Insured Pet Sitter
Hiring an insured pet sitter requires more than accepting a verbal assurance. Professional standards recommend a structured vetting process:
Request a Certificate of Insurance
A legitimate professional sitter should be able to provide a current certificate of insurance (COI) that names the underwriting company, effective dates, coverage limits, and the specific types of coverage included. If a sitter cannot produce this document, that is a significant red flag regardless of their experience level.
Verify Membership in Professional Organisations
PSI and NAPPS both offer member directories. Sitters affiliated with these organisations typically have access to group insurance plans and are expected to follow published codes of conduct. Membership alone does not guarantee quality, but it signals a baseline professional commitment.
Ask About CCC Coverage Specifically
Many general liability policies do not include care, custody, and control coverage by default. This means if the pet is injured while in the sitter's care, the policy may not pay out. Professional consensus suggests that owners ask directly: "Does your policy cover my pet if it is injured, escapes, or requires emergency veterinary treatment while you are responsible for it?"
Confirm How Veterinary Emergencies Are Handled
Owners should establish, in writing, what happens financially if their pet requires emergency veterinary care during the sitting period. Some sitters carry policies that reimburse emergency vet costs up to a specified limit (commonly in the range of 1,000 to 5,000 in the relevant currency). Others expect the owner's personal pet insurance to cover medical costs while the sitter's policy addresses only liability claims. This distinction is critical and should be documented before the first day of care.
Understanding breed-specific needs also helps owners communicate risks effectively. Our article on what to tell your sitter about breed traits covers this in detail.
What to Prepare Before Leaving Your Pet With a Sitter
Even with a fully insured sitter, preparation is the owner's responsibility. Thorough documentation protects both parties and improves outcomes during emergencies.
- Written veterinary authorisation: A signed document authorising the sitter to seek emergency veterinary care and specifying a spending limit or pre-approved clinic. Without this, some veterinary practices may refuse to treat the animal at the sitter's request.
- Current medication list with dosages: Include the prescribing veterinarian's contact details, the exact dosage schedule, and instructions for missed doses.
- Behavioural profile: Note known triggers, anxiety patterns, aggression history, escape tendencies, and any Fear Free handling techniques that have worked. This information is directly relevant to insurance claims because undisclosed behavioural issues may be grounds for claim denial.
- Proof of vaccinations and parasite prevention: Many insurance policies require that pets be current on core vaccinations. Our guide on spring parasite prevention covers common gaps that owners overlook.
- Microchip and ID details: If the pet is microchipped, provide the chip number and the registration database. Consider sharing access to a GPS pet tracker for added security during the sitting period.
Emergency Contact Protocol
Insurance claims are more likely to succeed when there is a clear, documented emergency protocol in place. Both PSI and NAPPS recommend that sitters and owners agree on the following before any booking begins:
- Primary emergency vet: Name, address, phone number, and hours of the nearest emergency veterinary facility.
- Owner contact hierarchy: A ranked list of contacts (primary owner, secondary contact, designated decision-maker) with phone numbers and time zone information if the owner is travelling internationally.
- Spending authorisation: A written maximum amount the sitter is authorised to approve for emergency veterinary care before reaching the owner. Professional guidelines typically suggest setting this between 500 and 2,000 in local currency, adjustable based on the pet's medical complexity.
- Documentation requirements: The sitter should photograph or video any injuries, symptoms, or property damage immediately. Timestamped documentation strengthens both insurance claims and veterinary assessments.
For guidance on recognising genuine emergencies versus situations that warrant calm observation, owners and sitters alike benefit from reading about recognising when symptoms require immediate vet attention.
Red Flags and Green Flags in a Pet Sitter's Insurance
Green Flags
- Willingly provides a certificate of insurance without being asked twice.
- Carries both general liability and CCC coverage with clearly stated limits.
- Has a written emergency protocol template ready for every client.
- Maintains pet first aid certification (through organisations such as the Red Cross or PetTech).
- Asks detailed questions about the pet's health, behaviour, and triggers before accepting the booking.
- Uses indoor pet cameras and supports owner access during the sitting period.
Red Flags
- Claims to be "bonded and insured" but cannot produce documentation.
- Uses a personal homeowner's or renter's policy instead of a commercial pet care policy. Most personal policies explicitly exclude business activities and animal-related liability.
- Has no protocol for veterinary emergencies or expects the owner to handle all decisions remotely, even in time-sensitive situations.
- Refuses to discuss policy exclusions or becomes evasive when asked about coverage limits.
- Does not ask about the pet's medical history, behavioural issues, or current medications.
Understanding Key Exclusions in Pet Sitting Insurance
Exclusions are the most important and least-read sections of any insurance policy. Common exclusions in pet sitting insurance include:
Pre-existing Conditions
If a pet has a documented health condition before the sitting period begins, most policies will not cover veterinary costs related to that condition. This is why full medical disclosure is essential, both for ethical reasons and to avoid claim disputes.
Breed-specific Exclusions
Some policies exclude coverage for breeds commonly classified as "dangerous" or "restricted" under local legislation. Breeds affected vary by insurer and jurisdiction but frequently include certain bully breeds, mastiff types, and wolf hybrids. Sitters working with these breeds should confirm coverage explicitly before accepting bookings.
Animals Not Listed on the Policy
If a sitter agrees to care for an additional pet not disclosed to the insurer, any incident involving that animal is typically not covered. Professional standards require sitters to update their insurer whenever they accept a booking involving a species or number of animals outside their declared scope.
Intentional or Negligent Acts
Insurance does not cover damage or injury resulting from intentional harm or gross negligence. Leaving a gate open in a known escape-prone dog's garden, failing to administer critical medication, or leaving an animal unattended in a vehicle may be classified as negligence and void coverage.
Exotic or Non-domestic Animals
Standard pet sitting policies typically cover dogs and cats. Coverage for birds, reptiles, small mammals, or exotic species usually requires a policy endorsement or a specialised policy. Sitters who care for non-standard species should verify coverage per species type.
Off-leash or Off-premises Incidents
Some policies restrict coverage to incidents occurring at the client's home or the sitter's premises. Dog walking coverage, off-leash park incidents, or transport-related events may require additional endorsements. This is particularly relevant for sitters offering combined walking and sitting services. Our guide on evaluating dog daycare play group management discusses similar liability considerations in group settings.
Special Considerations for Anxious or Elderly Pets
Anxious and elderly pets present higher risk profiles for insurance purposes, and sitters must understand how this affects coverage.
Anxiety-related Incidents
Separation anxiety, noise phobias, and unfamiliar-environment stress are among the most common triggers for property damage, escape attempts, and self-injury during pet sitting. Fear Free Pets certification standards recommend gradual introductions, environmental enrichment, and documented calming protocols. Sitters should note that property damage caused by an anxious pet (chewed doors, scratched floors, destroyed blinds) may fall under the CCC or property damage portion of the policy, but only if the pet's anxiety history was disclosed. For related guidance, see our article on how dogs behave in unfamiliar environments.
Enrichment tools such as food puzzles and scatter feeding can help reduce anxiety-driven behaviour during the sitting period, which in turn reduces the likelihood of insurance-relevant incidents.
Elderly and Medically Complex Pets
Senior pets with arthritis, organ disease, cognitive dysfunction, or multiple medications require sitters with specific competencies. Insurance policies may require additional disclosure for pets over a certain age or with known chronic conditions. Sitters caring for elderly cats should encourage owners to complete a spring wellness checklist before the sitting period, and those caring for arthritic dogs should understand adaptive handling techniques that reduce the risk of injury during routine care.
Professional guidelines strongly recommend that sitters never understate the risks associated with caring for elderly or medically complex animals. If a sitter's insurance does not adequately cover high-risk pets, the ethical course of action is to decline the booking or arrange supplementary coverage.
Liability Coverage Limits: How Much Is Enough?
Coverage limits vary widely across providers. General liability limits for pet sitting businesses typically range from 500,000 to 2,000,000 per occurrence in the US market, with similar proportional ranges in the UK, Australian, and Canadian markets. PSI's group insurance programme, available to members, provides coverage at levels designed for small pet care businesses.
When evaluating whether coverage limits are adequate, sitters should consider:
- The value of homes they enter (high-value properties increase property damage exposure).
- The breeds they commonly care for (larger, stronger breeds carry higher bite liability).
- Whether they offer group walks or daycare (multiple animals increase incident probability).
- Their geographic location (urban areas with higher litigation rates may warrant higher limits).
Final Recommendations for Owners and Sitters
Insurance is not a substitute for competence, careful screening, or thorough preparation. It is a financial safety net that works best when both parties understand what it covers, what it excludes, and what documentation is required to support a claim.
Owners should treat a sitter's insurance status with the same seriousness as their references and qualifications. Sitters should treat their insurance policy as a living document, reviewing and updating coverage annually, adding endorsements when they expand services, and disclosing all relevant information to their insurer before each booking period.
When both parties approach insurance with transparency and diligence, the result is a professional relationship built on trust, accountability, and genuine protection for the animals at the centre of every arrangement.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a pet sitter's homeowner's insurance cover pet sitting work? ↓
What is care, custody, and control coverage and why does it matter? ↓
Are exotic pets covered under standard pet sitting insurance? ↓
What should owners do to help ensure an insurance claim succeeds if something goes wrong? ↓
Can a pet sitter's insurance deny a claim because of the pet's breed? ↓
Laura Chen
Pet Sitter & Travel Specialist
Pet sitter and travel specialist — practical logistics, sitter vetting, and anxiety management for travelling pet owners.
Content Disclosure
This article was created using state-of-the-art AI models with human editorial oversight. It is intended for informational and entertainment purposes only and does not constitute veterinary medical advice. Always consult a licensed veterinarian for your pet's specific health needs. Learn more about our process.