Cane Corso: cost, insurance & feeding guide

Powerful guardian needing significant food; deep chest and joints make bloat and orthopedic coverage important.

Cost to own$3,494/yr$4,729 first year
Insurance$50–$90/moHigher risk
Feeding2234 kcal~5.7 cups/day

Profile

Size
Giant
Weight (M)
99–110 lb
Weight (F)
88–99 lb
Life span
9–12 yrs
Group
Working
Activity
High

True cost of ownership

Owning a Cane Corso costs roughly $4,729 in year one (setup included) and about $3,494/year after that — an estimated $37,919 across a 11-year life. Here's where it goes for a representative adult, then dial it in for your situation.

First-year setup (one-time)
$1,235
Recurring per year
$3,494
Lifetime (modeled range)
$30,335–$58,774
Annual line itemEstimate
Food$1,535
Routine vet & wellness$480
Parasite prevention$219
Pet insurance$840
Grooming$40
Toys, treats & extras$380
Total per year$3,494

💡 Budget tip: set aside about $291/month, plus a separate $1,000–$3,000 emergency fund for the unexpected.

A modeled planning estimate, not a bill — anchored to published 2024–2025 US ranges and scaled to your inputs. How we estimate.

Everything your pet needs

Ad · Fur Forecast may earn a commission from these links, at no cost to you.

Insurance outlook

Higher risk

A typical accident-and-illness policy for a Cane Corso is modeled at $50–$90/month as an adult — roughly $8,820 over a 11-year life. Giant mastiff-type with orthopedic, bloat and cardiac risk and high claim severity.

Conditions this breed is prone to

Get a real quote & fine-tune for your pet
Premiums shift with age, ZIP code, deductible, and reimbursement %. Use the estimator below or get quotes from the insurers.

These are modeled estimates for comparison, not quotes, adjusted for your state & coverage off a $5k limit / $500 deductible / 80% baseline — see how we estimate. Get real numbers from the insurers below.

Compare insurers for a Cane Corso

Cane Corsos are higher-risk to insure and prone to costly hereditary conditions, so an unlimited annual payout (Healthy Paws / Pets Best) protects you against a large claim — and Embrace explicitly covers breed-specific genetic conditions.

InsurerAnnual limitReimburseDeductibleWaiting periodsStandout
Lemonade$5k–$100k70/80/90%$100–$5002-day accident · 14-day illnessLowest base price; app-based; multi-pet & bundle discounts
Healthy Paws ★ best fitUnlimited (no caps)70/80/90%$100–$50015-dayNo per-incident or lifetime payout caps — strong for big claims
Embrace$5k–$30k70/80/90%$100–$1,000 (diminishing)2-day accident · 14-day illnessCovers genetic & breed-specific conditions; deductible shrinks each claim-free year
Pets Best$5k–Unlimited70/80/90%$50–$1,0003-day accident · 14-day illnessDirect-to-vet pay option; low-deductible flexibility

Ad · Ad · Fur Forecast may earn a commission from these links, at no cost to you.

Get real quotes

Ad · Fur Forecast may earn a commission from these links, at no cost to you.

Feeding guide

A neutered adult Cane Corso at about 99 lb with high activity needs roughly 2234 kcal/day. That’s about 5.7 cups of a typical 350-kcal/cup food across two meals, keeping ~223 kcal (10% of the total) for treats. Dial it in for your pet’s exact weight, age, and food below.

On the bag, often “kcal ME/cup”.
Ribs easily felt + a visible waist = ideal (5).
Add it for a grams/day amount.

Estimates use the standard RER/MER veterinary formula. Every animal differs — confirm with your vet, especially for puppies, seniors, or weight-loss plans.

Top-rated food & feeding gear

Ad · Fur Forecast may earn a commission from these links, at no cost to you.

Common questions

How much does it cost to own a Cane Corso?
Budget about $4,729 the first year (one-time setup included) and roughly $3,494/year after that — around $37,919 over a typical 11-year life. That covers food, routine vet care, prevention, insurance, grooming and supplies; see the full breakdown above.
How much does a Cane Corso cost per month?
About $291/month in recurring costs (food, vet, prevention, insurance, grooming and everyday extras), on top of roughly $1,235 of one-time setup in the first year. A good rule of thumb: set aside $291/month plus a separate $1,000–$3,000 emergency fund.
How much should I feed a Cane Corso?
A neutered adult Cane Corso (~99 lb) with high activity needs about 2234 kcal/day total — roughly 5.7 cups of a 350-kcal/cup food split across two meals, keeping ~223 kcal (10%) for treats. Adjust for age, activity, and your food's calories.
How long do Cane Corsos live?
Cane Corsos typically live 9–12 yrs. Keeping them at a healthy weight (use the feeding guide above) and budgeting for routine care are the two biggest levers on a long, healthy life.
What health problems are Cane Corsos prone to?
The conditions most associated with the breed are hip dysplasia, elbow dysplasia, bloat (GDV), entropion/eyelid issues, cardiac disease. Giant mastiff-type with orthopedic, bloat and cardiac risk and high claim severity. This is general breed-predisposition guidance, not a diagnosis — see your veterinarian.
Is pet insurance worth it for a Cane Corso?
Cane Corsos are higher risk to insure (modeled $50–$90/month, about $600–$1,080/year as an adult). Giant mastiff-type with orthopedic, bloat and cardiac risk and high claim severity. Weigh that premium against the cost of treating the conditions they're prone to.
Which pet insurance is best for a Cane Corso?
Cane Corsos are higher-risk to insure and prone to costly hereditary conditions, so an unlimited annual payout (Healthy Paws / Pets Best) protects you against a large claim — and Embrace explicitly covers breed-specific genetic conditions. Compare annual payout caps, deductibles and breed-condition coverage in the table above, then get real quotes — premiums also shift with your state, your pet's age, and the coverage you pick.

Related breeds