Australian Shepherd Insurance Guide

Australian Shepherd Insurance: What Canadian Owners Should Know

By PetAssured Editorial Team Last reviewed : May 28, 2026 6 min read

Quick Answer

Australian Shepherds are athletic, intelligent working dogs increasingly popular in Canadian cities and on rural acreage. The breed is generally healthy with a few important watchpoints: MDR1 drug sensitivity, hereditary eye conditions, epilepsy, and hip dysplasia. Insurance is moderate; the bigger challenge is meeting the breed's exercise and mental stimulation needs.

Aussies are working herding dogs that need both physical exercise and mental work. Health-wise they're sound, but the MDR1 gene mutation (common in Collie-family breeds) means they react badly to certain medications — a critical thing to know before any vet visit.

Common Australian Shepherd health issues

ConditionHow commonTypical treatment cost (CAD)
MDR1 drug sensitivity (multidrug resistance gene mutation)Common in the breedLow ongoing — requires awareness, not treatment; one cheap genetic test
Hereditary eye conditions (CEA, cataracts, PRA)Notable in the breedDiagnostic to surgical
EpilepsyHigher than averageLifelong medication if confirmed
Hip and elbow dysplasiaModerateHigh if surgery required
Autoimmune conditionsNotable in herding breedsVariable — diagnostic to ongoing management
Cancer (lymphoma, hemangiosarcoma)Moderate in seniorsCatastrophic
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Our Recommendation

For an Australian Shepherd, comprehensive coverage with standard reimbursement (80% or 90%) and a moderate-to-high cap works well. Critical: tell your vet that your dog is an Aussie before any medication is prescribed — the MDR1 mutation makes certain common drugs (some antiparasitics, sedatives) dangerous. A one-time genetic test (under $100) tells you whether your specific dog carries the mutation; insurance may cover diagnostic testing for a documented genetic condition.

Frequently asked questions

What's MDR1 and why does it matter?
MDR1 is a gene mutation that causes severe reactions to certain drugs — including some antiparasitics, sedatives, and chemotherapy agents. Aussies, Collies, Shelties, and a few other breeds are commonly affected. A simple cheek-swab test confirms status. Tell every vet who treats your Aussie that the breed is MDR1-prone.
Are Aussies expensive to insure?
Moderate range — premiums reflect the breed's working-dog activity level and a few breed-specific risk categories. Get quotes from multiple insurers.
Are Australian Shepherds good first dogs?
Generally no — they need significant exercise, mental stimulation, and consistent training. Experienced owners with active lifestyles thrive with them. See our first-time owner guide for alternatives.
What about Miniature Australian Shepherds?
Same breed at smaller size. Similar health profile, slightly lower premium due to smaller size.