888-899-4VPI
Pet Health Zone
Pet Education
Pet Articles
Pet Tips
Pet Horoscopes
Pet Stories




First Aid For
Your Pet >>


First Time
Pet Owners >>


Pet Toxins &
Poisons >>
VPI Pet Insurance HealthZone
The Benefits of Microchipping Your Pets
blank

Pet Owners Have A Direct Link To Pets

Microchipping Your PetsIt’s every pet owner’s worst fear: Your gardener left the back gate open and your dog got out while you weren’t home. Maybe your child left the front door ajar and your cat scooted out. Or, perhaps your area was hit with a natural disaster and your pet became separated from the family.

Scary situations for a pet owner—especially if your pet loses his collar or his ID tag information is outdated or worn away.

The good news: If your pet is microchipped, there’s a better chance he’ll return home safely. More than 1,200 calls are placed everyday by veterinary hospitals, humane societies and animal shelters who are using the microchip to reunite pets with their owners.

What Is A Microchip?

A microchip is a tiny computer chip—about the size of a grain of rice—that is implanted by an injection similar to a vaccine needle under the skin of your pet. Anesthesia is not necessary and most animals don’t feel the injection, which is done by a veterinarian.
  
The chip is made of an inert, biocompatible material that will not disintegrate, rust or cause an allergic reaction. It also won’t relocate from its point of injection which, in cats and dogs, is usually between the shoulder blades.
  
The chip doesn’t have a power source or a battery; it’s activated by a short Radio wave that can be read by a scanner, so it lasts throughout your pet’s lifetime.
  
Birds, reptiles, horses and other animals can also be microchipped.

How Does A Microchip Work?

Microchipping Your PetsEach chip has a unique code. When read under a hand-held scanner, the code will appear on the screen. The code is then entered into the manufacturer’s database and, if you have registered your information, your pet will be connected to you.
  
Most veterinarians and shelters have scanners. If your information in the database has not been updated (for example, you moved and did not change your contact information), then the veterinarian or shelter that implanted the microchip will be notified.
  
Many shelters and rescue organizations microchip 100% of pets adopted. So, if you adopt a pet with a microchip, immediately contact the company that made the microchip (AVID and HomeAgain are the most common) and register your pet on their database.

How Expensive Is A Microchip?

While a microchip requires no maintenance, it can cost between $30 to $45 to be implanted. Some companies charge an additional fee to register your contact information on the database.


Check with your veterinary hospital and local shelters to make sure they have scanners to read your pet’s chip.


If your pet is enrolled with a pet health insurance policy, check to see if you receive a microchip reimbursement. VPI Pet Insurance's optional Pet WellCare Protection coverage offers a $20 benefit toward your microchip expense.

Is There A Downside To A Microchip?

Microchipping Your PetsThe microchip industry is proprietary, which means each manufacturer maintains its own database; a national registry does not yet exist. However, microchip scanners display the name of the microchip's manufacturer when the microchip is read. The likelihood that your pet cannot be identified from its microchip is therefore very low.

The AVMA (American Veterinary Medical Association) and the Humane Society, among others, are pushing for a universal scanner. Currently, a shelter or veterinarian’s office must have four different scanners to ensure it can read every code—if they can afford to buy the scanners.
  
Check with your veterinary hospital and local shelters to make sure they have scanners to read your pet’s chip.

The Best Way To Protect Your Pet

Don’t rely on any one method to identify your pet. Make sure your pet wears a durable collar with up-to-date contact information on his identification tags.
 
A microchip is a permanent level of protection and could make the difference in whether or not you are reunited with your pet.

Millions of pets are microchipped in the U.S., and millions more have received the implant worldwide. Nearly $80,000 in microchip claims were filed by VPI policyholders in 2007. It’s a safe and trusted method to bring your pet home again.

Return to the VPI Pet HealthZone >>

blank

Suggested Reading

When Disaster Strikes
Keeping your pets safe in catastrophic situations.

Exercising Your Pet In Cold Climates
Take safe measures when outside.

blank

Related Testimonial

BonnieAfter some rainy weather, Bonnie decided to relieve her cabin fever by wandering off for three hours. When she got back, she was shaking and her eyes had turned blue. On the way to the vet she began going into seizures. Read More >>

Print this page:
The Nation's Oldest and Largest Provider of Pet Health Insurance
Underwritten by: Veterinary Pet Insurance Company (CA), Brea, CA
National Casualty Company (Nat'l), Madison, WI an A+15 rated company
© 2001 - 2008 Veterinary Pet Insurance Company • Privacy PolicyUnderwriting Information

Products available through this site are only available for residents of the United States.
In Canada, please contact Petsecure at www.petsecure.com.

Home | What's Covered | How a Policy Works | Facts About Pet Insurance | Quick Quote | Enroll Today