A Cane Corso puppy typically costs between $1,500 and $4,000 from a reputable breeder, though prices vary depending on lineage, location, and coat color. Show-quality Cane Corsos can run significantly higher. But the purchase price is just the beginning.
With monthly food costs around $80, annual vet bills averaging $600, and grooming around $100/year, the first year of owning a Cane Corso will cost roughly $3,595. Cane Corsos have moderate health risks including hip dysplasia, so budgeting for unexpected vet visits is wise.
Over a Cane Corso's average lifespan of 9–12 years, you can expect to spend $31,948 or more in total. Use the calculator below to get a personalized estimate based on your specific choices for food quality, grooming, and insurance.
Cane Corsos are an expensive breed to acquire, feed, train, and insure. A health-tested puppy from a breeder doing OFA hips, cardiac, and eye clearances is $2,000-$4,000. Food on a 100-110 pound dog is $80-$120/month. Liability-aware homeowner's insurance often costs $300-$700/year extra, and several major carriers will not write a policy on a Corso at all — budget time, not just money, to find coverage.
Hidden costs the calculator misses: structured professional obedience training is not optional ($1,500-$3,000 across the first 18 months). A Corso that doesn't learn impulse control as a teenager is a homeowner's-insurance and occasionally a legal problem. Bloat is the emergency line item — prophylactic gastropexy at neuter is $400-$700 and prevents a $5,000-$8,000 torsion. Hip dysplasia surgery, when it occurs, is $4,000-$7,000 per joint. Cherry eye and ectropion (eyelid abnormalities) are common breed issues and run $500-$1,500 per eye to correct.
Realistic ongoing budget: $250-$360/month for a healthy adult, plus that $3,000-$5,000 orthopedic and surgical fund banked across the first three years. Where owners over-spend: 'mastiff-grade' protein kibbles at $130/bag with no measurable benefit over a quality large-breed adult formula at $80. Where penny-pinching backfires: skipping the structured group obedience class because you've owned big dogs before. A 110-pound dog with a thin training base is a different animal than a 110-pound dog with a real one.
From a reputable breeder
$1,500 – $4,000
Average
$2,750
Adopting from a rescue typically costs $100–$500, which includes spay/neuter and initial vaccinations.
| Expense | Cost |
|---|---|
| Initial supplies (leash, bowls, collar) | $300 |
| First-year vet visits & vaccines | $400 |
| Spay/neuter surgery | $350 |
| Basic obedience training | $200 |
| Crate, bed & toys | $250 |
| Food (mid quality) | $960 |
| Grooming (professional) | $100 |
| Flea, tick & heartworm prevention | $300 |
| Treats & replacement toys | $75 |
| Pet insurance ($55/mo) | $660 |
| First Year Total | $3,595 |
* Excludes purchase price. Add $2,750 (avg) for total first-year investment.
| Expense | Annual Cost |
|---|---|
| Food (mid quality) | $960 |
| Routine vet care | $600 |
| Grooming (professional) | $100 |
| Flea, tick & heartworm prevention | $300 |
| Treats & replacement toys | $75 |
| Pet insurance ($55/mo) | $660 |
| Annual Total | $2,695 |
Minimum
$27,905
9 year lifespan
Average
$31,948
estimated total
Maximum
$35,990
12 year lifespan
Includes purchase price (avg $2,750), first-year costs, and 9–12 years of recurring expenses.
Cane Corso — Annual Cost
$2,695
Average Dog — Annual Cost
$2,035
A Cane Corso costs about $660 more per year than the average dog. The average dog costs approximately $1,200 to purchase and $2,035/year to maintain.
A Cane Corso typically costs between $1,500–$4,000 from a reputable breeder. Prices vary based on lineage, breeder reputation, location, and coat color. Adopting from a rescue can cost $100–$500.
The annual cost of owning a Cane Corso is approximately $2,695, covering food, veterinary care, grooming, preventive healthcare, and extras. This does not include the purchase price or first-year startup costs.
Over a Cane Corso's 9–12 year lifespan, you can expect to spend between $27,905 and $35,990 in total, including the purchase price, first-year expenses, and ongoing annual costs.
Cane Corsos are prone to hip dysplasia, bloat, cherry eye. Pet insurance typically costs $55/month for a large-sized dog and can save thousands in unexpected vet bills. It's especially worth considering given this breed's health profile.
Monthly food costs for a Cane Corso average around $80. Budget kibble may cost about $56/month, while premium food runs about $120/month. The right choice depends on your dog's health needs and your budget.
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