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'Desexing' a horse or gelding for a male and Spaying for a female will cost on average between $75 and $3,000, but this will vary a bit according to each horse and it's situation.
the cost of having a horse 'fixed' will vary by vet to vet. To have a colt or Stallion castrated and turned into a gelding is cheaper than to have a mare spayed. You should expect to pay $1,000 or more, but this is a rough cost.
first just to buy a horse it would cost more than $1000 plus you have to get all of the shots which would cost more than $700
On an average ferry, the cost of shipping a horse would be approximatley $300. This is a little steep, but well worth the money if you want to ship your horse. YAY HORSES
500 doollers
A good horse or pony would cost between $800 to $3000.
As breeder, trainer and judge of Arabian horses, I can honestly say that there are great horses of both sexes. The stallion or gelding usually are a bit stronger when it comes to racing or endurance rides, but have no real apprecial advantage on most show discipines. They also do not suffer from a few mares problem of hormonal swings, but a gelding can not be bred. A stallion has to be handle with more care and heightened observation a sex is almost always on a stallions mind when around other horses. To house a stallion you generally have increased stabling and man care issues. Mares and geldings can be run together, and fencing issues/cost are usually a bit less Every trainer and owner has his/he preferences when working with the different sexes. I personally prefer working with stallions and gelding, even though one of my most winning horses (an I still own) won 6 netional top tens and is a mare. Clarification to this question would be more helpful in answering. Is the person going to race, breed, show the horse? If so what events? Is the question in regards to handling and housing issues? Cost of purchaing a quality stallion/gelding or mare?
Depends on the vet bills.
A black slave named Morgan would be cheaper.
Alot of money
A horse cost anywhere from $10 to as much as $200 in that time period, depending on its bloodlines and what it was used for--cow horse, race horse, etc.
In South Africa, the cost of a horse can be around R30,000. Looking after the horse can cost around R2,500 per month.