Depends on how you keep it and where you are. If you are boarding it, that can cost anywhere from $100-500 a month. If it's unbroke and you are a beginner you will have to pay to get it trained which could cost anwhere from $50-200 a month depending on the trainer. If it is broke then you wont have to worry about training. If you decide to keep it at home you will have to pay for hay in the winter which can cost up to $200 for the winter. And grain will be about $50 a month, all year long. Then theres vaccinations which are given twice a year and cost about 70 dollars the first time and 30 the second. Then theres dewormer which is 5-10 every two months. Then theres ferrier every two months which can cost from 20-40.
Personally, I board my horse at a friends house. She gives me free board, but I pay for all his needs. I pay about $100 a month on him, but hes a pretty cheap horse. So you could easily spend upwards of $2000 per year and more if you board.
nothing they cost you a lot of money to feed and keep
it costs 2050
it depends on the animal you want like if you want a horse it will cost about 5k a year
For 1 quarter of a year I pay 75 euros.
This depends, where you keep your horse and what your going to do with it? If you are going to board it at a farm, then boarding costs which can be anywhere from about 200-1,000 a month. Then the costs of the vet,food, and blankets ect. Then if you do shows the cost of those and the tack you need.
Oh you know five or six...maybe seven
it can cost any amout it depends on what breed and how much the person is willing to give thank you for your answers we are happy to answer them
There are some horses going for free, wild mustangs selling for $125, or at the other end, champion racehorses worth millions. You typical horse will be in the thousands, about $1000-$5000 depending on health, training, breeding, even color.
There is no 'true' answer to this question as the price of keeping a horse varies greatly from place to place and owner to owner. Not to mention the costs of ownership go up every year. That being said, most people can keep a horse for around $4,000 a year at home, so if you could keep that price stable over the course of 20 years that would mean you'd spend a total of $80,000.
It costs about 35,000.
It should cost roughly 200,000 pounds per year for a race horse, maybe 12,000 for a normal horse, this includes first class stables food and training (for race horse).
The cost of keeping a horse is a combination of many different factors. An urban area will cost more than rural. With boarding, vet (just maintainence, no illness or injury), food, supplies, hoof care, tack and fencing you will probably spend between $3000 to $5000 a year per horse.