French Bulldog

French Bulldog cost calculator

French Bulldog dog

French Bulldogs are among the most expensive popular breeds to own. Purchase: $1,500–$8,000. Annual: $2,500–$5,500. Lifetime: $30,000–$60,000+ — driven by brachycephalic health issues.

The French Bulldog is a affectionate playful adaptable dog. Brachycephalic — overheating and air travel are real risks; many airlines refuse to transport them.

💵 Price: $1,500–$8,000 ⚖️ 20-28 lb ⚡ Energy ●●○○○ 👶 Great with kids 🕒 Alone 3-5 hrs

Why Frenchies are so expensive

  • Brachycephalic airway syndrome (BOAS). Many Frenchies need soft palate or nostril surgery — $1,500–$5,000+ per procedure.
  • C-section deliveries. Most French Bulldog litters require C-section, which raises breeder cost and is reflected in the purchase price.
  • Skin and ear allergies. Recurring vet visits plus prescription medication add up — often $500–$2,000/year.
  • Spinal issues. Hemivertebrae and IVDD risk; advanced imaging or surgery can run $3,000–$10,000.
  • Heat sensitivity. Limits boarding/daycare options and can require AC accommodations.

Insurance is often a strong fit for Frenchies

French Bulldogs are one of the higher-value insurance candidates among popular breeds. Premiums run above average ($60–$120/month), and the breed's documented health risks mean covered claims are more likely than average. Whether insurance pays off depends on the individual dog and policy terms — run the math in our Insurance vs. Savings calculator. If you do enroll, doing so as a puppy avoids pre-existing exclusions that hit brachycephalic breeds especially hard.

Ways to save

  • Adopt or rescue — many French Bulldog rescues exist; adoption fees are typically $300–$800.
  • If buying from a breeder, ask for OFA, BOAS, and spinal screening reports.
  • Manage weight aggressively. Even 1–2 lbs over ideal makes airway issues worse.
  • Build a relationship with a vet who has BOAS surgical experience.

Note: This is an editorial recommendation linking to our own analysis, not a paid placement. PetPlanWise has no current affiliate partnerships; future paid placements will be labeled "Sponsored" here. Policy.

Editorial

Insurance for French Bulldogs

Often a high-value breed for accident-and-illness coverage.

Run the math

FAQ

Why are Frenchies so expensive to buy?

C-section delivery cost, low litter size, and heavy demand. Designer colors push prices over $10,000.

What's the most expensive Frenchie health issue?

BOAS surgery and IVDD spinal surgery. Either can run $5,000–$10,000.

Should I insure a French Bulldog?

Yes — one of the stronger cases for insurance among popular breeds. Insure as a young puppy.

Fact-checked by PetPlanWise Editorial
Cost methodology cross-referenced with published AAHA, AVDC, AVMA, NAPHIA, and Banfield data. Read our editorial standards — no individual veterinarian endorsement.
Cost data reviewed May 2026 · methodology audited quarterly
One number hides the risk.

A single average can’t show the rare, expensive years. The Pet Cost Simulator runs 10,000 lifetimes of a French Bulldog to reveal the full range — the typical cost, the unlucky year, and the catastrophic tail.

See the full cost range →

Sources

Educational estimates only. Not veterinary or financial advice. Get a written estimate from your vet before treatment.

Traits and temperament — French Bulldog

A quick read on what living with a French Bulldog is actually like. Numbers are typical breed-standard ranges from AKC (dogs) and CFA / TICA (cats); individual French Bulldogs vary.

Weight
20-28 lb (male) · 16-24 lb (female)
Height
11-13 inches
Energy level
●●○○○
20-30 min/day of exercise
Trainability
●●●○○
Shedding
●●○○○
~10 min/week grooming
Time alone
3-5 hrs
Does not tolerate being left alone for long (around 3-5 hours max).

Temperament: Affectionate playful adaptable. Great with kids; Reserved with strangers.

What they are good at: apartment living companion lap-warming.

Things French Bulldog owners ask about

  • Brachycephalic — overheating and air travel are real risks; many airlines refuse to transport them
  • Cannot swim — short snout and dense body
  • Most have C-section births
  • AKC most popular breed in the U.S. since 2022

Sources: AKC breed standards (dogs), CFA / TICA breed standards (cats), Stanley Coren "The Intelligence of Dogs" (trainability ranking), Banfield State of Pet Health (breed-typical conditions). Individual pets vary widely — these are typical, not guaranteed.