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How much does it cost to breed a horse? H&H crunches the numbers

Let’s go over the inevitable and unexpected costs

  • Breeding your own horse is, for many owners and riders, an appealing proposition – the chance to produce exactly the type of horse you want, from bloodlines you’ve chosen, with every stage of their development in your hands. But how much does it cost to breed a horse?

    It’s certainly not a cheap way of getting your next horse, and the costs involved with breeding a horse are often significantly higher than buyers and breeders anticipate. It’s important to say upfront: most small-scale breeders don’t make money from breeding horses. “Making a bonfire out of banknotes would be a cheaper hobby,” as one hobby breeder puts it.

    Caroline Ironside of MFS Stud Farm in Scotland, who has been breeding sport horses for 30 years, calculates that she needs around £9,000 per foal simply to break even – and that’s before accounting for the value of her own time, her land, or her stabling.

    As Eva-Maria Livesey, executive director of British Breeding, points out: “Our foals are actually remarkably cheaply priced, given that there’s a lot that goes into them that breeders don’t even think about as a cost.”

    Understanding what goes into producing a horse helps explain why good youngstock costs what it does – and why, more often than not, the breeder is subsidising your purchase.

    It’s also worth knowing that British breeders operate at a structural disadvantage compared to their European counterparts. In Germany and the Netherlands, horse breeding is classified as agriculture, giving breeders access to subsidies, tax advantages and cheaper land and feed that British studs simply cannot access. In the UK, horse breeding is classified as a leisure industry – regardless of how professionally it is run. The result is that British-bred horses often cost more to produce than equivalent horses on the Continent, for reasons entirely outside the breeder’s control.

    Costs involved with breeding a horse

    I’m going to lay out the costs of breeding a horse. All prices quoted are approximate and based on prices at the time of publishing (April 2026). These costs will vary significantly depending on your location, whether you have your own land and facilities, and whether everything goes to plan, which, with horses, it often doesn’t.

    I’ll cover the costs of:

    Stallion in paddock

    Importing semen from a top international stallion can cost more than £2,000. Credit: Alamy

    Stud fee

    While natural covering is still used, artificial insemination (AI) with chilled or fresh semen is the most common method of breeding sport horses. Stud fees can vary from a few hundred to many thousands of pounds – importing semen from a top international stallion can cost £2,000 or more – but an average fee for a good, proven stallion is likely to be in the region of £1,000 plus VAT.

    If you’re using a stallion standing abroad, be prepared for significant additional costs on top of the stud fee itself. Post-Brexit, a single semen shipment from Europe that once cost around £30 now costs in the region of £240, with mandatory veterinary documentation adding a further £25. Health papers, collection and delivery charges can add £150-200 or more to the bill. If your mare fails to hold on the first cycle – which is far from unusual – those shipping costs alone can exceed the price of the semen itself.

    “Before we’ve even started, our costs are way up compared to European breeders,” as one breeder puts it.

    Vet having conversation with horse owner about the costs of breeding a horse

    Veterinary fees are an unavoidable cost of breeding, so make sure you understand what’s covered. Credit: Lucy Merrell

    Veterinary fees associated with breeding

    Vet fees are unavoidable, but most studs offer all-in-one packages in conjunction with a veterinary practice. Prices vary from around £275–450 plus VAT for the first cycle using chilled or fresh semen, though costs have risen in recent years partly due to the consolidation of equine practices into large corporate groups.

    Package components vary, so make sure you understand exactly what is and isn’t included. Packages for maiden mares and those over 18 can cost more. You can opt to pay vet fees in the usual way rather than via a package if you prefer.

    If you’re using frozen semen or embryo transfer, costs increase considerably – a full embryo transfer package from a top-level mare can run to £4,500 or more, with recipient mare hire adding a further £1,000 on top.

    Stud keep charges

    If your mare is to be covered naturally, she’ll need to go to stud. The use of frozen semen requires a high level of veterinary attention, so sending your mare to a specialist stud is recommended. With fresh and chilled AI, it is possible to breed from an experienced broodmare at home.

    The length of stay at stud will vary. If you live locally, your mare can travel to and from the stud between insemination and pregnancy confirmation. But a resident mare that doesn’t hold for two or three cycles could be away for three or four months.

    Grass keep will lessen costs, but these will soon add up if you want your mare stabled.

    There’ll also be routine costs to consider – teeth, feet, and worming – as well as specialist feed in the last trimester and booster vaccinations prior to birth.

    Mare and foal in stable

    If you send your mare to foal at stud, expect her to stay for around four weeks. Credit: Getty Images>

    Cost of foaling down

    Experienced breeders can foal their mare at home, although the vet will need to attend afterwards to check the mare and foal. If you decide to send your mare to stud to foal, she will need to arrive in good time and stay until the foal is strong enough to travel home. As well as the foaling fee – typically around £400-500 – there’ll be around four weeks’ keep, some of which will be stabled.

    What can go wrong – and what it costs

    It’s worth remembering that complications occur all too often, no matter how much care is taken or expertise deployed.

    A joint infection can add £4,000 or more to your costs. A retained placenta will require immediate veterinary treatment – typically around £250. A retained testicle in a colt can cost £750 to correct. A plasma transfusion for a foal that has not received adequate antibodies from its dam can run to £1,000. And that’s before accounting for the possibility of losing a foal or a mare entirely.

    As one breeder who has experienced all of the above puts it: “Where there’s livestock, there’s dead stock.” When budgeting for breeding, build in a contingency – ideally of several thousand pounds – for complications you hope will never arise.

    Subsequent costs of breeding a horse

    Once the mare and foal are home, the ongoing costs begin. The foal will need a passport, microchipping, sometimes a DNA test, and registration with the relevant breed society. If he is a colt, there may also be the cost of castration, typically around £500.

    If you chose to keep the foal, you’ll then likely need to keep the foal for at least three years before they are backed. Over this time, you’ll be paying the normal costs of keeping a horse, such as feed, worming, vaccinations, and foot trimming.

    For those without land, field rent and livery charges must be factored in. Budget a minimum of £2,500 per year for basic keep, though the real figure is often considerably higher – one commercial operation estimates it costs an average of £15,000 to take a horse from conception to three years old when all costs are properly accounted for.

    And this is before backing and production costs, which is where the value of a horse increases significantly – but where the expenses do too.

    Rider leaning over horse in backing process

    Breeding is just the first part of the process, then you’ve got the producing to think about. Credit: Andrew Sydenham

    What happens next

    The table below covers costs up to the point of backing – but it’s worth understanding that this is where the significant value increases begin, and where the costs continue to climb.

    A horse that goes from unbacked to backed sees a notable spike in value, simply because it can now be ridden. From there, value tends to plateau between the ages of four and six, while the horse is developing but unproven.

    In dressage, for example, the movements that really move the market – flying changes, the beginnings of piaffe and passage – typically emerge at six or seven in a professionally produced horse.

    Each additional year of keep, training, and competition entry fees adds to the total cost of production.

    So how much does it cost to breed a horse?

    The table below gives an approximate guide to the costs involved in breeding a horse from conception to three years old, assuming everything goes straightforwardly — which it often doesn’t. Travel costs are additional, and if your foal is a colt, castration costs will also apply.

    Service Cost Total
    EHV vaccinations (course of 3 injections, with call outs) £200 + VAT £240
    CEM and EIA tests £120 + VAT £144
    Stud fee £1,000 + collection fee, delivery and VAT £1,400
    Stud livery (grass only) £270 + VAT per month £324
    Veterinary package for AI (chilled or fresh semen) £345 + VAT £414
    Mare’s keep for the year £270 per month £3,240
    Autumn pregnancy diagnosis £60 + VAT £72
    Flu and tetanus boosters £75 + VAT £90
    Foaling fee £400 + VAT £480
    Mare and foal vet check £120 + VAT £144
    Passport, microchipping, breed registration, DNA test £150 £150
    Three years keep including routine care £2,500 per year (minimum) £7,500
    Total approx. cost to breed a horse from birth to backing £14,198

    Is it worth it?

    For most small-scale breeders, the honest answer is that it rarely makes financial sense. The costs are high, the risks are real, and the market for youngstock is currently challenging.

    And yet the breeders who remain are, almost without exception, passionate advocates for what they do – producing horses with individual care and attention that, at its best, results in animals that are better prepared for long-term soundness and rideability than those raised in larger, more industrial operations.

    If you’re considering breeding your own horse, go in with your eyes open, your budget stress-tested, and a healthy contingency fund. But if you do produce a horse that goes on to fulfil its potential – knowing you were there from the very beginning – there are few things in the equestrian world quite like it.

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