The debit card that could help pet parents save big on vet care

Veterinary care is expensive, and like almost everything else right now, it's not immune to inflation. The average cost of emergency care for a pet is between $800 and $1,500, but 97% of pets in the U.S. are not insured.

And, as a friend recently described so succinctly to me, think of it this way: Pet insurance is what health insurance was like for people in the U.S. before the Affordable Care Act. Meaning, there is no pet insurance available for pets with preexisting conditions. So any treatment for pets with preexisting conditions is out-of-pocket—and expensive.

Millennials are the largest segment of pet owners, and they are willing to spend double on their pets than previous generations, but given those insurance rates, not enough pet owners are financially prepared for emergencies.

Catherine Dennig cofounded Fursure after facing an exorbitant (and unaffordable) vet bill and the subsequent loss of her beloved cat. Since launching in 2020, Fursure has signed up more than 60,000 pet parents across all 50 states, supporting over 1,800 checking accounts with the new Fursure Card. Touted to be the first rewards debit card made for pet parents, customers can earn five points for every dollar spent on a pet, which can be redeemed towards any vet bill, essentially serving as a rainy day fund for pet-related emergencies. Customers can also earn exclusive discounts on products from pet retailers like Bark Box, Chewy, and The Farmer's Dog.

Dennig recently shared more with Fortune about what Fursure does and what it could mean for the future of our pets and the pet insurance industry.

The following interview has been condensed and lightly edited for clarity.

Could you share a bit about your professional background before launching Fursure?

Before Fursure I was leading product teams on news feed and ads at Facebook, where I helped build and launch Facebook Ad Credit for SMBs to try advertising, which became a sustainable growth lever for Facebook. I led the News Feed Integrity Content Quality team, a large cross-functional product team building classifiers for problematic content like clickbait, sensationalism, ad farms, and more. I learned a ton in my 3.5 years there and loved my amazing coworkers, many of whom became my first Fursure investors, and always knew I wanted to get back to building something I was deeply passionate about for the next 10-plus years, so I left to start Fursure.

Before Facebook, I graduated in 2015 from Princeton University, where I started my first company, Nofomo. I learned more than a few hard-won lessons, namely to hire for truly mission-aligned teammates and to always iterate on products with customer feedback to ultimately solve real problems for people.