The cost of keeping horses has changed more in the last three years than in the previous ten. Feed, farrier schedules, show fees, and even travel are all rising, and riders are being pushed to make smarter, higher return care decisions just to maintain the same quality of life for their horses.
That economic pressure is reshaping the landscape for 2026. Riders are no longer waiting for soreness, stiffness, or subtle performance dips before taking action. The shift is toward preventive musculoskeletal care so that problems are stopped before they get expensive.
Here is what is driving that shift.
1. Feed and Forage Volatility Is Here to Stay
Weather swings, regional supply interruptions, and transportation costs all feed into higher hay and grain prices. Even small increases add up quickly over a year for barns with multiple horses.
Preventive care matters here because a horse that stays sound often needs fewer emergency feed changes, fewer quick fixes, and fewer stress driven supplement experiments. Healthy, well managed musculoskeletal systems tend to tolerate feed changes and seasonal shifts far better.
2. Farrier Costs Are Increasing Nationwide
Most riders have already felt the bump in hoof care:
- Higher base trim or shoeing prices
- Fuel and travel surcharges
- Appointment minimums
- Increased material costs
When a horse is moving well, hydrated well, and recovering well, shoeing becomes more predictable and less reactive. Hoof angles and loading are not constantly being adjusted to chase soreness. That stability directly reduces the financial whiplash that comes from lameness cycles.
3. Show Fees Are Rising In Many Circuits
Riders are paying more for every entry. Hauling, stalls, and office fees all trend upward as we move into the 2026 season. A missed show because of avoidable stiffness or soreness now carries a bigger financial sting.
Preventive musculoskeletal care becomes a quiet competitive advantage. A sounder horse simply gets to the gate more often, adds more clean runs to the record, and makes better use of every entry fee.
4. Vet Costs and Rehab Cycles Are Heavier Than Ever
Diagnostics, imaging, injections, bodywork, and structured rehab all reflect higher pricing than even a few years ago. Riders respect their veterinarians and want to provide excellent care, but they also want fewer reasons to start that process in the first place.
Preventive work is rarely dramatic. It looks like small daily choices. Extra hydration. Post ride recovery support. Careful management of micro tightness before it becomes a bigger story. These boring habits quietly cut off a surprising number of future vet visits.
The Takeaway: Preventive Care Is the Only Lever Riders Fully Control
Board rates rise. Hay prices fluctuate. Show fees increase. Those are fixed realities of modern horsekeeping. The lever that still belongs to the rider is how consistently the horse is supported in hydration, recovery, and muscle health.
Small daily routines especially hydration and recovery support prevent the silent accumulation that becomes expensive soreness later. This is the foundation of the 2026 Preventive Musculoskeletal Health Report and it is why the series begins with economics. When the true financial burden becomes clear, the solution does too.
A sound horse is the smartest financial decision a rider can make in 2026.


