The 0.90m Jumper value.

Mid-high four figures would be my guess.

My two cents worth from Western Canada.

Agreed, the big classes are 2 foot 6 and 2 foot 9, and fearless kids on ponies do very well in jumpers.

I returned to riding 12 years ago now, at a h/j barn. When about 10 years ago, I priced the entry level horses kids were bringing into the barn to do 2 foot 6 and 9, they were running about $5000 for a quiet OTTB or a grade horse of some kind that kid could show within a couple of months acclimatization. In retrospect I see that my market research was happening in the aftermath of the 2008 stock market crash.

I didn’t stay at that barn so don’t have current data. But a couple of years ago my current coach put up for sale a nice mellow OTTB gelding under ten, over 16 hands, with some exposure to low height schooling shows and lots of private lessons and leases to juniors. $10,000. That gave me sticker shock :slight_smile: but in fact she got overwhelming interest. He ended up selling to someone in her lesson program, though.

The amount of interest she got suggests she had him priced fair to low. So the price for that entry level horse might have crept up even doubled in a decade.

And none of these horses were confirmed at 3 feet, indeed the kiddies horses might have been stepping down or maxed out by that height.

Over 3 feet is a whole other ball park around here. My guess is if you really wanted a horse to compete at 3 feet, you want a horse that can school a bit higher at home and then you are into the higher price category of horse.

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The prices often reflect the trainer to trainer prices, allowing for commissions…if a buyer has a good enough eye, finds the OTTB with the suitable talent, soundness and mine, often the owners are glad to find a home for their good for show, but unsuitable race horses. I’ve never charged a commission for a horse I have passed the name of on to a buyer. But it is surprising how the horses a trainer might find disappear off the face of the earth at times.

We have a regional tb racetrack in slow decline. My sense is that if the track trainer trusts the h/j trainer, those raw OTTB can be had for very little. Maybe even free.

Don’t quite follow your last sentence. Do you mean the OTTB aren’t advertised on the open market? Or that the supply is inconsistent?

Just came back from a horse show where I was able to talk to some other coaches, and the amount they have been paying lately for 0.70 type jumpers shocked me. I usually get clients with already bought horses, so I rarely shop.

My client was champion in the 0.85, beating well bred warmbloods on her home bred hony…I need to find more like him.

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