How Much Does a Trakehner Horse Cost? 2026 Price Guide

The Trakehner is the oldest warmblood breed in the world and the only one with a fully closed studbook, meaning every Trakehner today traces back through verified Trakehner ancestors. Originally bred for the East Prussian cavalry beginning in 1732, the breed survived the infamous 1944-45 Trek across frozen Germany at the end of WWII. That hardship-tested foundation gives modern Trakehners their elegance, blood, and rideability — and their high market value.

Quick Answer: Trakehner Prices

Type Price Range
Gelding (pleasure/amateur) $8,000 – $25,000
Trained riding horse $20,000 – $55,000
Mare (registered, breedable) $15,000 – $45,000
Approved stallion $60,000 – $300,000+
Top show dressage/eventer $100,000 – $750,000+
Foals (registered) $4,500 – $18,000

Why Are Trakehners Expensive?

1. Closed Studbook and Limited Numbers

The Trakehner has the only closed warmblood studbook in the world. Only Thoroughbred, Arabian, and Anglo-Arab outside blood is permitted, and even then only by registry approval. With roughly 4,000 foals born globally per year, supply is permanently constrained.

2. Rigorous Inspection System

The American Trakehner Association (ATA) and the Trakehner Verband enforce some of the strictest standards in horse breeding:

  • Stallion licensing requires a 70-day or 30-day performance test
  • Mares earn Premium status only with top inspection scores plus performance results
  • Foals receive an inspection brand only after meeting standards
  • Crossbred horses with Trakehner blood cannot be registered as Trakehner

3. Olympic Heritage

Trakehners have produced individual Olympic gold medalists in eventing and dressage, and contribute heavily to modern warmblood breeding. Stallions like Abdullah and Peron carry significant pedigree premiums.

4. Import Costs from Germany

Most upper-level Trakehners are bred in Germany:

  • Neumuenster Trakehner Auction prices: $20,000-$200,000+
  • Quarantine: $2,500-$4,500
  • Air transport: $7,500-$12,000
  • Customs and veterinary fees

Trakehner Prices by Purpose

Dressage

Trakehners excel in dressage thanks to their light, elastic gaits:

  • Started 3-4 year old: $15,000 – $35,000
  • First-Second Level: $30,000 – $70,000
  • Prix St. Georges: $75,000 – $200,000
  • Grand Prix horse: $200,000 – $750,000+

Eventing

Trakehners are highly regarded eventing horses thanks to their hardiness and stamina:

  • Started over fences: $20,000 – $40,000
  • Preliminary level: $40,000 – $90,000
  • Advanced/4-star eventer: $100,000 – $400,000+

Show Jumping

  • 1.10-1.20m amateur jumper: $30,000 – $70,000
  • 1.30m+ competitor: $75,000 – $250,000+

Breeding

  • Premium mare: $25,000 – $75,000
  • Approved stallion: $60,000 – $300,000+
  • Verband-papered foal: $5,000 – $18,000

Understanding Trakehner Registration

The Trakehner’s most famous identifier is the double moose-antler brand on the left hip — the original East Prussian mark. Designations within the registry significantly affect price:

Main Studbook (Hauptstutbuch): Mares with strong pedigree and high inspection scores.

Premium Mare (Praemienstute): Earned through outstanding inspection plus performance. Premium prices.

Elite Mare: Top designation; usually has multiple successful sport offspring.

Approved Stallion: Passed the 70-day or 30-day performance test. Eligible to breed Trakehner mares.

Pre-Studbook (Vorbuch): Lower-tier registration. Still papered but reduced prices.

Unregistered “Trakehner blood” horses: Cannot be branded; sell at significant discounts.

Health Considerations

Trakehners are among the soundest warmbloods thanks to closed studbook hardiness:

  • Osteochondrosis (OCD): Less common than in heavier warmbloods but always check
  • Kissing spines: Watch in dressage prospects
  • Suspensory injuries: Risk for upper-level dressage horses
  • WFFS (Warmblood Fragile Foal Syndrome): Genetic testing now standard
  • Equine cerebellar abiotrophy (CA): Reported in some lines with Arabian crosses

Impact on pricing: Trakehner buyers expect a full PPE with radiographs. WFFS-clear and CA-clear documentation is especially important for breeding mares and stallions.

Ongoing Costs

Expense Monthly Notes
Board $500 – $2,000 Sport-horse facility rates
Farrier $150 – $275 Standard sport shoeing
Training $800 – $2,800 Maintains and grows value
Insurance $75 – $400+ Scales with declared value

Where to Buy a Trakehner

American Trakehner Association Breeders

Pros: US-bred and inspected horses, established American breeding programs, easier vet access
Cons: Smaller pool than Germany

German Trakehner Verband Auctions

Pros: Neumuenster Auction, deepest selection of upper-level prospects, full inspection records
Cons: Import costs and competitive bidding

Sport Horse Agents

Pros: Vetted prospects, video, trial coordination
Cons: Commissions of 10-15%

Private Sales

Pros: Confirmed sport horses often available below auction prices
Cons: Verify Verband papers and full sport record

Red Flags When Buying

  • No Trakehner brand or original Verband / ATA papers
  • Pedigree cannot be verified in the official registry
  • Seller advertises “Trakehner cross” as a registered Trakehner
  • Refuses radiographs or PPE with your vet
  • WFFS or CA testing not disclosed for breeding stock
  • Recent injection history withheld

Trakehner Crosses: More Affordable Options

Trakehner blood is highly valued in crossbreeding programs and partial-Trakehner horses can be more affordable:

  • Trakehner x Thoroughbred: $5,000 – $20,000 (excellent eventing prospects)
  • Trakehner x Hanoverian: $7,000 – $22,000 (modern sport horses)
  • Trakehner x Quarter Horse: $4,000 – $14,000
  • Unbranded young stock from approved parents: $3,500 – $10,000

The Bottom Line

Trakehners offer Olympic-quality athleticism with a uniquely refined type thanks to their closed studbook and Thoroughbred/Arabian influence. Plan on $20,000-$45,000 for a sound trained amateur, $75,000+ for a confirmed mid-level dressage or eventing horse, and well into six figures for proven international competitors. Verify the double moose-antler brand, confirm registry papers from ATA or Trakehner Verband, and demand a thorough PPE with radiographs and breed-specific genetic testing.

Sources: American Trakehner Association, Trakehner Verband, USEA records, Neumuenster Auction archives

Jason Michael

Jason Michael

Author & Expert

Jason Michael is the editor of Horse Besties. Articles on the site are researched, fact-checked, and reviewed by the editorial team before publication. Read our editorial standards or send a correction at the editorial policy page.

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