Here's What You Need To Know About Obamacare Enrollment This Year

Health insurance exchanges, financial assistance and other key issues explained.
LOADINGERROR LOADING

An updated version of this article was published on Nov. 1, 2018.

It’s open enrollment season again for Americans who shop on the Affordable Care Act’s health insurance exchanges to buy coverage. It’s a complicated, often confusing process for many people, especially those who may be using a health insurance exchange for the first time.

Despite all the noise about repealing Obamacare and the ongoing debate in Congress about whether to change it, it’s still the law, and it still comes with benefits and responsibilities.

Here are some basic facts about the exchanges, how they work, how to get financial help for insurance and how to find out about other options.

Health Insurance Exchanges

These marketplaces are intended for people who aren’t offered health benefits from their employers and aren’t enrolled in some other form of coverage, such as Medicare or Medicaid.

The exchanges also are the primary way eligible people can apply for financial assistance to reduce their monthly insurance premiums and out-of-pocket costs.

Some exchanges are operated by states, others by the federal government and others jointly by both levels of government. Residents of most states use HealthCare.gov or CuidadoDeSalud.gov, the Spanish-language version. The state-run exchange websites are listed here.

On these websites, shoppers enter their personal and financial information to sign up for comparison shopping of health insurance policies and benefits and to apply for subsidies. Those eligible for other government health care programs may be able to apply through an exchange, or the exchange may refer them to a state or federal agency.

Consumers who can’t access the internet or don’t want to enroll online can do so by phone or in person. The phone number for people in HealthCare.gov states is (800) 318-2596, and the state-run exchanges have their own hotlines. Insurance agents and brokers, as well as other enrollment counselors, can help people in person, and none of them charges consumers for the assistance.

For the first time this year, shoppers using some online insurance brokerages and insurance provider websites can bypass HealthCare.gov and apply for coverage and financial assistance directly with those companies. These websites may not include all the policies available on the health insurance exchanges, however. Participating brokers include eHealth, GetInsured, GoHealth and Health Sherpa. A handful of insurers, such as Centene and Oscar Health, also added this feature.

Deadlines To Enroll

The deadlines to enroll in a health insurance plan for next year are different from last year, and consumers in most states have less time than they used to. That makes it crucial to begin the shopping and application process as early as possible.

On the federally run health insurance exchanges accessed via HealthCare.gov in 39 states, open enrollment begins Nov. 1 and ends Dec. 15. Residents of the following states with federal exchanges must enroll before the end of that six-week period:

Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

The state-run exchanges in Idaho and Vermont have the same Nov. 1-Dec. 15 period to sign up.

Open enrollment also begins Nov. 1 at the remainder of the state-run exchanges, but the end date varies:

California: Jan. 31

Colorado: Jan. 12

Connecticut: Dec. 22

Maryland: Dec. 22

Massachusetts: Jan. 23

Minnesota: Jan. 14

New York: Jan. 31

Rhode Island: Dec. 31

Washington: Jan. 15

In states with final deadlines in January, people who want their health insurance to be in place at the beginning of the year must enroll in December. Policies selected in January won’t be active until February.

After those deadlines pass, you can’t purchase health insurance until the next open-enrollment period, except under special circumstances, such as having a baby or moving.

The Individual Mandate

The Affordable Care Act requires most U.S. residents to obtain some form of health coverage or face a penalty next time they file their income taxes. The fine doesn’t apply if you were uninsured for two months or less.

That fine starts at $695 for each adult and $347.50 for each child in a household.

But for most people it will be higher ― possibly more than $13,100 for large, wealthy families. That’s because the penalty is the the minimum or 2.5 percent of annual income (minus the first $10,000 or so for a single person and a little over $20,000 for families), whichever is higher. The IRS hasn’t finalized these numbers for 2018, but they will be similar. A person earning the median U.S. income last year, $53,716, would owe more than $1,000, according to a calculator created by the Tax Policy Center.

There are a number of exemptions from the mandate, including one that lets you avoid the fine if the cheapest insurance policy available in your area is considered “unaffordable” under the law because it costs more than about 8 percent of household income. Other examples include people who don’t earn enough to file federal income taxes and people who would be eligible for Medicaid but live in states that didn’t expand the program under the Affordable Care Act.

There also are special “hardship” exemptions from the mandate, such as for people who filed bankruptcy during the year or were homeless.

President Donald Trump’s administration has sent mixed signals about how strongly it will enforce the individual mandate, but the law hasn’t changed, so anyone who goes without health coverage next year and doesn’t qualify for an exemption still risks facing a tax penalty.

Financial Assistance

The Affordable Care Act offers two kinds of subsidy, both linked to household income.

The first is premium tax credits, offered to anyone using a health insurance exchange who has an income ranging from the federal poverty level to four times that amount, or about $12,000 to about $48,000 for a single person. The federal government sends the money directly to the health insurance company, and the policyholder pays whatever the difference is between the subsidy and the full price of the insurance. Tax credits cannot be used for “catastrophic” plans or for insurance policies that are available only outside an exchange.

The second type of help is cost-sharing reductions, which lessen the amount a person pays out of pocket for health care by doing things like shrinking the deductible and any co-payments required by the insurance company. These are available to people with incomes between the poverty level and 250 percent of poverty, or about $12,000 to about $31,000. Cost-sharing deductions are available only for plans sold on a health insurance exchange. In addition, consumers must choose a mid-range Silver plan to receive this extra subsidy.

In October, Trump announced he would no longer reimburse health insurance companies that provide these cost-sharing reductions. But the law still requires insurers to reduce cost-sharing for eligible consumers. The insurance companies won’t get paid, but the subsidies aren’t going away.

HuffPost readers: Are you shopping for health insurance through an exchange like HealthCare.gov or directly from an insurance company? Tell us about your experience during the current open enrollment period ― email jeffrey.young@huffpost.com. Please include your full name, hometown and state, and phone number if you’re willing to be interviewed.

Health Insurance ‘Metal Tiers’

There are four main types of health insurance plans sold on the exchanges: Bronze, Silver, Gold and Platinum. There are also high-deductible ”catastrophic” plans mainly available to people younger than 30.

As the metal names indicate, the plans tend to get more generous and more expensive as you go from Bronze to Platinum. The big difference is how much out-of-pocket spending policyholders must do before most of their benefits kick in. That’s calculated using what’s called “actuarial value,” which is a way of estimating what percentage of a typical person’s medical costs the insurance pays and how much the patient pays. The metal tiers in general break down like this:

  • Bronze: 60 percent of medical costs paid by the insurer
  • Silver: 70 percent of medical costs paid by the insurer
  • Gold: 80 percent of medical costs paid by the insurer
  • Platinum: 90 percent of medical costs paid by the insurer

Catastrophic plans have an actuarial value that’s almost the same as that for Bronze plans, but premiums often are lower because only those younger than 30 can buy them (with limited exceptions), and they tend to be healthier.

This year, however, the comparisons aren’t as clear cut as they have been in the past. Anticipating that Trump would cut off payments to health insurance companies that sell Silver plans to the lowest-income enrollees, some states allowed insurers to add extra rate increases to Silver policies.

This let insurers protect themselves against financial loss in the event Trump did cut off their funding, but it also made rates higher than they would have been and complicated the shopping process for consumers.

For example, in states with extra premium increases only for Silver plans, some Gold plans will cost about the same or even less than Silver. And because the size of the premium tax credits available to low- and middle-income people are linked to the price of Silver plans, those credits will be larger for 2018. That means some consumers could choose to use that subsidy to get Bronze plans for little to no premium instead of paying more for a more generous Silver plan.

Premium Increases

The unsubsidized cost of health insurance on the exchanges is rising again next year, and in many states the increases are substantial. The causes are a mix of problems already existing in these marketplaces and actions taken by the Trump administration.

In the 39 states whose residents use HealthCare.gov to enroll, the premium for the lowest-cost Bronze plan is an average of 17 percent higher for 2018 than it was this year, according to an analysis of federal data from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Prices for the least-expensive Silver plan are rising even more, by an average of 35 percent in those states.

Since the exchanges began in 2013, affordability has been a major concern, especially for those who qualify for little or no financial assistance. Health insurance companies initially anticipated a healthy, less expensive pool of customers. But the medical costs of those who did enroll were higher than expected, leading insurers to raise rates each year since, including next year.

When Trump took office, he contributed to the cost problem in two ways.

First, he has hinted that he won’t aggressively enforce the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate, causing insurers to worry that even fewer healthy people would sign up without the threat of a fine. Second, Trump cut off payments to health insurance companies serving the poorest exchange enrollees. As a consequence, insurers in most states are increasing premiums even more than they otherwise would have to protect themselves from significant financial losses if Trump halts the payments.

Exchange customers who receive premium tax credits are essentially shielded from these increases, however. In many parts of the country, some subsidized enrollees will actually be paying less next year. The way these subsidies are structured, there is a maximum percentage of household income any eligible person must pay for health insurance. When premiums rise, the subsidy gets bigger to compensate. But those who earn too much to qualify for tax credits must bear the full weight of the higher premiums. These higher earners may find better deals by shopping outside the exchanges: going directly to a health insurer, consulting a broker or using an online insurance brokerage.

Medicaid, CHIP And The Basic Health Program

Depending on your income and other factors, you or the children in your household may qualify for Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program, also known as CHIP. Generally the joint federal-state programs are intended for low-income individuals and families. In most states, there is no monthly cost, and out-of-pocket expenses are limited.

The eligibility criteria vary by state and usually are different for the categories of people who may enroll in Medicaid or CHIP. Those include children, parents, pregnant women, people with disabilities and elderly nursing home patients. Children in families with incomes as high as four times the poverty level, which is $61,260 for a family of three, can enroll in one of these programs, depending on the rules in their home states. Adults who qualify under these rules, such as pregnant women, parents or people with disabilities, must have lower incomes to qualify for Medicaid

The Affordable Care Act called for a Medicaid expansion across the nation to open up the program to all working-age adults, including those with no children, who earn up to 133 percent of the poverty level, which is about $16,000 for a single person. But the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2012 that states could refuse the Medicaid expansion, and 19 states still haven’t adopted it.

Some states use different names for Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program. In Wisconsin, for example, Medicaid is BadgerCare and in Vermont, CHIP is called Dr. Dynasaur.

In Minnesota and New York, residents with incomes up to twice the poverty level, which is about $24,000 for a single person, may be eligible to enroll in the Affordable Care Act’s Basic Health Program. These benefits are called MinnesotaCare and, in New York, the Essential Plan. No other states have opted to create these programs.

This article has been updated with information about how to apply for financial assistance from an insurance company or online insurance broker. It was later also updated to reflect a new deadline for enrollment on the Maryland health insurance exchange.

Before You Go

1912

Health Care Reform Efforts In U.S. History

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot