Individual & family health plans
Bottom line up front: Individual and family health plans cover medical expenses for people who don't get coverage through an employer. Plans vary widely in cost, network size, and what's covered — comparing options from multiple carriers is the fastest way to find the right fit.
What are individual & family health plans?
Individual and family health plans are medical coverage you purchase on your own, rather than getting through an employer or government program. They cover doctor visits, hospital stays, prescriptions, preventive care, and more — depending on the plan you choose.
Plans are available through the ACA marketplace (Healthcare.gov or your state exchange) and directly from carriers. Marketplace plans may qualify for premium tax credits that lower your monthly cost. Off-marketplace plans offer similar coverage but without subsidy eligibility.
All ACA-compliant plans cover the same 10 essential health benefits — including emergency services, maternity care, mental health, and prescription drugs. The differences are in cost structure, provider networks, and how much you pay out of pocket.
Who needs individual or family coverage?
- Self-employed and freelancers — no employer plan available
- Between jobs — COBRA is expensive; individual plans are usually cheaper
- Early retirees (under 65) — too young for Medicare, need bridge coverage
- Young adults aging off a parent's plan — coverage ends at 26
- Part-time or gig workers — employer doesn't offer benefits
- Families — need coverage for a spouse, children, or both
Plan types explained
| Plan type | How it works | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| HMO | Primary care physician required. Referrals for specialists. Must stay in-network. | Budget-conscious individuals who don't need frequent specialist visits |
| PPO | No referrals needed. Out-of-network coverage available at higher cost. | People who want flexibility to see any provider |
| EPO | No referrals needed. Must stay in-network (no out-of-network coverage). | People who want flexibility without paying PPO premiums |
| HDHP + HSA | High deductible, lower premiums. Paired with a tax-advantaged health savings account. | Healthy individuals who want to save on premiums and build tax-free savings |
There's no universally "best" plan type. An HMO with a strong local network can be excellent. A PPO makes sense if your preferred specialists are out-of-network on other plans. We help you weigh these tradeoffs based on your actual healthcare usage.
What it costs
Health insurance costs are built from four numbers. Understanding all four is the difference between picking a plan that looks cheap and one that actually saves you money.
| Cost component | What it means |
|---|---|
| Premium | What you pay monthly, regardless of whether you use care |
| Deductible | What you pay out of pocket before insurance kicks in |
| Copays / Coinsurance | Your share of costs after meeting the deductible (flat fee or percentage) |
| Out-of-pocket maximum | The most you'll pay in a year — after this, the plan pays 100% |
ACA plans are organized into metal tiers — Bronze, Silver, Gold, and Platinum — that reflect this tradeoff. Bronze plans have the lowest premiums but highest out-of-pocket costs. Platinum plans cost more monthly but cover a larger share of every bill. Silver plans are often the sweet spot because they're eligible for cost-sharing reductions if your income qualifies.
How to compare plans
- 1
List your priorities. Which doctors do you need to keep? What prescriptions do you take? How often do you see specialists? These answers narrow the field fast.
- 2
Compare total cost, not just premiums. A plan with a $200/month premium and a $7,000 deductible may cost you more than a $350/month plan with a $2,000 deductible — depending on how much care you use.
- 3
Check the formulary. If you take regular medications, make sure they're covered — and at what tier. A plan that doesn't cover your prescriptions isn't a bargain.
- 4
Verify your providers. Confirm your doctors, specialists, and preferred hospitals are in-network before committing.
- 5
Check subsidy eligibility. If you're buying through the marketplace, enter your income to see if you qualify for premium tax credits. The difference can be hundreds per month.
When and how to enroll
The annual Open Enrollment Period (OEP) runs from November 1 through January 15 in most states. Plans purchased during OEP typically start January 1 or February 1, depending on when you enroll.
Outside of OEP, you can enroll during a Special Enrollment Period (SEP) if you experience a qualifying life event:
- Losing employer-sponsored coverage
- Getting married or divorced
- Having or adopting a child
- Moving to a new state or coverage area
- Turning 26 and aging off a parent's plan
- Losing Medicaid or CHIP eligibility
You generally have 60 days from the qualifying event to enroll. Our agents can verify your eligibility and walk you through the process.
Get help choosing a plan
Our licensed agents compare plans from multiple carriers, check your provider networks, and help you find coverage that fits your budget. No cost to you.