Grandmothered plans are individual and small-group health plans that took effect after the ACA was signed into law in 2010, but before the exchanges opened for business in 2013. (In some states, grandmothered plans include plans that were issued as late as the end of 2013.)| healthinsurance.org
Grandfathered plans are health plans that were already in effect as of March 23, 2010, when the Affordable Care Act was signed into law. In the individual market, they are plans that already covered the policyholder as of that date, and in the employer-sponsored market, they are plans that the employer had already implemented as of that date, and has continuously offered ever since, with at least one covered employee at all times.| healthinsurance.org
The type of managed care your health plan falls under affects your healthcare costs and plan benefits – including access to medical providers.| healthinsurance.org
A health insurance deductible is the amount an individual must pay for healthcare expenses before insurance (or a self-insured company) covers the costs. Often, insurance plans are based on yearly deductible amounts.| healthinsurance.org
Coinsurance refers to money that an individual is required to pay for services, after a deductible has been paid. Coinsurance is often specified by a percentage.| healthinsurance.org
Under the Affordable Care Act, individual and small-group health plans that are not grandfathered must cover items and services in 10 health benefit categories.| healthinsurance.org
While the Affordable Care Act's premium subsidies help pay the cost of the health insurance itself, cost-sharing subsidies help to reduce out-of-pocket spending for eligible enrollees when they select Silver plans. The Trump administration eliminated federal funding for cost-sharing reductions, but the benefits are still available to eligible enrollees. And because the cost of cost-sharing reductions has been added to premiums, premium subsidies are much larger than they were prior to 2018.| healthinsurance.org
Learn how the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) improved health coverage and made it more affordable through income-based subsidies.| healthinsurance.org