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
The type of managed care your health plan falls under affects your healthcare costs and plan benefits – including access to medical providers.| healthinsurance.org
Obamacare's annual open enrollment runs until January 15 in most states. Here's why you might want to enroll by December 15 anyway.| healthinsurance.org
Open enrollment for 2025 ACA (Affordable Care Act)-compliant health insurance is just around the corner. Let’s take a look at the various changes that consumers should be aware of this fall.| healthinsurance.org
A cost-sharing reduction (CSR) is a provision of the Affordable Care Act that reduces out-of-pocket costs for eligible enrollees who select Silver health insurance plans in the marketplace. CSRs – often referred to as cost-sharing subsidies – reduce enrollees' cost-sharing by lowering a health plan's out-of-pocket maximum, and increasing the actuarial value (AV) of the plan.| healthinsurance.org
There are two different meanings for the term benchmark plan – and both have to do with the Affordable Care Act: Benchmark plan is the term used to describe the second-lowest-cost Silver plan (SLCSP) available in the exchange/Marketplace, and it’s also the term for the plan that each state designates as the standard for essential health benefits (EHBs).| healthinsurance.org
See if you're eligible for the Affordable Care Act's premium tax credits (premium subsidies), how subsidies are calculated, and why they are more robust in 2023.| 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
The Affordable Care Act standardized individual health insurance policies by creating a “metal” ranking for individual/family and small-group policies, based on their actuarial value (the percentage of costs that the plan pays across a standard population).| healthinsurance.org
A list of the open enrollment deadlines for enrollment in 2025 ACA-compliant health insurance in every state. Open enrollment runs from November 1 to January 15 in most states, but some state-run exchanges have different schedules.| healthinsurance.org
The ACA's subsidy cliff has been temporarily eliminated (through 2025), saving some health insurance buyers thousands of dollars per year.| healthinsurance.org
The Affordable Care Act’s open enrollment period is the annual window during which individuals and families can compare the various health plans that are available and select the one that will best fit their needs for the coming year.| healthinsurance.org
Find out if you qualify for lower costs on Marketplace health insurance coverage at HealthCare.gov.| HealthCare.gov