Coverage Education

Health coverage categories, explained simply

These educational overviews are a starting point for understanding common coverage types available to U.S. residents. They are not a recommendation of any specific plan or provider.

Individual health plan documents
Marketplace Basics

Individual Plans

Coverage purchased by a single person, typically through the federal or a state health insurance marketplace. Premiums, deductibles, and provider networks vary widely by plan tier (Bronze, Silver, Gold, Platinum).

Family reviewing health coverage
Household Planning

Family Coverage

A single plan that covers a policyholder along with a spouse and/or dependents. Family plans often have a combined deductible and out-of-pocket maximum shared across everyone on the policy.

Senior coverage discussion
Medicare Awareness

Senior Coverage

Most U.S. residents become eligible for Medicare at 65. Understanding the difference between Original Medicare, Medicare Advantage, and supplemental (Medigap) policies helps clarify what each option covers.

Short-term coverage bridge planning
Temporary Gaps

Short-Term Coverage

Temporary coverage designed to bridge a gap, such as between jobs. These plans typically offer limited benefits and may not cover pre-existing conditions, so reading the terms closely matters.

Dental and vision care
Supplemental Benefits

Dental & Vision Information

Routine dental and vision care is often excluded from standard health plans. Standalone dental and vision policies, or add-on riders, are common ways people fill that gap.

Health savings account planning
Tax-Advantaged Savings

Health Savings Accounts

An HSA lets you set aside pre-tax money for qualified medical expenses when paired with an eligible high-deductible health plan. Unused funds roll over year to year.

How to Compare Plans

Look beyond the monthly premium

A lower premium can be helpful, but the best fit usually depends on how often you use care, which doctors and prescriptions you need, and how much risk you can comfortably absorb during the year.

Total yearly cost

Compare premiums, deductibles, copays, coinsurance, and the out-of-pocket maximum together.

Provider access

Check whether preferred doctors, hospitals, pharmacies, and specialists are in network.

Medication coverage

Review formularies, tiers, prior authorization rules, and mail-order options before enrolling.

Coverage Costs

Understand the costs you may see in a health plan

Health coverage includes more than a monthly premium. Learning a few common cost terms can make plan documents easier to review.

Premium

The regular amount paid to keep health coverage active, usually billed each month.

Deductible

The amount you may need to pay for covered care before certain plan benefits begin sharing costs.

Copay

A fixed amount you may pay for a covered service such as an office visit or prescription.

Coinsurance

A percentage of a covered healthcare cost that you may pay after meeting the plan deductible.

Before You Enroll

Ask a few important questions before choosing coverage

Plan names and monthly prices only tell part of the story. Review the details that may affect your everyday access to healthcare.

Explore Coverage Direction
  • Are my doctors in the network?

    Review the current provider directory before enrolling.

  • Are my prescriptions covered?

    Check the plan formulary and medication tiers.

  • What is the out-of-pocket maximum?

    Understand the yearly limit for covered in-network expenses.

  • Do specialist visits need referrals?

    Referral requirements can vary depending on the plan structure.

Need a Starting Point?

Not sure which coverage category fits your situation?

Answer four simple questions to explore a general educational coverage direction and an illustrative premium range.

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