Introduction / Who is it for
The USA does not have universal health insurance. Everyone must arrange their own. Without insurance, a single hospital stay can cost tens of thousands of dollars. This guide shows the 3 main paths.
Path 1: Employer-Sponsored Insurance (most popular)
Most companies in the USA offer employer-sponsored health insurance. The employer pays part of the premium, and the employee pays the rest from their salary.
- Employee premium: 100-500 USD/month (single) or 300-1500 USD/month (family)
- Deductible: 500-5,000 USD per year — the amount you pay before insurance kicks in
- Copay: 20-100 USD per doctor visit
- Out-of-pocket maximum: 3,000-9,100 USD per year (above this, the insurer pays everything)
Open enrollment usually occurs in November/December (Open Enrollment) or within 30-60 days of starting a job.
Path 2: Marketplace (Healthcare.gov)
For individuals without employer insurance or self-employed. Established in 2014 (Affordable Care Act / Obamacare).
Who can apply
- U.S. citizens
- Green Card holders
- Individuals with long-term work visas (H-1B, L-1)
- F-1 students (with restrictions)
- EAD holders
Individuals on tourist visas, ESTA, or without status — DO NOT qualify.
Subsidy — Advance Premium Tax Credit (APTC)
Most applicants receive a federal subsidy that reduces the premium. The amount depends on income relative to the federal poverty level (FPL):
- 100-150% FPL: largest subsidy, premium nearly zero
- 200-300% FPL: significant subsidy
- 400%+ FPL: subsidies phased out (before 2024 — limit temporarily lifted, check current rules)
4 levels of plans
- Bronze — 60% coverage, lowest premium, high deductible
- Silver — 70% coverage, average premium. Choice for individuals with CSR (Cost-Sharing Reductions) subsidies
- Gold — 80% coverage, higher premium, low deductible
- Platinum — 90% coverage, highest premium, lowest deductible
How to apply
- Go to healthcare.gov (or the state site if the state has its own: California, NY, Washington, etc.)
- Create an account, fill in family and income details
- The system shows plans with subsidies
- Select a plan, pay the first premium
- Coverage starts on the 1st day of the following month
Open Enrollment dates
November 1 — January 15 each year for the federal marketplace. States with their own deadlines may extend. Outside this period, you can enroll only if you have a "qualifying life event" (job loss, marriage, birth of a child, moving).
Path 3: Medicaid (for low-income individuals)
Medicaid is a joint federal-state program for individuals with the lowest incomes. Free or very low cost.
Who qualifies
Rules are state-specific. Generally:
- Income below 138% of the federal poverty level (in states with Medicaid Expansion)
- Income below another threshold in states without Expansion (Texas, Florida, Mississippi, etc.)
- Children, pregnant women, disabled individuals — often with a higher threshold
Immigration requirements
- U.S. citizens — full coverage
- Green Card holders — full coverage after 5 years of obtaining GC (there are exceptions)
- Other legal residents — emergency Medicaid (only for emergencies)
- Individuals without status — DO NOT qualify; may receive emergency Medicaid in case of an accident
How to apply
Through the state Medicaid website or through Healthcare.gov — the system automatically directs. In most states, online application + documents (paystubs, proof of address, visa/GC).
What if I don't have insurance
- Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC) — clinics with sliding-scale fees (you pay based on income)
- Free clinics — free clinics for the uninsured
- Emergency Room — hospitals MUST treat you in an emergency (EMTALA), but will bill you
- Community clinics — some serve the uninsured at lower prices
Costs without insurance (approximate)
- Visit to GP: 150-300 USD
- Visit to ER: 500-3,000 USD (just for registration)
- Hospitalization for 1 day: 5,000-15,000 USD
- Appendix surgery: 30,000-60,000 USD
- Natural childbirth: 12,000-20,000 USD
- C-section: 18,000-30,000 USD
Common mistakes
- Not selecting insurance during Open Enrollment — missing out until the next year
- Choosing the cheapest Bronze plan for a family with children (high deductible is painful)
- Not updating income in the Marketplace (subsidies are reconciled on the annual tax return; overstatement = refund, understatement = payment)
- Not checking if the doctor is "in-network" (out-of-network = high costs)
- Not enrolling in FQHC when uninsured
Negotiating hospital bills
If you receive a high hospital bill:
- Request an "itemized bill" — detailed breakdown
- Ask for a "self-pay discount" — usually 40-70% off
- Apply for "financial assistance" — non-profit hospitals MUST offer this if income is low
- Negotiate a payment plan (interest-free)
- Do not ignore — unpaid bills go to collections and damage credit score
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