Health Insurance After a Job Loss: How to Find the Right Coverage Fast
Losing a job is stressful enough without having to decode your health insurance options at the same time. The good news is that you have real choices available, and understanding them quickly can save you both money and frustration.
What Happens to Your Coverage When You Lose a Job
When your employment ends, your employer-sponsored health insurance typically ends with it. Coverage will often cease on your last day or at the end of that month. This triggers a Special Enrollment Period, which gives you 60 days to enroll in new coverage outside the standard annual open enrollment window. Acting within this window is critical because missing it could leave you uninsured for months.
Your Three Main Options
COBRA allows you to keep your current employer plan by paying the full premium yourself, including the portion your employer used to cover. For many people, that is a surprise. According to KFF, the average employer-sponsored family plan costs over $23,000 per year, with employers typically covering around 73% of that cost.
Under COBRA, you pay all of it plus an administrative fee. The upside is continuity, with the same doctors, same network, and no disruption. The downside is the cost, which can be significant on a reduced or eliminated income.
ACA Marketplace plans are often the more affordable alternative. Job loss qualifies you for that same 60-day Special Enrollment Period to shop plans at Healthcare.gov. Plans are categorized by metal tiers (Bronze, Silver, Gold) that reflect how costs are split between you and the insurer.
Medicaid is worth checking if your income has dropped significantly. Eligibility is based on household income relative to the federal poverty level, and in states that have expanded Medicaid, a single adult earning up to roughly $21,000 annually may qualify. If you are eligible, coverage can begin almost immediately with little to no monthly premium.
How to Choose the Right One
The right option depends on your health needs, your income, and how long you expect to be without employer coverage. If you have ongoing prescriptions or scheduled procedures, COBRA may be worth the higher cost for the short term. However, if you are generally healthy and need to manage expenses, a marketplace plan is likely the smarter move. Of course Medicaid is the strongest safety net if your income qualifies.
One of our licensed insurance professionals can help you compare all three options side by side based on your specific situation. If you would like help finding the coverage that fits your needs and budget, contact our office today.
Featured Blogs
- Health Insurance After a Job Loss: How to Find the Right Coverage Fast
- How Medicare Advantage Plans Make Money (and What that Means for You)
- Your Health Insurance Claim Got Denied. Now What?
- What Happens to Your Life Insurance Policy During a Divorce?
- What Is Medicare, Really? A Plain-Language Breakdown for Anyone Approaching 65
- HSA vs. FSA: Which Tax-Advantaged Account Is Right for You?
- Life Insurance in Your 20s: Why Starting Early Pays Off Big
- Aging and Our Body’s Ability to Heal Itself
- What is Credit Health Insurance?
- Keeping Health Insurance After a Layoff
- Waking Up to the Impact of Insomnia
- How Life Insurance Benefits Women
- Electric Car: To Buy or to Lease?
- What experts say about raising the retirement age
- Coverage for healthcare treatment denied? Here’s what you can do.
- How are the proceeds of a life settlement taxed?
- Sharing the Road with Cyclists
- Buying Life Insurance for an Elderly Parent?
- What Every Renter Needs to Know about Renters Insurance
- Medicaid Unwinding: Your Questions Answered
- Does Uber Insurance Cover Passengers?
- Living Your Best Life After 60
- Weird Things Covered by Home Insurance
- Buying Health Insurance: A Millennial’s Guide
- Self-Love Ideas for Valentine’s Day
- Life Without Clutter
- Set Yourself Up for Success with Your Fitness Routine
- When to Upgrade Your Auto Insurance
- Winter Hydration – Do I Need It?
- What Does My Home Insurance Policy Cover?
- I’m 60+; Do I Need Life Insurance?
- Why Do I Keep Breaking My New Year’s Resolutions?
- Closing Out the Year with a Smile!
- How to Enjoy a Long Layover
- Are You Paying Too Much for Auto Insurance?
- 6 Cold Weather Safety Tips
- 10 Tips for Managing Cholesterol Levels
- How Social Security Cost-of-Living Adjustments Affect Your Taxes
- How Much Life Insurance Do You Need Right Now?
- LA County COVID Vaccine Info
- The Case(s) to Buy Life Insurance for Your Child
- SimpliSafe vs. Ring, Which is Right for You?
- What Medical Bills are Tax Deductible for 2019?
- Are You in a Flood Zone? The Answers Might Surprise you!
- The Safest Vehicles to Buy in Model Year 2020
- Freezing Pipes Burst! Am I Covered?
- This is Why You Pay Taxes on Employer-Sponsored Disability Insurance