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Health Insurance ‘Metal’ Plans Explained

by | Oct 9, 2024 | Health Insurance

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What Is the Difference Between the Metal Plans?

PLATINUM | GOLD | SILVER | BRONZE

From 1/1/2014 on, all individual and family health insurance plans will have these “Metallic” names whether you purchase health insurance “On Exchange” or “Off Exchange”. It gives you an easy-to-understand overview of how the plans will share the payment of your medical bills.

Health insurance companies that sell plans on the Health Insurance Marketplace can offer four types of qualified health insurance plans, including Bronze, Silver, Gold, and Platinum. The plan you choose determines not only the premium you pay but also what portion of your health costs you pay.

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Health Insurance 'Metal Plans' Explained

To make it easier to shop for coverage, health insurance plans have standardized “metals”. The “metal” plan depends on its actuarial value, or the average percentage of health care costs the plan pays vs what the member pays. The more coverage a plan provides, the higher the monthly premium and the fancier the metal level. Gold is better than Silver. Silver is better than Bronze.

  • Platinum plans cover 90% of medical expenses

  • Gold plans cover 80% of medical expenses

  • Silver plans cover 70% of medical expenses

  • Bronze plans cover 60% of medical expenses

This percentage will not go on forever, there is always an “Out of Pocket Maximum” (this is your pocket, not the insurance company), so you’ll only pay your portion of the expenses until you’ve reached your out-of-pocket maximum.​

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The Out-of-Pocket Maximums for 2023 are:

Individuals: $9,100 Families: $17,400

You’ll want to review your “Summary of Benefits and Coverage” to find out what your deductible is, your co-insurance, your out-of-pocket maximum, along with all of the important details of what your plan covers.

 

What Do the Health Insurance Plans Cover?

Regardless of the plan you choose, it will provide all 10 essential health care benefits guaranteed to policyholders under the Affordable Care Act. The difference among the plans has to do with how much overall out-of-pocket costs you’ll pay up to your out-of-pocket maximum.

 

Choose the Right Health Plan with Nevada Insurance Enrollment

Choosing the right metal tier requires evaluating your budget and assessing current and expected health care needs. Our agents guide you in reviewing the options available across the tiers and help you determine which plan best fits your health needs and budget. We can also help you determine whether you qualify for subsidies to lower your premium.

Health Insurance: What is a Single Payer System?

Health Insurance: What is a Single Payer System?

A single-payer health care system is one in which there is one party that collects all healthcare fees and covers all health care costs. In theory, this could reduce medical costs because there would be significantly fewer entities involved in the system, thus cutting down on administrative costs.

Health Insurance: What is a Single Payer System?

How to Switch or Cancel Your Auto Insurance Policy

When it comes time to renew your auto insurance, do you simply stay with the insurer that you’ve known and trusted for years? For some, this works out fine. For many, however, this is a costly mistake. If it’s been a while since you’ve shopped around for auto insurance, you could be throwing hundreds of dollars away.

Health Insurance: What is a Single Payer System?

What is a Prescription Drug Formulary?

A drug formulary is a list of the prescription drugs that your health insurance company has agreed to cover so that when you fill your prescription, you don’t pay the full price of the medication. In most cases, formularies are comprised of drugs that are the safest, most effective, and most affordable.

 

By page visits (this month)

#1) Health Insurance Subsidy Chart

#2) Health Insurance

#3) Health Insurance WITH a Subsidy

#4) Insurance Blog

#5) Request a Quote

By page visits (this month)

 

#1) Health Insurance Subsidy Chart

#2) Health Insurance

#3) Health Insurance WITH a Subsidy

#4) Insurance Blog Posts

#5) Request a Quote

Message from Nevada Insurance Enrollment

We would like to comment on this article for the sake of our clients who we have attempted unsuccessfully to enroll during this 1st year of “Open Enrollment”.

Health Insurance plan Unaffordable? Need Exemption?

When individuals and families buy their own health insurance, IF the insurance is greater than 8% of your “household income”, it is considered “unaffordable” and you are not required to buy health insurance.

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