Learn how ACA’s provisions may help you save money on comprehensive health insurance.
“Obamacare” is a commonly used reference to the Affordable Care Act (ACA) legislation enacted in 2010. The ACA’s sweeping reforms included provisions that set standards for comprehensive health coverage and other provisions aimed at helping make the coverage more affordable to more people. 1 But while the term Obamacare can be used to refer to the entire law, this article will use this term to describe ACA-compliant individual/family major medical health plans that are obtained through the health insurance exchange/Marketplace in each state.
Once open enrollment begins, you can enroll in an ACA-compliant individual and family health insurance plan – or make changes to your existing coverage – through the Marketplace in your state.
Enroll through your state’s Marketplace on your own or with the help of a broker, Navigator, or enrollment counselor. Or enroll through an enhanced direct enrollment entity.
Live in a state that uses the federally facilitated Marketplace? Call 866-553-3223 to speak with a licensed health insurance agent. If not, check your state’s exchange for enrollment by phone.
Enroll in person at enrollment centers and during enrollment events all across the country. Brokers, Navigators, or enrollment counselors can provide you with zero-cost assistance with the enrollment process.
In a state that uses HealthCare.gov? Find assisters nearby.
Complete a paper application. (State-run Marketplaces will have their own paper application.) Here’s the paper application for HealthCare.gov.
Compare health plans and check subsidy savings.
When we’re talking about Obamacare coverage, we’re referring to health insurance plans that are compliant with the ACA and offered by private health insurance companies on the Marketplace / exchange. (You can also buy ACA-compliant coverage outside of the Marketplace/exchange.) ACA-compliant means that the plans conform to ACA rules for things like minimum benefit levels, maximum out-of-pocket limits, guaranteed-issue coverage and various other consumer protections.
(The ACA sets the minimum federal requirements, but states can impose their own additional requirements.)
In every state, residents can use the Marketplace / exchange to learn about and enroll in Obamacare (ACA) plans. The majority of the states use the federally operated HealthCare.gov for enrollment, but quite a few states run their own exchange platforms. In addition, individuals can enroll in Obamacare / Marketplace plans through a direct enrollment (DE) or an enhanced direct enrollment (EDE) pathway if they live in a state that uses HealthCare.gov as its Marketplace. 2
Everywhere except the District of Columbia, residents also have the option to enroll in ACA-compliant plans outside the Marketplace/exchange. But financial assistance in the form of premium subsidies and cost-sharing reductions is only available when coverage is purchased through the Marketplace (which can be done directly or through a DE or an EDE). That financial assistance is the primary reason that most eligible residents purchase Marketplace individual and family health plans. 3
All Obamacare / Marketplace health plans are required to offer a core comprehensive set of benefits, known as essential health benefits (EHB), 4 without any lifetime or annual dollar limits. 5 These include:
Each state sets its own rules for what has to be covered within each of those general categories, with details outlined by the state’s EHB benchmark plan. 7 So some of the coverage specifics under a Marketplace plan will depend on where you live. (For example, a state can specify how many physical therapy visits a plan has to cover in a given year.)
Any ACA-compliant individual or family health plan that is not grandfathered or grandmothered/transitional – including all Obamacare plans – must limit out-of-pocket costs for in-network care. The limit can’t be more than $9,450 for a single person in 2024. 8
And Obamacare plans must also spend at least 80% of premium revenue on medical costs and quality improvements. 9 If they don’t, carriers are required to send rebates to enrollees.
You can enroll in ACA-compliant individual/family health coverage through your state’s Marketplace (or a DE or EDE if you’re in a state that uses HealthCare.gov) as long as you live in the United States, are a U.S. citizen/national or are lawfully present in the United States, not incarcerated, and not enrolled in Medicare. 10 But while most people are eligible to enroll in Obamacare coverage, they can only sign up during an annual open enrollment period or a special enrollment period. More on that in a moment.
But eligibility for financial assistance in the Marketplace involves a few additional criteria. 11 To qualify for Obamacare subsidies (cost-sharing subsidies and/or premium subsidies): 12
If you buy health coverage through the Marketplace, the monthly premium you pay is going to depend on several factors, including:
In most states, open enrollment for ACA-compliant individual/family health plans runs from November 1 through January 15, though you will need to enroll by December 15 in order to have a January 1 effective date.
That schedule applies to the 32 states that use HealthCare.gov as their Marketplace, as well as several of the state-run Marketplaces. But there are some state-run Marketplaces that have different enrollment schedules, and different deadlines to get a January 1 effective date.
Outside of the annual Open Enrollment Period, you won’t be able to enroll for an ACA-compliant individual health plan (even outside the exchange) unless you qualify for a Special Enrollment Period. A variety of qualifying life events will trigger a Special Enrollment Period.
You can enroll in an Obamacare plan online, by phone, with a paper application, or in-person.
The majority of the states use HealthCare.gov as their Marketplace, but some do not. If you’re not sure about your state’s Marketplace, you can enter your zip code in this tool. If your state doesn’t use HealthCare.gov, the tool will point you to your state’s Marketplace.
You’ll then be able to enroll directly through the website, either on your own or with the help of a broker, Navigator, or enrollment counselor.
You’ll also have the option to submit a paper application. Here’s the paper application for HealthCare.gov. (If your state runs its own Marketplace, it will have its own paper application.)
You can also choose to enroll over the phone. If you’re in a state that uses HealthCare.gov, the phone number is 1-800-318-2596. If you’re in a state that runs its own exchange, that exchange will provide an enrollment phone number. Find information about your state’s exchange.
If you prefer to sit face-to-face with someone who can help you enroll, there are enrollment centers and enrollment events all across the country. They are staffed with brokers, Navigators, or enrollment counselors, all of whom can provide you with zero-cost assistance with the enrollment process. Find assisters nearby.
If you’re in a state that uses HealthCare.gov and you want to find someone who can help you understand your coverage options and get enrolled, you can use this tool to find enrollment assisters in your community. This will include people who can help you over the phone, online, or in-person.
There are several things to keep in mind when you’re buying coverage:
Here’s more about what you should keep in mind when you’re choosing a health insurance plan in the exchange.
In the individual/family and small-group market, health plans sold since 2014 must fit into one of four: Bronze, Silver, Gold, or Platinum. (There are also catastrophic plans available to some enrollees in the individual market.)
Learn more about Obamacare’s metal plan levels.
The pros of the Obamacare legislation include the fact that individual/family health insurance:
The cons depend on your perspective, but include the fact that individual/family health insurance is no longer available for purchase year-round, and can be quite expensive for people who don’t qualify for premium subsidies (although recent legislation has temporarily ensured that nobody has to pay more than 8.5% of their household income for the benchmark plan). 20
In most states, no. The federal penalty included in the ACA was eliminated at the end of 2018. But there are some states that have instituted their own coverage mandate penalty, which is assessed by each state during income tax filing. They include Massachusetts, New Jersey, California, Rhode Island, and Washington DC.
Obamacare (the Affordable Care Act) was signed into law in March 2010. 21 Some of its provisions took effect later that year, including the preventive care coverage rule and a provision that allows young adults to stay on a parent’s health plan until age 26.
But the ACA’s expansion of Medicaid and the bulk of the new rules for individual/family health coverage didn’t take effect until January 2014. The exchanges debuted in the fall of 2013, allowing people to buy ACA-compliant health coverage that took effect in 2014.
Before the ACA reformed the individual health insurance market, insurers routinely discriminated against people with pre-existing medical conditions, and premiums were based on gender.
Prior to 2014, there were only five states where individual health insurance was guaranteed-issue regardless of medical history. 22 In the rest of the states, people with pre-existing medical conditions were generally subjected to condition-specific exclusions, higher premiums, or outright denials. In many states, high-risk pools served as ‘coverage of last resort’, but even those plans came with benefit caps.
As a result of Obamacare, medical history and gender are no longer a factor in eligibility for individual health insurance, nor do they affect the premiums people pay.
Section 1557 of the ACA prohibits discrimination in health plans, including discrimination based on gender or sexual orientation. 23 The details are left to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), so there have been some changes as administrations have taken differing approaches: