Pages
Archives
- March 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXCategories
- Animals (2)
- Autos (6)
- Best Health (1)
- Citizen (1)
- College Student (1)
- Conversion (1)
- Dade County Florida (1)
- Deductibles (1)
- Dental Health (1)
- Dental Vision (1)
- Dental Work (1)
- Dermatologist (1)
- Feeding Tube (1)
- Film (2)
- Fire Casualty (1)
- Freak Accident (1)
- Good Health (1)
- Health Carrier (1)
- Health Coverage (1)
- Health Ins (1)
- Health Insurance (284)
- Health Insurance Carrier (1)
- Health Insurance Companies (1)
- Health Insurance Plan (1)
- Health Policy (1)
- Hello My Friend (1)
- Hospitalization (1)
- Howto (12)
- Individual Health (1)
- Insurance Dental (1)
- Insurance Life (1)
- International Health Insurance (1)
- Medical Expenses (1)
- Mother Lives (1)
- News (5)
- Nurse (1)
- Own Insurance (1)
- Personal Injury Protection (1)
- Sgli (1)
- Student Policies (1)
- Tax Filing (1)
- Unhealthy Teeth (1)
Recent Comments
- M. Bennett:This book is typical of many t
- Olivia:Combines the Dearborne Pastrac
- Darryl W. Mitchell:I have several different resou
- Haw'n Iron:great format and actually inte
- K. Feldman:When I decided to make a caree
- L. Murphy:It coverd the same stuff as my
- Robert E. Rodarte:In regard to "Exam Cram, Life
- Kate Wright:This text, workbook, and instr
- P. Steele:I purchased this book with the
- :This book is written in an eas
Recent Post
- Workbook to Accompany Understanding Health Insurance: A Guide to Billing and Reimbursement
- PASSTRAK Life and Health Insurance License Exam Manual, Fifth Edition
- One Nation, Uninsured: Why the U.S. Has No National Health Insurance
- Life and Health Insurance License Exam Cram
- The New Health Insurance Solution: How to Get Cheaper, Better Coverage Without a Traditional Employer Plan
- Understanding Health Insurance: A Guide to Billing and Reimbursement
- Long Term Care Insurance Quote, LTCi vs Life Ins
- eSuremenow.com; How Do I Determine Which Long Term Care Insurance Company I Should Choose?
- Insurance Guide
- Water Committee 21Jul08 4
7 Responses to “How do health insurance deductibles work?”
By bettyk on Mar 24, 2009 | Reply
You need to speak with an insurance councellor regarding health ins. I just went through that myself. It takes some explaining and investigation as they are not all the same. bettyk
By John on Mar 28, 2009 | Reply
You pay the first $1K medical bills. Your insurance kicks in after the initial $1K, not at 100%, but based on whatever your insurance plan/contract says, usually it’s 80/20, meaning insurance picks up 80% and you pick up 20% of the bill up to your annual deductible limit. Anything after that annual deductible limit, insurance will pick up 100%.
By adk_eric on Mar 31, 2009 | Reply
John’s answer is correct but also look for something called a “stop loss limit”. This limit is the most you will have to pay total out-of-pocket in any given year, including the 20% coinsurance and $1K deductible.
By Insurance on Mar 31, 2009 | Reply
Its easy to compute 180 x 12 = 2160 vs 480 x 12 = 5760.
As the deductible is only 1,000 and the premium difference is 3,600. or an extra of 300 per month. Mathematically if nothing happens to you for the next 3.5 months and you already have 1,000 in your bank account to cover the dedutible.
If you don’t fore see any claims for the next 3-4 months you should take the $180 per month plan.
Also insurance companies will impose a 30 days waiting period and 120 days to 12 months exclusion period for pre-existing condition. Technically if you opt for $ 480 plan you may not get protection immediately. as it is normal for insurance company to impose waiting period and certain exclusions.
Ask your agent to compare for you
By mbrcatz17 on Apr 1, 2009 | Reply
Well, the deductible is how much you pay of covered services, BEFORE the insurance kicks in.
So, you pay for the first 5-6 doctor visits, or the first couple of emergency room visits, or the first broken arm, etc, whatever adds up to $1,000, BEFORE the insurance pays one dime.
If you don’t see the doctor often, you’ll be ahead of the game in three months.
By zippythejessi on Apr 4, 2009 | Reply
A deductible is the amount that you have to shell out before the company picks up the tab. NEVER pay a provider up front – ALWAYS have the insurance billed first. If you use a participating provider, you’ll pay a LOT less than if you paid first. Reason is: participating providers accept a discount from the plan. The second reason you want the insurance billed first is because that’s how the deductible is tracked.
That said, basically you want to have the least out of pocket. If you’re a healthy adult with no children, who doesn’t use the insurance often, go with the cheaper premium and the deductible – you’ll come out ahead financially. (If you don’t use the insurance, you don’t pay the deductible.) If you have any chronic condition, or young children – go with the $480 a month plan – it’ll work out cheaper in the long run.
Good luck!
By mzprincesslady on Apr 6, 2009 | Reply
If you are the type that doesn’t use your insurance as much but you are paying for health insurance every month you should go with a company called Ameriplan visit the website and look over your options. With this plan you don’t have to worry about deductilbes or co-pays.