Questions you should ask during open enrollment
Open enrollment is no one's idea of a good time, but health coverage is a crucial part of your financial health. Whether you're getting insurance through an employer or the A ffordable Care Act marketplace, it's important to ask the right questions before you choose a plan for 2024. The right coverage for you will depend on your circumstances: Are you a light or heavy health care user? Are there any big medical events in your future, like a pregnancy or surgery? From doctors and medication coverage to deductibles and copays, here are the things to consider when you're comparing plans.
Open enrollment is no one's idea of a good time, but health coverage is a crucial part of your financial health. Whether you're getting insurance through an employer or the Affordable Care Act marketplace, it's important to ask the right questions before you choose a health plan for 2024.
"Open enrollment is a great time to do a personal health audit," says certified public accountant Charlene Rhinchart. a personal finance editor at drug savings site
Here's how to weigh your options. ARE YOUR DOCTORS IN NETWORK? Plan networks change from year to year. If you love your doctor or specialist, make sure they're still in the network of the plan you're considering for 2024.
You should also consider whether you want the option to go out of the network - which you can usually do in a preferred provider organization, or PPO, plan, although it will cost more. Health maintenance organizations, or HMOs, tend to be cheaper but lack the out-of-network flexibility.
ARE YOUR MEDICATIONS COVERED?
If you're on prescription medications, check plan fonnularies to make sure you understand how your drugs will be covered in 2024. Drug coverage can change from year to year, even if you stick with the same plan.
"Even if you were in an
WHAT ARE THE OUT-OF-POCKET
COSTS? Every plan has set costs, like the monthly premiums, plus the costs of care, which include the deductible and any copays and coinsurance. Comparing plans means estimating how much health care you'll use next year.
On the one hand, you have the costs you'd pay if you don't use the plan much beyond preventive care. On the other hand, you have the maximum amount you could pay in each plan if you're a heavy health care user. You can easily compare these situations.
There's a squishy middle ground, however, where the best plan for you depends on the amount and type of care you'll need next year.
"The tricky part is we never really know how much we're going to spend in a given year if we're in the middle," says
"It's the best predictive modeling you can do at this point," Rosenfeld says. IS A HIGH-DEDUCTIBLE PLAN RIGHT FORYOU? A high-deductible health plan, or HDHP, in 2024 is defined as a plan with a deductible of at least
Letter: Medical insurance delivers no value
Georgia's new Medicaid program off to slow start Georgia Medicaid program with work requirement has enrolled only 1,343 residents in 3 months The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp's new health plan for low-income adults has enrolled only 1,343 people through the end of September about three months after launching
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News