Health Insurance Explained for Everyday People

Understanding health insurance doesn’t have to be overwhelming. On this page you’ll learn how health insurance works, what your coverage options are, how to avoid costly mistakes, and how to choose a plan that fits your life and your budget in plain language, no jargon required.

What Is Health Insurance?

Health insurance is a contract between you and an insurance company. You pay a monthly premium, and in exchange, the insurer helps cover the cost of your medical care — from routine checkups to emergency surgery.

In the United States, health insurance is the primary way most families access medical care without facing financially devastating bills. A single emergency room visit can cost $3,000–$10,000 out of pocket. A hospital stay — several times more. Health insurance is what stands between a health event and a financial crisis.

Under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), most health insurance plans are required to cover a set of essential health benefits — including emergency care, prescription drugs, mental health services, maternity care, and preventive services like annual physicals and vaccinations.

The goal of health insurance isn't just to help you pay for care after something goes wrong — it's to give you access to preventive care that catches problems early, when they're far less expensive and far more treatable.

Key Health Insurance Terms

💳
Premium The monthly amount you pay to keep your insurance active — regardless of whether you use it.
🎯
Deductible The amount you pay out of pocket before your insurance starts covering costs.
🤝
Copay A fixed fee you pay for a specific service — like $25 per doctor visit.
📊
Coinsurance Your percentage share of costs after your deductible is met — typically 20–30%.
🛑
Out-of-Pocket Maximum The most you'll pay in a year. After this, your insurer covers 100% of covered costs.

How Health Insurance Works

From paying your premium to getting care and receiving your bill — here's how the process flows step by step.

1

You Pay Your Premium

Every month you pay a premium to stay covered — whether you use any medical services or not. This is your baseline cost for having insurance active.

2

You Receive Care

When you need medical services, you visit a provider. In-network providers have negotiated rates with your insurer, which lowers your cost significantly.

3

Your Insurer Processes the Claim

Your provider submits a claim to your insurance company. The insurer applies your deductible, copay, or coinsurance rules to determine what you owe.

4

You Pay Your Share

You pay whatever portion is your responsibility — until you hit your out-of-pocket maximum, after which your insurer covers 100% of covered costs.

Types of Health Insurance Plans

Not all health insurance works the same way. The plan type you choose determines how you access care, whether you need referrals, and how much you pay when you go out-of-network.

🏥

HMO — Health Maintenance Organization

You choose a primary care physician who coordinates all your care. Referrals are required to see specialists. Coverage is only for in-network providers, except in emergencies.

Most Common
🔓

PPO — Preferred Provider Organization

More flexibility — you can see any doctor or specialist without a referral. Out-of-network care is allowed, though it costs more. Higher premiums but greater freedom.

Most Flexible
⚖️

EPO — Exclusive Provider Organization

A middle ground between HMO and PPO. No referrals required for specialists, but out-of-network care isn't covered except in emergencies. Lower premiums than PPOs.

Middle Ground
💰

HDHP — High-Deductible Health Plan

Lower monthly premium with a significantly higher deductible. Often paired with a Health Savings Account (HSA) that lets you save pre-tax money for medical expenses.

Low Premium
🏛️

Medicaid

Government-funded health insurance for low-income individuals and families. Eligibility and benefits vary by state. Covers a comprehensive range of services at little or no cost.

Government
👴

Medicare

Federal health insurance for adults 65 and older, and certain younger people with disabilities. Divided into Parts A, B, C, and D. Learn more: Medicare vs Medicaid explained.

65+ / Disability

What You'll Pay — and When

Health insurance costs more than just your monthly premium. Here are the key terms you need to understand before choosing a plan.

Premium
Your monthly payment to maintain coverage — due whether or not you receive any care that month.
Example: You pay $380/month for a family plan. That's $4,560/year before you ever use your insurance.
Deductible
The amount you pay out of pocket for covered services before your insurance begins contributing. Resets each plan year.
Example: $3,000 deductible. You pay the first $3,000 of covered medical costs yourself. After that, your insurer shares the cost.
Copay
A fixed fee you pay for a specific type of visit or service — often regardless of whether you've met your deductible.
Example: $35 copay for a primary care visit, $60 for a specialist. These amounts are fixed and predictable.
Coinsurance
The percentage of costs you share with your insurer after you've met your deductible. Common ratios are 80/20 or 70/30.
Example: With 80/20 coinsurance, a $1,000 bill after your deductible = you pay $200, insurer pays $800.
Out-of-Pocket Max
The most you'll pay in a single plan year. After you hit this cap, your insurer covers 100% of covered costs for the rest of the year.
Example: $7,500 out-of-pocket max. A major surgery that triggers $20,000 in bills only costs you $7,500 maximum.
Network
Your insurer's list of contracted providers. In-network care costs less. Out-of-network care can be significantly more expensive — or not covered at all.
Example: Same specialist: $60 copay in-network vs. $400+ out-of-pocket out-of-network. Always check before booking.
💡

The number most people ignore: your out-of-pocket maximum. That's your worst-case scenario for any given year. Compare it across plans — it's your real financial ceiling, not your deductible.

How to Choose the Right Health Insurance Plan

Choosing health insurance isn't just about finding the lowest monthly premium. The right plan depends on how you actually use healthcare — not what looks cheapest on paper.

1

Estimate your actual healthcare usage

How often do you see doctors? Do you have prescriptions? Kids with regular appointments? People who rarely use healthcare may do better with a high-deductible plan. Families with ongoing needs often save more with a higher premium and lower deductible.

2

Check that your doctors are in-network

Before enrolling in any plan, verify your current doctors and preferred hospitals are in-network. Don't rely solely on the insurer's online directory — call the office directly to confirm.

3

Compare the out-of-pocket maximum

This is your true worst-case financial exposure. Compare it across every plan you're considering — it matters far more than the deductible for protecting against catastrophic costs.

4

Check your prescriptions against the formulary

If you take regular medications, verify they're covered under each plan's formulary and at what tier. A cheaper premium plan can cost more if your medications aren't covered well.

5

Run the total cost scenario

Don't compare premiums — compare total annual cost. Calculate: (monthly premium × 12) + your expected out-of-pocket costs. The math often reveals the "cheap" plan is actually more expensive.

HMO vs. PPO vs. EPO

FeatureHMOPPOEPO
CostLowestHighestMiddle
PCP RequiredYesNoNo
Referral NeededYesNoNo
Out-of-NetworkEmergency onlyYes (higher cost)Emergency only
Best ForLow cost, predictableFlexibilityNo referrals, lower cost
James's Take
"The single most common mistake I see families make is choosing the plan with the lowest monthly premium without running the actual numbers. A $180/month plan with an $8,000 deductible can cost a family $10,000 more than a $340/month plan with a $1,500 deductible — if they actually use their insurance. Run your worst-case scenario. Don't choose a plan on what it costs when nothing goes wrong."

What Health Insurance Covers

Under the Affordable Care Act, most health plans are required to cover these essential health benefits — though exact coverage and costs vary by plan.

🏥

Emergency Services

Emergency room visits, ambulance transport, and urgent care — even if the provider is out-of-network.

👨‍⚕️

Preventive Care

Annual physicals, vaccinations, cancer screenings, and wellness visits — often covered at no cost before your deductible.

💊

Prescription Drugs

Covered medications at tiered cost levels — generic (lowest), preferred brand, and non-preferred brand. Always check your plan's formulary.

🧠

Mental Health & Substance Use

Therapy, counseling, and behavioral health treatment — federally required benefits, covered at parity with medical services.

🤰

Maternity & Newborn Care

Prenatal visits, labor, delivery, and newborn care — all essential benefits required under the ACA.

🧪

Lab Tests & Imaging

Blood work, X-rays, MRIs, biopsies, and other diagnostic tests used to diagnose and treat medical conditions.

Health Insurance FAQs

The questions families ask most often — answered in plain language.

What's the difference between a deductible and an out-of-pocket maximum?
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Your deductible is the amount you pay before your insurance starts sharing costs. Your out-of-pocket maximum is the most you'll pay in a full plan year — after which your insurer covers 100% of covered costs. Think of the deductible as when coverage kicks in, and the out-of-pocket max as your absolute ceiling for the year.
What happens if I miss open enrollment?
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Missing open enrollment means you typically can't get coverage until the next enrollment period — unless you experience a qualifying life event like losing job-based coverage, getting married, having a baby, or moving to a new state. These trigger a Special Enrollment Period that gives you 60 days to enroll.
Can I keep my own doctors when I switch health plans?
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Only if they're in-network with your new plan. Before enrolling, always call your doctor's office directly to confirm they accept the specific plan — don't rely solely on the insurer's online directory, which can be outdated. If your doctors are out-of-network, consider a PPO that still provides some out-of-network coverage.
What is a Health Savings Account (HSA) and who can use one?
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An HSA is a tax-advantaged account you can use to pay for qualified medical expenses. To be eligible, you must be enrolled in a High-Deductible Health Plan (HDHP). You contribute pre-tax money, it grows tax-free, and withdrawals for medical expenses are also tax-free — making it one of the most tax-efficient accounts available.
Does health insurance cover therapy and mental health treatment?
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Yes. Under the ACA, mental health and substance use disorder services are classified as essential health benefits. Federal law requires plans to cover mental health services at parity with medical services — meaning you can't be charged more for therapy than for a comparable medical visit.
Is COBRA worth it after losing a job?
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COBRA lets you keep your employer's plan, but you pay the full premium — including the portion your employer used to cover. This can be 3–5x what you paid before. Compare COBRA costs against Marketplace plans during your Special Enrollment Period. Many people find subsidized Marketplace plans are significantly more affordable than COBRA.
Can I get health insurance if I'm self-employed?
+
Yes. Self-employed individuals can purchase coverage through the Health Insurance Marketplace at Healthcare.gov. Depending on your income, you may qualify for premium tax credits that significantly reduce your monthly cost. You can also deduct health insurance premiums from your federal taxes as a self-employed individual. See our full guide: Marketplace vs Employer Insurance.
What's the difference between in-network and out-of-network care?
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In-network providers have negotiated discounted rates with your insurance company — you pay significantly less, often just a copay or coinsurance rate. Out-of-network providers haven't agreed to these rates, so costs are much higher. With some plan types (HMO, EPO), out-of-network care isn't covered at all except in true emergencies.

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JS

Written & Reviewed by James A. Sabb

Consultant & Advisor · 30+ Years Experience · Health Insurance Advisory Since 2015 · CEO, Sabb Media International LLC · Pompano Beach, FL

James A. Sabb has spent over three decades in regulated industries, including 10+ years advising individuals and families on health insurance decisions within federally regulated environments. He founded SabbMedia.com to bring that inside expertise to everyday people — no sales pressure, no jargon, and no incentive other than getting you to the right answer.

⚠️ Disclaimer: The content on this page is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, legal, or insurance advice. Sabb Media International LLC is not a licensed financial advisor or insurance broker. James A. Sabb provides consultative and educational guidance only. Always consult a qualified, licensed professional before making any financial or insurance decisions.

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