But sometimes, buyer's remorse is a lot trickier to deal with. When you sign up for the wrong health insurance plan, you can't just head to the Marketplace and exchange it for a new one. You have to contend with specific rules unique to our health insurance system.
If you regret choosing the wrong plan, you're not completely out of options. Read below to see where you stand.
What to do
Even if you've already signed up for health insurance, you still have time to cancel and change your plan before open enrollment ends. If the enrollment window has already closed, you're out of luck.If you're not happy with your insurance plan after open enrollment has ended, you don't have many options. The only circumstance where you can change your insurance plan outside of open enrollment is if you have a qualifying event. This triggers a Special Enrollment Period (SEP) when you can enroll in health insurance, just as if it's open enrollment again.
A qualifying event typically includes:
- Losing your job
- Having a child or adopting a child
- Getting married or divorced
- Moving to a new ZIP code or county
- Losing your health coverage due to job loss
Once your qualifying event has occurred, you have 60 days to sign up for coverage (some plans may only allow 30 days, so make sure to find out quickly). After that 60-day window has expired, you won't be able to buy coverage again until open enrollment or another qualifying event.
Outside of a qualifying event, there's no other way to sign up for new coverage if you've changed your mind.
You can cancel your health insurance coverage during the year at any time. Because the individual mandate was recently repealed, people who don't have health insurance won't have to pay a penalty for forgoing insurance. You won't have health insurance, but you also won't have a stiff fine to pay at the end of the year.
Other options...
One interesting (but potentially risky) alternative to standard insurance is to sign up for a healthcare sharing ministry. These ministries aren't classified as health insurance, but they work similarly. Members pay a monthly premium and have an annual "unshared" amount that functions like a deductible.These premiums are often less expensive than plans on the Marketplace, and members can usually see the same doctors they had before.
Ministries often require their members to be religious and don't cover medical bills for acts they deem immoral. A health care sharing ministry doesn't have to follow the rules of the Affordable Care Act, so pre-existing conditions typically aren't covered.
Want to purchase guaranteed HSA-eligible items? Click here!
Source: Zina Kumok of HSAStore.com
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