What types of health insurance are available in Texas?+
Texas residents typically get health insurance through an employer, the individual marketplace (healthcare.gov), Medicaid or CHIP for those who qualify, or Medicare after age 65 (or with certain qualifying conditions). Short-term plans and healthshare arrangements also exist, though they work very differently from ACA-compliant coverage and don't cover the same benefits. Which option fits depends on your household income, employment, family situation, and health needs. An independent advisor can walk through eligibility and the trade-offs of each path.
How much does health insurance cost in Georgetown?+
Individual health insurance premiums in Georgetown depend on your age, household income (which drives potential ACA subsidies), plan metal tier (bronze, silver, gold, platinum), plan type (HMO, PPO, EPO), the network of doctors and hospitals, and your deductible and out-of-pocket maximum. Employer plans use different pricing structures. Because plans and networks change each year, comparing options through an advisor during open enrollment — or during a special enrollment period triggered by a qualifying life event — is usually worthwhile.
When can I enroll in health insurance?+
Individual ACA plans on the marketplace can generally be purchased during the annual open enrollment period or during a special enrollment period triggered by a qualifying life event — losing coverage, marriage, divorce, birth or adoption of a child, or a move, among others. Employer plans typically have their own annual open enrollment windows. Medicare has separate enrollment periods. An advisor can confirm which enrollment window applies to your situation and help you compare plans before you enroll.
What is a deductible, copay, and out-of-pocket maximum?+
A deductible is the amount you pay for covered services before your plan starts sharing costs. A copay is a fixed dollar amount you pay for certain visits or prescriptions. Coinsurance is a percentage you pay after the deductible. The out-of-pocket maximum is the most you'll pay in a plan year for covered in-network services before the plan pays 100%. Together, these determine what you actually pay when you use care — not just the monthly premium.
What does health insurance actually cover?+
ACA-compliant plans cover a set of essential health benefits, including doctor visits, hospital care, prescription drugs, preventive care, maternity, mental health, and more, with specific cost-sharing that varies by plan. Networks determine which providers are covered at in-network rates. Coverage details, formularies, and networks change each year, so reviewing the summary of benefits and drug formulary each renewal — not just the price — matters. An advisor can help you compare what a plan actually covers, not just the premium.
Am I eligible for an ACA subsidy?+
Many households in Texas qualify for premium tax credits and cost-sharing reductions on marketplace plans based on household income and family size. Eligibility and subsidy amounts change with income and household composition. An independent advisor can estimate whether you likely qualify, walk through how a subsidy affects the plans you can choose, and help you enroll accurately so your subsidy is calculated correctly for the plan year.
Can I keep my doctor on a new plan?+
Networks vary by plan and change year to year. Just because a provider is in-network on one plan doesn't mean they're in-network on another, even from the same insurance company. Before switching plans, check the plan's provider directory for your doctors, preferred hospitals, and specialists, and confirm directly with the provider's office that they accept the specific plan you're considering — not just "that carrier" in general.
Why work with an independent health insurance advisor?+
An independent health insurance advisor can compare marketplace, off-exchange, short-term, and (for eligible individuals) Medicare or group options rather than representing a single insurance company. That's especially useful when a household has multiple options — for example, a marketplace plan for one spouse and an employer plan for another. An advisor can help you understand subsidies, networks, drug coverage, and total expected cost, not just monthly premium, and re-shop annually as plans and prices change.
How does health insurance work for residents of Georgetown?+
Residents of Georgetown generally access individual health insurance through the marketplace, employer plans, Medicaid or CHIP if eligible, or Medicare after 65. Available plans, provider networks, and pricing vary by ZIP code, so two neighbors can see different plan options and different in-network doctors. An independent advisor in Georgetown can review your eligibility, estimate subsidies, and compare plans across carriers — including how each plan's network overlaps with the providers you and your family already use.
Why work with a local health insurance advisor in Georgetown?+
A local advisor understands which carriers, networks, and hospital systems serve the Georgetown area, and how each plan's network overlaps with local providers. They can walk through subsidies, plan design, and drug coverage, help you enroll accurately, and be available when a claim, billing issue, or life change comes up mid-year. Because independent advisors compare multiple carriers, you see options across the market rather than a single company's plans.