En español | Many Vermonters are eligible to buy health insurance through Vermont Health Connect, the state’s Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplace, during open enrollment, which begins Nov. 1, 2023, for 2024 health insurance coverage.
Residents who experience a qualifying life event, such as a marriage, divorce, the birth of a child, a move or lost health insurance, may be eligible to buy or change coverage outside the open enrollment period.
Most people enrolled in ACA marketplace plans have seen their premiums go down because the 2021 American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) increased tax credits for insurance premiums and expanded the number of households that qualify for them. Every household that pays more than 8.5 percent of its income qualifies for federal tax credits to help afford health insurance. These enhanced subsidies are available through 2025.
Before the 2021 law, such tax credits were only available to people earning less than a certain salary ($54,360 for one person). Most Americans with a marketplace plan can save an average of about $800 per year, according to the federal government.
To buy health insurance through Vermont Health Connect, you must:
You may also qualify for Green Mountain Care, the state’s Medicaid program, which offers free or low-cost coverage to low-income families and individuals.
You apply for coverage and choose your plan at the same time. Once you’re approved for a plan, you’ll need to pay your first monthly premium for your coverage to begin. You can pay online, via phone or ask to receive a bill in the mail, which should arrive in one to three weeks.
To apply and enroll:
Coverage and cost depend on where you live, the type of plan you choose, your estimated household income, and the age and disability status of you and your family. If you qualify for Green Mountain Care, you will be able to get free or low-cost coverage and may not face premiums or copays, depending on your income level.
All Vermont Health Connect plans cover 10 “essential” benefits, including:
Insurance companies cannot deny coverage because of preexisting conditions. When you apply, you can identify your medical needs and choose a plan that makes financial sense for you and your family.
Most Vermont Health Connect plans cover basic dental services for those under age 21. But adults who want dental coverage must add it to their policy. Deductibles and out-of-pocket costs vary between plans; enrolling in a family plan may cut costs.
Every eligible household that pays insurance premiums that exceed 8.5 percent of annual income qualifies for federal tax credits for insurance premiums through 2025. According to Megan O’Reilly, AARP vice president of government affairs for health and family, subsidy recipients ages 50 to 64 have already seen average annual savings of over $950.
Yes. If you qualify for a premium tax credit, you may also qualify for a cost-sharing reduction that would help you pay for such out-of-pocket expenses as deductibles and copays. You must enroll in a Silver-level plan to get this assistance.
Vermont Health Connect plans are organized into five categories:
Vermont Health Connect’s Plan Comparison Tool helps you estimate and compare costs and benefits of plans. It also gives you an estimate of your eligibility for financial assistance.
If you already have coverage through your employer, you can switch to a marketplace plan, but you probably won’t qualify for the federal financial help unless you can prove your employer’s insurance is inadequate or unaffordable. Premiums would need to be more than 9.12 percent of your household income for individual coverage to be unaffordable.
If you already have a marketplace plan but want to change plans to take advantage of the financial assistance, you’ll need to wait until open enrollment to do so unless you experience a qualifying life event or qualify for Vermont's income-based special enrollment period.
If you already have coverage directly with Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Vermont or MVP Health Care but want to move your plan into the marketplace to receive the financial assistance, you can do so at any time. Any payment you’ve already made toward your deductible and out-of-pocket limits will transfer with you.
Visit Vermont Health Connect's American Rescue Plan Act FAQs for a full breakdown of what different categories of Vermonters can do.
Probably not, if you stay with the same insurance provider. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Vermont offers the same network of providers across its tiers of coverage and for both its on- and off-marketplace plans. MVP Health Care — the only other insurer in Vermont offering marketplace plans — does the same.
If you are looking to swap insurers, talk to your doctor or use the Plan Comparison Tool to see whether they will accept your plan.
It depends. You can enroll as a family. In certain cases, however, some family members may also be eligible for subsidies or other programs, depending on age, income and disability, or caregiver status. Members of “mixed households,” in which family members are on different plans, may be able to see the same doctor or go to the same medical practice, as long as the provider is in both insurance networks, which is common in Vermont.
This guide was updated on Jan. 24, 2023, with information about open enrollment.
This story is provided by AARP Vermont. Visit the AARP Vermont page for more news, events, and programs affecting retirement, health care, and more.
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