Shoulda thought about this before you had a kidI'm Krallum and I approved this message.
10/2/2013 12:00:50 PM
10/2/2013 12:25:51 PM
anyone been able to sign up yet? still can't get the security questions to show
10/2/2013 12:31:52 PM
^^are only for between 100%-400% of the poverty level, so i think there are still gaps under 100%. these gaps were intended to be covered by medicaid by expanding Medicaid to include most low-income people, but since that was kicked out by the supreme court now we have a coverage gap.[Edited on October 2, 2013 at 12:33 PM. Reason : ^i'd wait a few days]
10/2/2013 12:32:44 PM
^I see!
10/2/2013 12:50:34 PM
hey if I already have health insurance thru my employer AND thru tricare, do I need to sign up for this shit?
10/2/2013 12:52:19 PM
10/2/2013 12:54:06 PM
^^noin fact, you can't even get the subsidy if your employer offers you insurance, or if you qualify for a government health-insurance program (like TRICARE)[Edited on October 2, 2013 at 1:04 PM. Reason : you can still look on the exchange, but you probably won't get a good deal
10/2/2013 1:03:55 PM
^^Catastrophic coverage has always been available. It should be what you have already if you picked the right plan.
10/2/2013 1:09:37 PM
10/2/2013 1:11:46 PM
10/3/2013 3:48:59 PM
No, you don't have to be pregnant or anything like that, although if you have employer offered healthcare you don't qualify for a subsidy unless you are in that 100%-400% and spend over 9.5% on healthcare. the answer to your question is in the links that I posted
10/3/2013 5:20:59 PM
got a letter from BCBS saying my new plan will be over 300% the cost of my previous plan that I'd been paying forThanks Obama]
10/3/2013 5:49:09 PM
If you're right at poverty, you might be able to get a Bronze plan for free, or a Silver plan for about $230/year (both after subsidies, which cap post-subsidy premiums at 2% of income) with a cap on out-of-pocket expenses that gives it an effective actuarial value of 94%, higher than a Platinum plan would be for most people: http://kff.org/interactive/subsidy-calculator/#state=nc&zip=27695&income-type=dollars&income=11490&employer-coverage=0&people=1&adult-count=1&adults%5B0%5D%5Bage%5D=21&adults%5B0%5D%5Btobacco%5D=0&child-count=0&child-tobacco=0These people, the ones near yet not below the poverty level, are the ones boosted the most by Obamacare.I figured out that KFF's estimate of the 2014 poverty level, down to the dollar, was $11,490 for an individual, and I used age 21 and NCSU's ZIP Code, but age and location didn't seem to matter at this income level; they do matter on the other end, 400% of poverty or $45,960, where a 21-year-old would get no subsidy and pay about 5.52% of income for a Silver plan, while a 64-year-old would get 43% of a Silver plan subsidized and pay the post-subsidy cap of 9.5% of income in premiums...and such a person would need to at least get a Bronze plan, which would cost about 6.67% of income after subsidies, or else pay the penalty.
10/4/2013 9:56:21 PM
here's you guys' #1 problem ITT:BCBSseriously the worst insurance provider around
10/4/2013 10:33:13 PM
What do you suggest then? My #1 problem is Obamacare. If I were to just pay the fine every year... Could I sign up with BCBS right after a major event since they can't deny me coverage? This is a serious question.
10/9/2013 7:15:16 AM
10/9/2013 7:30:14 AM
10/9/2013 9:02:00 AM
That's if I have a major event. What are the penalties again?
10/9/2013 3:10:55 PM
2014: $95 per adult and $47.50 per child (up to $285 for a faimly) or 1% of family income, whichever is greaterthe penalty cannot be greater than the national average premium price for Bronze coverage and is pro-rated by month
10/9/2013 3:18:25 PM
so I read on the healthcare site that "catastrophic" plans are for low income only... I assume that the site is equating catastrophic plans with HDHPs? I looked on BCBS and found a HDHP that I liked... would that not meet some requirement for my insurance?
10/9/2013 3:18:38 PM
More importantly, catastrophic plans are for the under-30 set onlyand you can't use subsidies on them
10/9/2013 6:48:59 PM
Lets just say we make $100k... 1% of that <<<<< $7k/year for a bronze plan. Right?
10/9/2013 7:21:57 PM
...and why would you want that?
10/9/2013 7:25:05 PM
if you are just trying to save money, then the penalty is less expensive. but then you don't have insurance.
10/9/2013 7:27:58 PM
But I can always get it right?I could potentially pay $20k out of pocket per year.[Edited on October 9, 2013 at 7:35 PM. Reason : T]
10/9/2013 7:32:45 PM
yes, but ACA doesn't change how insurance works, you can't purchase it and then apply it retroactively. it also doesn't mean they won't charge you more for something in your history.[Edited on October 9, 2013 at 7:45 PM. Reason : $20k won't get you far in the hospital]
10/9/2013 7:43:12 PM
Just trying to figure out my best option. If this thing goes through we are forced by the govt to pay out nearly 35% of our income. Taxes and insurance. I'm not a fan
10/9/2013 7:47:08 PM
well this thing went through 3 years ago, its a done deal
10/9/2013 7:50:37 PM
Little false advertisement to a bunch of morons got us there
10/9/2013 7:52:09 PM
what was falsely advertised?
10/9/2013 7:54:17 PM
Can you give an example of the average family saving $2500 annually on this plan?
10/9/2013 8:23:35 PM
sure, a family with a household income between $15k (0 children) and about $100k (2 children)
10/9/2013 8:31:04 PM
You have numbers to back that up? My son and I pay $1600/year for insurance through BCBS. How could we save $2500/year when we aren't paying that much???
10/9/2013 10:04:06 PM
(because you get subsidies between 100% and 400% poverty)
10/9/2013 10:17:14 PM
Numbers please
10/9/2013 10:22:09 PM
http://benswann.com/exclusive-many-americans-suffering-sticker-shock-is-obamacare-really-affordable/
10/9/2013 10:23:10 PM
That story is clearly made up. They seem to be average and should be saving $2500 per year
10/9/2013 10:29:09 PM
He's not eligible for subsidies because he has employer provided insurance already, otherwise he would be unless Trader Joes pays a lot more than I think.^^^http://kff.org/interactive/subsidy-calculator/[Edited on October 9, 2013 at 10:30 PM. Reason : .]
10/9/2013 10:29:38 PM
I'm asking you to show me a situation where someone saves $2500/year. Or are you saying he meant the $2500/year is subsidy?
10/9/2013 10:50:48 PM
dtownral is trolling himself pretty hard in this thread
10/9/2013 11:08:45 PM
10/10/2013 10:34:55 AM
10/10/2013 10:45:05 AM
I continue to not understand this
10/10/2013 10:46:55 AM
is that not how 70/30 plans have always worked?
10/10/2013 10:50:33 AM
^^coinsurance. as for your $1 million... there is an OOP maximum for each plan. [Edited on October 10, 2013 at 10:54 AM. Reason : .]
10/10/2013 10:53:47 AM
and related to your OOP max, ACA also ended lifetime maximums (that limited what insurance paid out at a certain dollar value) that some plans had
10/10/2013 10:57:22 AM
BCBS Silver 0 plan, for example:https://www.bcbsnc.com/assets/shopper/public/pdf/sbc/Blue_Advantage_Platinum_500.pdfNo deductible50% coinsurance (I/N)OOP max:For In-Network $6,350person/$12,700 family ForOut-Of-Network $12,700person/$25,400 family(aka stay in network)
10/10/2013 11:01:30 AM
10/10/2013 12:08:56 PM
Pretend you're a teacher, put in $35,000 into the calculator.http://kff.org/interactive/subsidy-calculator/This is 305% of the poverty level. There's no subsidy.
10/10/2013 12:16:59 PM