I keep feeling like I'm missing out on something by keeping our old insurance.
Right now we pay $450/month for a family of 3, with a deductible of $20,000 and max OOP of $40k/family. It will be going up to around $500/month in 2023. We mostly pay cash for medical care because it ends up being cheaper than running it through insurance. We consider this plan to be a truly catastrophic plan.
We also have a DPC (direct primary care physician) at $180/month for the three of us. It has been money well spent: not only does she handle everything from wellness visits to urgent care, and help us over phone, email, and text...she also arranges discounts with local providers for cheap MRIs, sleep studies, etc. Last MRI was $500 cash pay; the provider would have charged $1,500 otherwise.
We have only hit the deductible twice in the 10 years of having our current insurance plan. We have averaged $350 per month in premiums over the last 10 years because it started at $250 and eventually went up over time to $450. (It will be over $500 in 2023.) We paid out maybe $50,000 out of pocket in that time. For a total of $92k.
One issue is that we have no idea exactly how much we'll earn each year. My husband has pretty steady income from an employer of about $99k before taxes (including annual bonus). He does tend to get an annual raise...but not every single year, and never the same amount.
I'm retired but still get random amounts of (mostly) passive income. For 2022 that will add up to about $29k; I expect it will be substantially lower in 2023 but can never be sure. There is also more from an inherited IRA (about $219,000 right now) that we have to spend down within 10 years.
I dislike the idea of having to worry about keeping our income under a certain amount—that is much too fiddly for me to handle with work incomes, investment income, etc. But if it were really, really worth it I'm sure I could handle it.
So: As a very rough example, if we estimate we'll earn $130,000 before taxes, we can get a premium tax credit of $830/month.
If we want to get our premium lower, we can get a Bronze plan with a $17,500 deductible and $18,200 OOP for $354...so saving about $150/month of our current plan with a slightly lower deductible and much lower OOP. I would want to keep the DPC.
However, I discovered the hard way that if your deductible is over $5k, you can't open an HCA. (At least that was the case a couple years ago when I tried.) If I'm going to go through all this I would at least like that option!
So maybe I want to try a $4,000 deductible. Looks like plans in that range (including our credit) would be around $1,000/month. And OOP maximums would still be around $17k!! This would be a Gold plan, and if we do that we might be able to discontinue the DPC, saving $180/month off of that. So let's say $820/month, which is about $140 more than we're paying now for our insurance + DPC. But for what benefit??
Final consideration is that we don't use much healthcare, but we do have an athletic son who went from ballet to boxing to football. His biggest injury (which cost us about $25k OOP) was from ballet! But he now has a football injury that just might require elbow surgery...which looks like it would be in the $7-8k range. Also, DH and I are in our mid-50s, and while we're pretty healthy now—no major issues, zero meds—I know we can't count on that forever.
So am I a complete face-punchable idiot for continuing to use our cheap non-ACA plan? Is there something obvious I'm missing? Because I don't get it.
Thanks for any insights!