Health insurance

Davy Crockett

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We had BCBS federal plan and they paid really well up until we got old enough for medicare, then things went south because when the bill comes medicare pays first and insurance pays second. (For you young guys, be aware of that.)

FF to last year, when I read the upcoming changes to our old policy I started shopping because prices were going up and coverage was going down so we went with nextblue. The premium was $345 a month less with better prescription coverage and a higher deductible so it made sense.

I don't know what to expect for sure on hospital stay, if medicare pays much or not but my maximum out of pocket is supposed to be $ 4500 . I'll know soon enough because I wiped out on the ice and spent 5 days in the hospital with fractured ribs. The paperwork hasn't been processed yet. I expect I'll pay the Maximum out-of-pocket $ 4500/year. Almost a wash since we save $ 4140/year in premiums.
 


Fester

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Insurance can be a balancing act. Lower premoums and you should be putting money away for the higher out of pocket expenses. Higher premiums will equal less out of pocket expenses when shit hits the fan...atleast how its supposed to work. It all depends what a person wants. Alot of people see low premiums and dont realize that if something happens they will be paying a chunk out of pocket. I wish the feds would allow people to invest in a medical savings account pre-tax with roll over at a younger age to bridge the premium gap with insurance at an older age....i am sure the politicians would figure a way to screw it up though.
 

Davy Crockett

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Insurance pays first if you are still working at 65 or older but if your retired then medicare pays first. It can work for or against , depending on the insurance company. It worked against us, I can't remember the exact details without refreshing my memory but it did. This stuff is overly complicated .
 


measure-it

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Insurance is a huge, high-profit scam. They do unregulated price increases & adjustments without good justifications, deny claims that you have to protest to get approved, keep very confusing info for complications, and just poor business practices.
High-profit....you bet! Just look at their line-item breakdowns, their huge staffs &fancy buildings/offices, and the amount of advertising $$ they spend to get your business. (ever watch TV or listen to the radio or read the newspaper during Medicare adj time?)
You can spend your hard-earned $$ on insurance for EVERYTHING:
health, life, dental, vision, life, home-owner, renter, flight/trip, pet.....
Hell, I think you could find ins. for whether you bought extra-soft or extra-strong toilet paper! CRAZY!!
 

lunkerslayer

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I'm looking at getting insurance for one employee plus me, i give out benefits after the first year. Does anyone have any website or insurance agents i could speak to. Any help would be appreciated
 

Davy Crockett

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I'm looking at getting insurance for one employee plus me, i give out benefits after the first year. Does anyone have any website or insurance agents i could speak to. Any help would be appreciated
From a business standpoint, I'd give them a raise and stay out of the insurance business.

From a concerned citizen standpoint, I say go for it because unless you pay 2/3 or more of thier insurance they won't be able to afford it and then a lot of us reading this have to pay the bill


Health insurance for one employee varies, but typically costs employers around $7,000-$9,000 annually for the total premium, with employees paying roughly $1,300-$1,500 (about 16-21%) through deductions, while the employer covers the rest. Monthly costs can be around $600-$800 total, with the employee paying $100-$150. Costs depend heavily on plan type, location, and business size.
 


lunkerslayer

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From a business standpoint, I'd give them a raise and stay out of the insurance business.

From a concerned citizen standpoint, I say go for it because unless you pay 2/3 or more of thier insurance they won't be able to afford it and then a lot of us reading this have to pay the bill


Health insurance for one employee varies, but typically costs employers around $7,000-$9,000 annually for the total premium, with employees paying roughly $1,300-$1,500 (about 16-21%) through deductions, while the employer covers the rest. Monthly costs can be around $600-$800 total, with the employee paying $100-$150. Costs depend heavily on plan type, location, and business size.
Yeah its looking bleak right now because to get a insurance plan for a company you need so many employees to even qualify. Im a small company with only 6 including myself and some agencies won't even bother unless you have 8 or more. I haven't checked out obozo care but i have a feeling those who are eligible wont qualify because they make too much but i will have to see. it just sucks that you are better off in the poor house if you want medical insurance. I never thought it would be so hard and expensive to get insurance.
 

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