I'm Young & Healthy, Can I Skip Health Insurance?
Table of Contents
- Urgh … our health insurance bill is going up again! For what we pay every year we could...
- Individual and $1,168 for family coverage! For that kind of dough.
- A year. But she’ll still prepare for the occasional minor injury or illness.
- Their home, using the money to pay off Maria’s debts in full. Two years later.
- Health Plan [$220/month].
- And that’s our Two Cents! Do you know other creative solutions to the high costs of health insurance?...
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Urgh … our health insurance bill is going
up again! For what we pay every year we could
add another room onto our house.
Sheesh, you’re right. It seems like we’re paying more
and more for a service we barely use. I mean,
I do yoga. And eat all my veggies. We hardly ever
get sick.
Now that we’re no longer required to purchase
health insurance, it kind of makes me wonder…
should we be paying for it at all?
We could pocket the premiums ourselves. And
if we get sick or hurt down the line, we can
just use that money to pay the bills.
But what if we have a serious injury? Like
your turkey fryer incident last Thanksgiving.
No sweat. We can just crowd-source money for
the bills. I see people on Facebook fundraising
for medical costs all the time!
Great! Although I do think you should quit
your extreme parkour.
Only if you give up knife-juggling.
Deal.
Have you ever found yourself wondering if
you should just skip out on the whole health
insurance thing? If you don’t have coverage
offered through your job, it’s a pretty
heft monthly expense. In 2018 the average
private insurance plan cost $440/mo for an
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individual and $1,168 for family coverage!
For that kind of dough, I could afford that
trip to Japan or buy a miniature pig!
With the recent repeal of the individual mandate
within the Affordable Care Act, some younger,
healthier people might be left wondering,
“Should I pay thousands of dollars each
year for a service I’ll probably never use?”
Take Maria here. She just graduated with a
Master’s degree and works for a tech startup
that doesn’t offer health insurance or retirement
options. She’s making too much to qualify
for subsidized healthcare, so she has to pay
$375 a month for her individual health insurance
policy. But she’s an avid runner, eats mostly
organic, and hasn’t been sick in 5 years.
That money that could be going to her retirement,
or savings to buy a house!
What might happen to Maria if she decides
to cancel her policy in order to fast-track
other financial priorities?
I think it’s time to…
RUN THE NUMBERS!
If Maria decides to cancel her health insurance
policy, she can expect to save around $4,500
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a year. But she’ll still prepare for the
occasional minor injury or illness, by setting
aside $1,000/yr for doctor visits or occasional
urgent care. If she stashes what’s left
[$3,500/yr] in a CD earning 2.5% interest,
in just 5 years she’ll have $18,857! Maria
just has to stay relatively healthy for the
next five years, and she’s gamed the system.
Things are going fine for a while. And then
in her third year of the plan, Maria is in
a serious car accident. Auto insurance would
only pay a fraction of her medical costs.
After all the hospital, surgery and ambulance
bills, Maria is left with $58,000 in medical
debt and an additional $8,000 on credit cards
she used to pay her bills while recovering
($66,000 in debt) Desperate, Maria launches
a GoFundMe campaign, joining the 250,000 other
people who use the platform every year to try and
help pay medical bills. And she ends up raising
the average amount: only $3,000.
Facing $63,000 in debt, her parents decide
to help. They take out a line of credit on
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their home, using the money to pay off Maria’s
debts in full. Two years later, when Maria’s
dad is forced to retire because of his own
health problems, they fall behind on their
mortgage payments and lose the house.
Granted, the chances of a sudden, costly medical
problem hitting someone young and healthy
like Maria are slim… but not insignificant.
A 2011 survey found that people between the
ages of 25-34 had a 1 in 10 chance of getting
hit with a medical bill of $13,000 or more,
and a 1 in 20 chance of at least a $27,000
bill.
Considering the lifetime of financial damage
that that kind of price tag can do to you
or your family, those odds are not to be taken
lightly. Besides, the whole point of insurance
is to protect you from really bad things that
probably won’t happen. No one buys insurance
hoping they’ll get to use it.
Is there a middle path that Maria could have
taken that would have allowed her to save
something, but also protected against a catastrophe?
Well, she could have enrolled in a High Deductible
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Health Plan [$220/month]. These have lower
premiums and will help you if something really
bad happens, but don’t typically cover routine
medical costs. Most insurance providers offer
such options, and they can be a good fit for
young, healthy people.
But Maria would still be on the hook for everyday
doctor’s visits and medications, so she
could still set aside $1000 a year for that
purpose, but put it into a Health Savings
Account, which allows her to deduct that money
from her taxes. And anything that’s not
used for medical expenses becomes part of
her retirement savings. Health Savings Accounts
are available only to people with High Deductible
Health Plans, and can be started at your insurance
provider’s recommended bank, or one of your
own choosing.
Imagine if Maria got into that car accident
with this scenario. The most she’d have
to pay out of pocket is $4,000. And if she
stays safe and healthy, she’ll be stashing
money away into her HSA that could later be
used for retirement, and even have a little
left over to start saving for a home.
Most importantly, she knows she’s not putting
her financial future--or that of her loved
ones--in jeopardy.
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And that’s our Two Cents!
Do you know other creative solutions to the high costs of health insurance?
Let us know about them in the comments.