Is short-term health insurance cheaper than ACA in North Carolina?
Short-term has a lower monthly premium — often $75–$150/month cheaper. But it excludes pre-existing conditions, mental health, maternity, and prescriptions. It has no out-of-pocket maximum and caps payouts at $1,000–$5,000 per incident. One ER visit costs $4,200 more on short-term. One surgery costs up to $47,000 more. Most NC residents qualify for ACA subsidies that bring premiums to $50–$200/month. Call (828) 761-3326 for a free subsidy check before choosing.
Same Person, Same Medical Event — Two Very Different Bills
Short-term plans look cheaper because the monthly premium is lower. But health insurance isn’t a monthly subscription — it’s financial protection for when something goes wrong. Here’s what happens when the same 30-year-old in North Carolina, on two different plans, actually needs care.
All scenarios below compare a typical short-term plan ($75/month, $5,000 deductible, $5,000 benefit cap per incident, no Rx or mental health) versus an ACA Silver plan ($150/month after subsidy at $35K income, $3,000 deductible, $9,450 OOP max). Call (828) 761-3326 for your specific comparison.
Short-Term vs ACA Silver — What You Actually Pay
Same 30-year-old in NC, same medical events. ACA assumes $35K income with 2026 subsidy applied.
Note: Illustrative 2026 NC comparison. Short-term plan: $75/month, $5,000 deductible, $5,000 benefit cap per incident, no Rx or mental health coverage. ACA Silver: $150/month after subsidy at $35K income, $3,000 deductible, $9,450 OOP max. Exact costs depend on your specific plan, income, ZIP code, and medical situation. Call (828) 761-3326 for your personalized comparison. NC License #10447418.
I’ve had clients call me after buying short-term plans they found through online ads. One had a $75/month plan with a $5,000 benefit cap. She went to the ER for abdominal pain — the bill was $12,000. The plan paid $5,000 and she owed $7,000. Had she enrolled in a subsidized ACA Silver at $140/month, her total ER cost would have been under $2,000. She saved $65/month on premium and lost $5,000 in one visit. That’s the real math. If you qualify for a subsidy — and most NC residents in their 20s–50s do — ACA is almost always better value than it looks. Call (828) 761-3326 for a free subsidy check. NC License #10447418.
Don’t Gamble on Coverage — Compare for Free
Check your ACA subsidy, verify doctors, check prescriptions. Same premium as HealthCare.gov.
Compare ACA Plans
See your subsidy and every real ACA plan in your NC ZIP code. Same plans, same prices as HealthCare.gov.
🔍 Compare ACA Plans Online 🧮 ACA Subsidy CalculatorTalk to Rob
Short-term vs ACA, subsidy check, doctor verification — free, no pressure. NC License #10447418.
📞 Call: (828) 761-3326 💬 Text Us 📅 Book an AppointmentWhat Short-Term Insurance Doesn’t Cover
Short-term plans are not required to follow the Affordable Care Act’s rules for essential health benefits. That means they can — and routinely do — exclude exactly the types of care that cause the largest medical bills. The six exclusions below are not edge cases; they are standard features of most short-term plans sold in North Carolina.
Pre-Existing Conditions
All care related to any prior health condition is excluded. Asthma ER visit: denied. Diabetes medication: not covered. Depression therapy: excluded. Prior surgery follow-up: denied. If you take any regular medication or see any doctor regularly, this exclusion applies to you.
Mental Health & Substance Use
Entirely excluded. No therapy, no psychiatry, no medication management, no substance abuse treatment. 1 in 5 adults needs mental health care. ACA plans are required to cover it as an essential benefit at parity with physical health care.
Maternity & Newborn Care
Entirely excluded. Pregnancy, prenatal visits, labor, delivery, and newborn care are not covered. Average NC hospital birth: $10,000–$30,000. ACA plans cover maternity as a required essential benefit. If there is any chance of pregnancy, short-term is the wrong plan.
Prescription Drugs
Usually entirely excluded or severely limited. You pay full retail price: $50–$500+/month depending on your medications. ACA Silver plans typically cover Tier 1 generics at $10–$15/month and Tier 2 at $25–$45/month. One medication can erase months of premium savings.
Benefit Caps Per Incident
$1,000–$5,000 per incident or $50,000–$100,000 annual maximum. One appendectomy exhausts the cap immediately. Anything above the cap: your bill, at billed charges, not negotiated rates. No ACA plan has per-incident caps. ACA OOP max 2026: $9,450 individual.
No Out-of-Pocket Maximum
ACA law requires a maximum OOP of $9,450/individual in 2026 — after which the plan pays 100%. Short-term plans have no such requirement. There is no ceiling on what you can owe. One serious illness or accident can mean $50,000–$300,000 in uncapped medical debt.
How to Choose the Right Plan in 4 Steps
Before paying for any health coverage, run through these steps in order
Check Medicaid Eligibility
Under $20,783/yr single or $42,972/yr family of 4 in NC? Medicaid: $0 premium, year-round enrollment, no waiting period. Call (828) 761-3326 to verify.
Calculate Your ACA Subsidy
$20K–$60K income? You likely qualify for a subsidy. Use the free calculator at generationhealth.me/tools/aca-subsidy-calculator.html or call (828) 761-3326.
Check for an SEP
Lost job coverage? Turned 26? Moved? Got married? Had a baby? These trigger a 60-day Special Enrollment Period — you don't have to wait for Open Enrollment.
Consider COBRA First
If you lost job coverage, you have 60 days to elect COBRA and 45 days to pay. Stay healthy = $0 cost. If something goes wrong, elect retroactively. Usually beats short-term.
When Short-Term Is the Only Option
Short-term insurance is not always wrong. There are specific situations where it is the only available option — but these situations are narrower than most people realize, and even then, the risks are significant. Here’s an honest look at when short-term may make sense and what you must understand before choosing it.
✅ Short-Term May Be Acceptable If…
- You missed ACA Open Enrollment (Nov 1 – Jan 15) with no qualifying event
- Your coverage gap is under 60 days and you’re completely healthy
- You have zero ongoing medications, conditions, or regular care
- You fully understand there is no OOP max and you accept $30K–$100K+ exposure
- You have read every exclusion in the plan document
- You have verified there is no better alternative (Medicaid, SEP, COBRA)
🚫 Better Alternatives to Check First
- Medicaid: Under $20,783 single / $42,972 family — $0, year-round enrollment in NC
- ACA SEP: 60 days after job loss, turning 26, move, marriage, or birth
- COBRA retroactive trick: 60 days to elect, 45 days to pay — stay healthy, pay $0
- Spouse’s plan: Losing your coverage is a qualifying event for their employer plan
- Parent’s plan: You can stay on a parent’s ACA plan until age 26
- Open Enrollment: Nov 1 – Jan 15 annually — plan ahead to avoid the gap
If you have any ongoing health condition — asthma, diabetes, depression, anxiety, prior surgeries, chronic pain, heart disease, cancer history — short-term plans will deny all claims related to that condition. This isn’t a loophole or an edge case. It is the design of the product. ACA Marketplace plans cannot deny or limit coverage for pre-existing conditions by federal law. If you take any regular medication or see any doctor for any ongoing condition, short-term insurance is almost certainly the wrong choice. Call (828) 761-3326 to check your ACA options.
Any ad promising “full coverage” at $50–$100/month is not an ACA plan. Any plan not sold on HealthCare.gov or through a licensed broker is not guaranteed to follow ACA rules. Look for: unusually low premiums for comprehensive coverage, no mention of deductibles, claims of unlimited benefits, high-pressure sales tactics, no mention of exclusions. Read the Scams & Junk Plans Guide or call (828) 761-3326 to verify any plan before you buy.
ACA or Short-Term? Let’s Figure It Out.
Answer 3 questions to find out which coverage makes sense for your situation.
Check Your ACA Subsidy — It’s Probably Lower Than You Think
Most NC residents earning $20K–$60K qualify for subsidies that bring ACA premiums below short-term prices.
Compare ACA Plans Online
Free. Same plans, same prices as HealthCare.gov. See your real subsidy and every plan in your NC ZIP.
🔍 Compare Plans Now 🧮 Free Subsidy CalculatorGet a Free Personalized Quote
Rob checks your subsidy, verifies your doctors, runs your prescriptions. Free. No SSN needed to talk. NC License #10447418.
📞 Call: (828) 761-3326 💬 Text Us 📅 Book OnlineNo SSN to Talk
Just questions, no pressure, no sales pitch
Licensed in NC & VA
License #10447418 · Verify at NCDOI.gov
$0 Cost to Compare
Same prices as HealthCare.gov — always free
Is short-term health insurance real insurance?
Technically yes, but short-term plans do not follow ACA rules. They can deny claims for pre-existing conditions, exclude mental health and maternity care entirely, cap payouts at $1,000–$5,000 per incident, and have no out-of-pocket maximum. One serious medical event can leave you owing $30,000–$100,000+. Always compare an ACA plan with subsidies before purchasing short-term. Call (828) 761-3326 for a free comparison.
When is short-term health insurance actually a good idea?
Short-term is only worth considering if you are completely healthy with no ongoing medications or conditions, your coverage gap is under 60 days, you missed ACA Open Enrollment with no qualifying event, and you fully understand that one ER visit or surgery may cost $30,000–$100,000 out of pocket. Even then, the COBRA retroactive election trick (60 days to elect, 45 days to pay, $0 unless you need care) is usually a better option. Call (828) 761-3326 to review your situation before buying short-term.
Can I get ACA coverage outside of Open Enrollment?
Yes — a qualifying life event triggers a 60-day Special Enrollment Period. Qualifying events include: losing job-based coverage, turning 26 and leaving a parent’s plan, moving to a new ZIP code or county, getting married, having a baby, or losing Medicaid eligibility. Medicaid enrollment in North Carolina is year-round with no enrollment period. ACA Open Enrollment runs November 1 – January 15 annually. Call (828) 761-3326 to check if you qualify for a Special Enrollment Period today.
How much does ACA insurance cost with subsidies in NC?
In North Carolina in 2026: at $25,000 income, approximately $50–$100/month after subsidy. At $35,000: approximately $100–$200/month. At $45,000: approximately $200–$300/month. Under $20,783 single or $42,972 family of 4: NC Medicaid at $0 premium, year-round. The free ACA Subsidy Calculator at generationhealth.me/tools/aca-subsidy-calculator.html gives 2026 estimates in 2 minutes. Call (828) 761-3326 for your exact figures.
What happens if I have a pre-existing condition and choose short-term?
All care related to your pre-existing condition will be denied. Asthma ER visit: denied. Diabetes medication: not covered. Depression therapy: excluded. Prior surgery follow-up: denied. This is not a loophole — it is how short-term plans are designed. ACA Marketplace plans cannot exclude or limit coverage for pre-existing conditions by federal law. If you have any ongoing health condition or take any regular medication, short-term insurance is almost certainly the wrong choice. Call (828) 761-3326.
What is the COBRA retroactive election trick?
When you lose job-based coverage, you have 60 days to elect COBRA continuation coverage, and then 45 additional days to pay the first premium. During this window, if you stay healthy you pay $0. If something goes wrong — an accident, an ER visit — you elect COBRA and your coverage backdates to the day you lost your job. This gives you up to 105 days of effective coverage at no cost unless you actually need it. This is almost always better than paying for short-term insurance during a gap. Call (828) 761-3326 to confirm this applies to your situation.