Who Needs an Individual Health Insurance Plan in NC?
An individual health insurance plan is for anyone who doesn’t have access to employer-sponsored coverage and isn’t yet on Medicare. In North Carolina in 2026, that means checking three things in this order: (1) Do you qualify for NC Medicaid? If your income is below ~$20,783 single, you probably do — $0 premium, minimal cost-sharing; (2) What is your income relative to the ACA subsidy thresholds? Most NC adults earning $20,783–$58,320 pay $0–$100/month after credits; (3) Which metal tier makes sense for your actual health care usage? The answer is almost never Bronze if you earn below 250% FPL.
Call (828) 761-3326 for a free individual plan comparison with your specific income and providers. NC License #10447418.
5 NC Situations That Require an Individual Plan
Individual ACA plans cover anyone without employer coverage under 65. These are the five most common situations Rob sees among NC residents calling about individual coverage.
Self-Employed / Freelancer
No employer plan. Premium tax credits offset much of the cost. Self-employed health insurance premiums are deductible on Schedule SE. Income estimating is critical — underestimate and repay excess credits at tax time; overestimate and leave monthly subsidy money unclaimed.
Income estimating is the key step — model it with a brokerGig Worker / Independent Contractor
Rideshare, delivery, contract work, 1099 income. Variable income makes subsidy calculation harder. NC Medicaid expansion means months with very low income may trigger Medicaid eligibility mid-year. A broker helps navigate the Medicaid/Marketplace boundary.
Variable income = extra complexity; broker manages the boundaryEarly Retiree (Ages 55–64)
Too young for Medicare, employer coverage ended at retirement. Often highest-income scenario — retiree income from 401(k) draws and investments may push past subsidy eligibility. Medigap OEP timing for the Medicare transition at 65 is critical: plan the ACA-to-Medicare sequence well in advance.
ACA-to-Medicare transition timing is the highest-stakes stepBetween Jobs / COBRA Comparison
Losing employer coverage triggers a 60-day Special Enrollment Period. COBRA continues your exact plan but you pay the full premium the employer was covering — often $500–$700+/month for a single adult. A subsidized ACA Silver plan may be $50–$150/month. Compare before defaulting to COBRA.
COBRA vs. Marketplace: a 10-minute comparison often saves $400+/moAged Off Parent’s Plan at 26
60-day SEP starting the day coverage ends. If income is below ~$20,783 single: NC Medicaid at $0. If income is $20,783–$40,000: subsidized Silver at $0–$100/month with CSR. Missing the 60-day window means waiting until November. A broker sets this up before the clock starts.
60-day window — set it up before the birthday, not afterSpouse Off Employer Plan
If one spouse has employer coverage and the other doesn’t, the uncovered spouse may need an individual ACA plan. Subsidy eligibility depends on whether the employer plan meets ACA affordability standards — if the employer offer is affordable for the employee but not the family, the spouse and dependents may still qualify for subsidized Marketplace coverage.
Employer affordability rule affects the whole household subsidyNC Income Thresholds — What You Qualify For in 2026
Your income relative to the Federal Poverty Level determines whether you qualify for NC Medicaid, ACA subsidies, and which Silver CSR tier applies. These are the 2026 thresholds for a single adult in North Carolina.
2026 estimates for a single NC adult. FPL thresholds are updated annually. Actual costs depend on age, county, and specific plan selection. Self-employed income uses net Schedule SE. Call (828) 761-3326 for your specific numbers.
Bronze vs. Silver vs. Gold — Which Tier Is Right for You?
The metal tier determines how costs are split between your monthly premium and your out-of-pocket expenses when you use care. For most NC individuals earning below 250% FPL, Silver with CSR dominates — and at many income levels it costs the same as or less than Bronze after subsidies.
| Plan Feature | Bronze | Silver (no CSR, 250%+ FPL) | Silver + CSR (200–250% FPL) | Silver + CSR (138–200% FPL) | Gold |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Actuarial value | 60% | 70% | 87% | 94% | 80% |
| Individual deductible (est.) | $6,000–$9,200 | $3,000–$5,000 | $500–$1,500 | $0–$300 | $1,000–$2,500 |
| Individual OOP max (est.) | $9,200 | $7,000–$9,200 | $3,000–$5,000 | $1,500–$3,000 | $4,500–$7,000 |
| Primary care copay | After deductible | $30–$45 | $5–$15 | $0–$5 | $20–$35 |
| Specialist copay | After deductible | $50–$80 | $15–$25 | $5–$10 | $35–$60 |
| CSR eligible? | No | No | Yes | Yes (stronger) | No |
| Best for | Very low usage, income >400% FPL | Moderate use, income 250–400% FPL | Regular use, income 200–250% FPL | Regular use, income 138–200% FPL | Frequent use, income >400% FPL |
A $0-Premium Bronze Plan Can Cost $9,200 in One Bad Year
For a single NC adult earning $28,000 (~175% FPL), a Bronze plan after subsidies might be $0/month. So is a Silver + CSR plan. But the Bronze plan carries a $6,000–$9,200 deductible with specialist visits and prescriptions all paid at full cost until that deductible is met. The Silver + CSR plan at the same premium has a $300–$800 deductible with $5 specialist copays and low-tier drug costs from day one.
One urgent care visit, one specialist referral, one month of a generic medication — the Silver plan pays dramatically less out of pocket. The premium is the same. Always model the full year. Call (828) 761-3326 for a free Silver vs. Bronze comparison with your actual income.
The subsidy cliff used to cut off at 400% FPL — that’s $58,320 for a single person in 2026. Enhanced subsidies now extend credits above that level, capping what you pay toward the benchmark Silver plan at 8.5% of your income. A 62-year-old NC early retiree pulling $70,000 from retirement accounts might still receive a meaningful monthly subsidy. A 35-year-old self-employed professional at $65,000 net income might pay $350/month instead of $550. Don’t assume you don’t qualify just because you earn above $58,000. Call (828) 761-3326 for a free subsidy estimate.
How to Compare Individual Plans in NC — 6-Step Process
HealthCare.gov lets you see plans. It does not verify your doctor’s network status, run your prescriptions against each formulary, or model your total annual cost. These six steps are what a thorough comparison actually requires.
ACA Enrollment Windows — Individual Plans in NC 2026
Individual ACA plans have fixed enrollment windows. Outside of Open Enrollment, you need a qualifying Special Enrollment Period (SEP) event or you cannot enroll until the next November.
Open Enrollment Period
November 1 — January 15 each yearAnyone can enroll. Coverage starts February 1 for January 15 enrollments. For January 1 coverage, enroll by December 15. No qualifying event required during this window.
⚠ Missing Open Enrollment without an SEP = uninsured until the next November.
Special Enrollment Period (SEP)
Year-round with qualifying event60-day SEP for: losing employer or job-based coverage · moving to NC · getting married or divorced · having a child · turning 26 (aging off parent’s plan) · losing Medicaid or CHIP · income change affecting subsidy eligibility. The clock starts the day the qualifying event occurs — not when you notice it.
COBRA Comparison Window
60-day SEP when job-based coverage endsCOBRA preserves your exact plan but you pay the full premium (employer share + employee share). For a single adult, COBRA typically costs $500–$700/month. A subsidized ACA Silver plan for the same period may cost $30–$150/month. Compare before electing COBRA.
NC Medicaid — Year-Round
No enrollment window — enroll any timeNC Medicaid expanded in December 2023 and has no annual enrollment window for eligible adults. If your income drops below ~$20,783 during the year — job loss, business slowdown, gap year — you may become eligible for Medicaid mid-year. A broker helps manage the transition.
NC Medicaid Screened First
Before recommending any Marketplace plan, Rob screens your income against the NC Medicaid 138% FPL threshold. Many NC individuals qualify for $0 coverage they aren’t aware of post-expansion.
Silver vs. Bronze Modeled Free
The Bronze trap hits individual plans as hard as family plans. Rob models Silver with CSR against Bronze with your actual income before recommending anything. Costs nothing, often saves hundreds per year.
Independent — All NC Carriers
Not captive to any one carrier. Every comparison covers the full NC market for your county and income. NC License #10447418 — verify at NCDOI.gov. Same agent for ACA and Medicare transitions.