I am going to beg you to pay attention to me this one time.
If you are under 50 (and probably under 60 -- and especially under 40!), please, please, PLEASE call either Blue Cross/Blue Shield and/or Preferred Health Systems (the insurance insiders consider these the best two in Kansas) and get a quote for yourself or your family on a "high deductible" Health Savings Account plan.
Even if your employer doesn't offer an HSA (shame on them), please, please, for your sake look into it.
I am begging you to please call those companies and get a quote immediately. Ask for different deductibles .. like $3000/6000 (what I have). The higher the deductible, the better off you are, but some people just can't get their head wrapped around a high-deductible -- please see my comments below -- you ALWAYS come out ahead with a high-deductible plan.
Quick background:
An HSA works very similar to an IRA -- it is a savings account that you can contribute money to (tax deductible like a traditional!) and has tax-free distributions (like a Roth!).
However: You can withdraw moeny from it without any penalties to cover any medical expenses!
And ... if you don't use it, it just sits there and compounds away.
I have personally ran through the numbers on HSA high-deductible insurance and EVERY SINGLE TIME, you come out ahead if you:
1) Don't use it at all (meaning you pay your insurance premiums but never get sick or injured in a given year): Because it's high deductible the total premiums you paid for the year are lower than otherwise.
2) You hit the full deductible: Every time I take a non high-deductible plan where when you add up the 80/20 copay + low deductible + 12 x the premium it equals MORE than if you pay your high deductible + 12 x the premium on an HSA plan. Every single time. I have never seen a low deductible plan win. At years end you come out ahead if you max out the usage on comparable coverages.
3) I have worked up several scenarios where you use a "portion" of the deductibles -- HSA comes out ahead every single time when I have calculated it in the past -- I'll admit it's been a couple of years since I put this in a spreadsheet, so do your own homework if you want to just to double check.
But regardless of whether you need the full insurance or don't use it at all you come out ahead.
And ... with BC/BS (should be the same with Preferred Health), once you hit your deductible, 100% of EVERYTHING is covered. Think about that. You hit your $3000 deductible, and 100% of EVERYTHING is covered -- that means you want your own private room should you be hospitalized? Done. You get the best service in the freaking industry because the hospital knows you are 100% covered. They will never skimp on medicines, service, etc.
I have been on one since the first year they were available and I am just dumb-founded that people don't know/understand them to this day. I cannot tell you how awesome they are.
There are two more "tricks" to them, that if you are have one or are considering I will be willing to share from my own personal experience.
If you can think of one reason why a non-HSA plan is better than HSA I challenge you to a duel. :) Just kidding but I'd like to hear it.
I can go on and on, and will, if anyone has questions about how these work.
If you are under 50 (and probably under 60 -- and especially under 40!), please, please, PLEASE call either Blue Cross/Blue Shield and/or Preferred Health Systems (the insurance insiders consider these the best two in Kansas) and get a quote for yourself or your family on a "high deductible" Health Savings Account plan.
Even if your employer doesn't offer an HSA (shame on them), please, please, for your sake look into it.
I am begging you to please call those companies and get a quote immediately. Ask for different deductibles .. like $3000/6000 (what I have). The higher the deductible, the better off you are, but some people just can't get their head wrapped around a high-deductible -- please see my comments below -- you ALWAYS come out ahead with a high-deductible plan.
Quick background:
An HSA works very similar to an IRA -- it is a savings account that you can contribute money to (tax deductible like a traditional!) and has tax-free distributions (like a Roth!).
However: You can withdraw moeny from it without any penalties to cover any medical expenses!
And ... if you don't use it, it just sits there and compounds away.
I have personally ran through the numbers on HSA high-deductible insurance and EVERY SINGLE TIME, you come out ahead if you:
1) Don't use it at all (meaning you pay your insurance premiums but never get sick or injured in a given year): Because it's high deductible the total premiums you paid for the year are lower than otherwise.
2) You hit the full deductible: Every time I take a non high-deductible plan where when you add up the 80/20 copay + low deductible + 12 x the premium it equals MORE than if you pay your high deductible + 12 x the premium on an HSA plan. Every single time. I have never seen a low deductible plan win. At years end you come out ahead if you max out the usage on comparable coverages.
3) I have worked up several scenarios where you use a "portion" of the deductibles -- HSA comes out ahead every single time when I have calculated it in the past -- I'll admit it's been a couple of years since I put this in a spreadsheet, so do your own homework if you want to just to double check.
But regardless of whether you need the full insurance or don't use it at all you come out ahead.
And ... with BC/BS (should be the same with Preferred Health), once you hit your deductible, 100% of EVERYTHING is covered. Think about that. You hit your $3000 deductible, and 100% of EVERYTHING is covered -- that means you want your own private room should you be hospitalized? Done. You get the best service in the freaking industry because the hospital knows you are 100% covered. They will never skimp on medicines, service, etc.
I have been on one since the first year they were available and I am just dumb-founded that people don't know/understand them to this day. I cannot tell you how awesome they are.
There are two more "tricks" to them, that if you are have one or are considering I will be willing to share from my own personal experience.
If you can think of one reason why a non-HSA plan is better than HSA I challenge you to a duel. :) Just kidding but I'd like to hear it.
I can go on and on, and will, if anyone has questions about how these work.
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