Reviewed by licensed insurance agents

The numbers they don't show you

One Hospital Visit Without Insurance Could Cost You More Than a Year of Premiums

The average 3-day hospital stay costs $30,000 without insurance. Whether you choose an ACA marketplace plan with subsidies or a private plan directly from a carrier, coverage caps your risk and costs less than you think.

$0–$150/mo* ACA plans with subsidies
$300–$800/mo* Private plans from major carriers
$10,600* Max annual out-of-pocket with either

* Amounts based on individual plans. Amounts for individuals + dependents or family will be higher.

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We'll use this to calculate subsidies and show your best options.

Based on your answers, here's your estimate:
$0–$50/month

You likely qualify for subsidies. Over 90% of marketplace enrollees receive financial help.

$0–$50/mo Estimated Premium
$200–$750 Estimated Deductible
$10,600 Max Annual Cost
Without insurance, your risk is unlimited. A single ER visit ($2,500), hospital stay ($30,000), or surgery ($33,000+) would come entirely out of your pocket.

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$2,500 Average ER visit without insurance
$33,000 Average appendectomy without insurance
$30,000 Average 3-day hospital stay without insurance
$0/mo What many Americans pay for ACA coverage with subsidies

What Healthcare Actually Costs: Insured vs. Uninsured

These are real numbers. The difference between having coverage and not having it isn't a few dollars — it's the difference between a manageable bill and financial ruin.

Medical Service Without Insurance With Insurance You Save
Primary care visit $250 $35 copay $215
Specialist visit $400 $65 copay $335
Urgent care visit $200 $35 copay $165
Emergency room visit $2,500 $400 copay $2,100
Basic blood work $200 $0 (preventive) $200
X-ray $300 $50–$90 $210+
MRI scan $1,500 $300–$450 $1,050+
CT scan $1,200 $240–$360 $840+
3-day hospital stay $30,000 $3,000–$6,000 $24,000+
Appendectomy $33,000 $3,500–$6,600 $26,400+
Childbirth (vaginal) $13,000 $2,000–$4,000 $9,000+
C-section delivery $22,000 $3,000–$6,000 $16,000+
Knee replacement surgery $50,000 $5,000–$10,600 max $39,400+
Heart attack treatment $75,000–$150,000 $10,600 max $64,400–$139,400
Cancer treatment (annual) $100,000–$500,000+ $10,600 max $89,400–$489,400+
Monthly prescriptions (common) $50–$500/month $10–$50/month $40–$450/month

* Insured costs shown are based on a Silver-tier plan and apply to both ACA marketplace and private plans purchased directly from carriers. Costs are after deductible is met. With cost-sharing reductions (available to lower-income marketplace enrollees), deductibles can be as low as $200–$500. The $10,600 out-of-pocket maximum is the absolute most you'd pay in a year — after that, insurance covers 100% of costs.

The Real Risk of Going Uninsured

It's not just about money. Being uninsured changes how you access care, when you seek help, and what happens when the unexpected hits.

100M+

Americans Carry Medical Debt

Over 100 million Americans have medical debt. It's the most common type of debt sent to collections — and the #1 reason people dip into savings, take on credit card debt, or face financial hardship.

$4,800

Average Annual Medical Spending (Uninsured)

Uninsured Americans still spend thousands on healthcare — they just pay the highest possible prices. Without negotiated rates, you pay 2–5x more than insurance companies pay for the same services.

1 in 2

Uninsured Adults Skip Needed Care

Nearly half of uninsured adults delay or skip needed medical care because of cost. That sore throat you ignore becomes pneumonia. That lump you don't get checked becomes stage 3 cancer. Early treatment is almost always cheaper and more effective.

$0

Preventive Care Costs With ACA Coverage

All ACA plans cover annual checkups, cancer screenings, vaccinations, blood pressure checks, cholesterol tests, and more at zero cost. Catching something early can save your life — and tens of thousands of dollars.

It Happens to Real People

$8,400

"I went 2 years without insurance thinking I was saving money. Then a kidney stone landed me in the ER — $8,400 bill. Through HealthcareSeeker I found a Silver plan for $45/month with subsidies. I would have saved thousands if I'd signed up sooner."

$45,000

"My wife needed emergency surgery last year. Without our ACA plan it would have been over $45,000. We paid $3,200 total. The monthly premiums paid for themselves 10x over with one event."

$0/mo

"As a freelancer I assumed I couldn't afford insurance. Turns out I qualified for a $0 premium plan with a $500 deductible. I had no idea subsidies could cover that much. HealthcareSeeker showed me options I didn't even know existed."

What You Get With ACA Coverage (That You Lose Without It)

These aren't optional add-ons. Every ACA marketplace plan is required by law to include all of these.

Out-of-Pocket Maximum

The most you'll ever pay in a year is $10,600 (individual) or $21,200 (family). No single family member can be charged more than $10,600 even before the family cap is reached. After these limits, insurance pays 100%. Without insurance, there is no cap — ever.

Free Preventive Care

Annual checkups, cancer screenings, blood work, vaccinations, contraception, depression screening — all $0 copay. Without insurance, each of these costs $100–$500+.

Pre-Existing Conditions Covered

Diabetes, asthma, cancer history, mental health — cannot be denied or charged more. Without ACA protections, insurers could refuse you entirely or charge 5–10x more.

Prescription Drug Coverage

Generic drugs: $10–$30/month. Brand name: $50–$150/month. Without insurance, the same prescriptions cost $50–$500+/month. Insulin alone can be $300+/month uninsured.

Mental Health & Substance Abuse

Therapy, counseling, psychiatric care, and substance abuse treatment are required benefits on every ACA plan. Without insurance, a single therapy session costs $100–$250.

Maternity & Newborn Care

Prenatal visits, delivery, postpartum care — all covered. Without insurance, childbirth costs $13,000–$22,000+. With an ACA plan, your total cost is capped at your out-of-pocket maximum.

Emergency Services

ER visits are covered even at out-of-network hospitals. Without insurance, an ER visit averages $2,500 and you have zero negotiating power on the bill.

No Lifetime Limits

ACA plans cannot set a cap on how much they'll pay over your lifetime. Without this protection, a single cancer diagnosis could exhaust a lifetime cap and leave you paying everything after that.

Most Americans Qualify for Help — And Don't Know It

Over 90% of ACA marketplace enrollees receive subsidies that reduce their premiums. Here's what you'd actually pay based on income.

Household Income Individual Family of 4 Estimated Monthly Premium Private Plan / Without Subsidies
Under $20,000 Under $20K Under $42K $0–$10/month $300–$500/month
$20,000–$35,000 $20K–$35K $42K–$72K $0–$50/month $300–$500/month
$35,000–$50,000 $35K–$50K $72K–$104K $50–$150/month $350–$600/month
$50,000–$75,000 $50K–$75K $104K–$156K $100–$250/month $400–$700/month
Over $75,000 $75K+ $156K+ $200–$600/month $300–$800/month

These are estimates based on 2026 federal poverty guidelines and typical Silver plan pricing. Your actual premium depends on your state, age, household size, and specific plan. The only way to know your exact cost is to check your eligibility.

Don't Want ACA? Here Are Your Other Options.

From private carrier plans to short-term coverage — here are your options outside the government marketplace, with honest trade-offs for each.

Private Health Insurance

$300–$800/month

The same comprehensive plans from carriers like Blue Cross, Cigna, Aetna, and UnitedHealthcare — purchased directly from the carrier or through a broker instead of through healthcare.gov. Same coverage, same protections, no marketplace involved.

What you get

  • Full ACA-compliant coverage (all essential health benefits)
  • Pre-existing conditions covered — guaranteed issue
  • Same $10,600 out-of-pocket cap as marketplace plans
  • No government marketplace account needed
  • Work directly with a carrier or licensed broker

What you give up

  • No premium subsidies — you pay full price
  • Can only enroll during Open Enrollment or with a qualifying life event
  • Same plans may cost less on the marketplace if you qualify for subsidies
Best for: Higher-income individuals who don't qualify for subsidies and prefer purchasing directly from a carrier without the marketplace

Short-Term Health Insurance

$50–$200/month

Real insurance with lower premiums. Covers doctor visits, ER, hospital stays, and surgery. Lasts 30 days to 3 years. Available year-round — no enrollment window.

What you get

  • Enroll any time — even tomorrow
  • Premiums 40–60% lower than ACA
  • Same-day approval common
  • Choose your own deductible ($1K–$10K)

What you give up

  • Pre-existing conditions are excluded
  • No maternity coverage
  • Mental health coverage limited or absent
  • May have annual/lifetime benefit caps
  • Not available in all states (CA, MA, NJ, NY restrict them)
Best for: Healthy individuals, gap coverage between jobs, people who missed open enrollment

Fixed Indemnity Plans

$100–$300/month

Pays a fixed dollar amount per visit, procedure, or hospital day — regardless of actual cost. Simple and predictable, but you cover the difference if the bill exceeds the payout.

What you get

  • Predictable costs — you know exactly what it pays
  • No network restrictions — see any provider
  • Enroll any time
  • Cash benefit paid directly to you

What you give up

  • Payouts won't cover full costs for major events
  • No out-of-pocket maximum — your risk isn't capped
  • Not comprehensive coverage
  • Not ACA-compliant (state mandate penalties may apply)
Best for: Supplemental coverage on top of another plan, budget-conscious healthy individuals

Supplemental Insurance

$25–$150/month

Accident, critical illness, and hospital indemnity plans that pay cash when specific events happen — an ER visit, a cancer diagnosis, a hospital admission. Works standalone or on top of other coverage.

What you get

  • Cash paid directly to you — use it for anything
  • Lump-sum payouts: $5K–$50K for critical illness
  • Covers gaps other insurance misses
  • Enroll any time, affordable premiums

What you give up

  • Only covers specific events — not general healthcare
  • Not a substitute for major medical insurance
  • Benefit limits are fixed regardless of actual costs
  • May have waiting periods for pre-existing conditions
Best for: Adding protection on top of a high-deductible plan, anyone wanting cash payouts for emergencies

Catastrophic Plans

$150–$300/month

An ACA plan with the lowest premiums and highest deductible ($10,600). Covers 3 free primary care visits and free preventive care before you hit the deductible. Only available if you're under 30 or qualify for a hardship exemption.

What you get

  • Lowest ACA premiums
  • Same $10,600 out-of-pocket cap as all ACA plans
  • 3 free primary care visits per year
  • Free preventive care (checkups, vaccines, screenings)

What you give up

  • $10,600 deductible — you pay everything else until you hit it
  • Not eligible for premium subsidies
  • Only available under 30 or with hardship exemption
  • Higher total cost if you actually use healthcare
Best for: Healthy adults under 30 who want cheap protection against worst-case scenarios

See What You'd Actually Pay in 60 Seconds

What you get

  • Find out if you qualify for $0 premium plans
  • See your estimated monthly cost with subsidies
  • Compare plans from every carrier in your area
  • ACA marketplace and non-ACA alternatives
  • 100% free — no obligation to enroll
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Unbiased Comparison

Without coverage, you risk

$2,500 for an ER visit
$30,000 for a hospital stay
$33,000 for an appendectomy
$100,000+ for cancer treatment
Unlimited financial exposure

Frequently Asked Questions

The average ER visit costs $2,500 without insurance, ranging from $800 to $10,000+. Complex emergencies involving surgery, imaging, or overnight stays can exceed $20,000–$50,000. With an ACA plan, your out-of-pocket cost is capped at $10,600 per year — no matter how many ER visits or procedures you need.

Before subsidies, individual ACA plans range from $250 to $900/month depending on the metal tier (Bronze, Silver, Gold, Platinum). However, over 90% of marketplace enrollees receive subsidies. With subsidies, most Americans pay $0–$150/month. A family of four earning $60,000 typically qualifies for a Silver plan at $50–$100/month.

Most people who think they can't afford insurance actually qualify for significant subsidies. If your income is under $60,000 (individual) or $124,000 (family of four), you almost certainly qualify for financial help. Many people qualify for $0 premium plans. The only way to know is to check — it takes 2 minutes.

There is no federal penalty as of 2019. However, California, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington DC have state-level penalties. More importantly, the real "penalty" for being uninsured is financial: one medical emergency can cost $10,000–$100,000+. The question isn't about avoiding a government penalty — it's about protecting yourself.

Every ACA plan caps your total annual out-of-pocket spending at $10,600 for an individual ($21,200 for a family) in 2026. Once you hit that amount, insurance pays 100% for the rest of the year. For family plans, no single person can be charged more than the $10,600 individual limit — even if the family hasn't reached $21,200 yet. This means even cancer treatment, heart surgery, or extended hospitalization is capped. Without insurance, there is no cap — your costs are unlimited.

Open Enrollment typically runs November 1 through January 15. Outside this window, you can enroll if you have a qualifying life event: losing existing coverage, getting married, having a baby, moving to a new state, or turning 26 (aging off a parent's plan). If you recently lost coverage, you have 60 days to enroll in a marketplace plan.

ACA marketplace plans cannot deny you coverage or charge you more because of pre-existing conditions — diabetes, asthma, cancer history, heart disease, mental health conditions, or anything else. This is federal law. All conditions are covered from day one with no waiting periods.

No. HealthcareSeeker is a free comparison platform. We help you understand your options, check your subsidy eligibility, and connect you with licensed agents who can help you enroll. We are compensated by our partners when you request a quote, which keeps the service free for you.

Every Day Without Coverage Is a Gamble

You wouldn't drive without car insurance. You wouldn't own a home without homeowner's insurance. Your health — and your financial future — deserves the same protection. Most Americans qualify for $0–$150/month plans.

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