Option 1: ACA Marketplace Plans
- Income-based subsidies dramatically reduce cost
- Covers pre-existing conditions — no exceptions
- Comprehensive coverage (preventive, prescriptions, mental health)
- Premiums 100% deductible as self-employed
- Special enrollment if you lose other coverage
- Only enrollable Nov 1–Jan 15 (except life events)
- Unsubsidized premiums are expensive
- Networks can be narrow in some markets
- Income estimation required — reconcile at tax time
Option 3: Short-Term Health Plans
- Lowest monthly premiums available
- Can start coverage immediately
- No open enrollment restrictions
- Good for genuine short coverage gaps
- Excludes pre-existing conditions broadly
- Low benefit caps can leave you exposed
- Not ACA-compliant — no consumer protections
- Insurers can deny claims easily
- Premiums not deductible as health insurance
Option 4: Medicaid
- Free or very low cost
- Comprehensive coverage
- No enrollment period for eligibility changes
- Available in most states (expansion states)
- Income limits — not available to higher earners
- Not available in all states (non-expansion)
- Some providers don't accept Medicaid
- Income must be reported and tracked carefully
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | ACA Marketplace | Health Sharing | Short-Term | Medicaid |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly cost (typical) | $0–$250 (subsidized) | $150–$350 | $80–$200 | $0–$50 |
| Pre-existing conditions | ✓ Covered | ✗ Often excluded | ✗ Excluded | ✓ Covered |
| ACA consumer protections | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ |
| Can join anytime | ✗ Open enrollment | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ If eligible |
| Premiums tax-deductible | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ | N/A |
| Coverage reliability | High | Variable | Low | High |
| Income-based subsidies | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ (free) |
| GigToolkit recommendation | ✅ First choice | ⚠️ With research | ⚠️ Short gaps only | ✅ If eligible |
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes — self-employed workers can deduct 100% of health insurance premiums paid for themselves and their family from gross income. This applies to ACA marketplace plans purchased in your name. It does not apply to health sharing arrangements or short-term plans, which don't qualify as insurance. This deduction reduces both your income tax and your adjusted gross income (but not SE tax directly).
You estimate your annual income when enrolling and receive premium tax credits upfront. At tax time, you reconcile your estimate with actual income — if you earned more than estimated, you repay some subsidies; if less, you receive additional credits. For gig workers with variable income, estimating conservatively (slightly higher) avoids a surprise repayment. Your actual net self-employment income (gross minus deductions) is what matters for subsidy calculations.
Several life events trigger a Special Enrollment Period (SEP): losing other coverage, moving to a new coverage area, getting married, having a baby, or significant income changes. If none of these apply and you miss enrollment, your options are limited to health sharing, short-term plans, or Medicaid (if eligible). This is why it's critical to enroll during open enrollment (Nov 1–Jan 15) even if you're healthy and think you don't need coverage.
For most gig workers, Silver is the best value — especially because cost-sharing reductions (CSRs) are only available on Silver plans for lower-income buyers. Bronze plans have lower premiums but very high deductibles (often $7,000+), which can be financially risky. Gold and Platinum plans have high premiums but low out-of-pocket costs — only worth it if you use healthcare frequently. Use an ACA comparison tool like eHealth to compare actual plan costs for your income and location.