Search Terms
91 healthcare terms — search by name, keyword, or browse A–Z.
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Deductible
The amount you pay out-of-pocket before your insurance starts covering costs.
Premium
The monthly amount you pay to keep your health insurance coverage active.
Copay
A fixed amount you pay for a specific covered service at the time of care.
Coinsurance
Your share of costs after meeting your deductible, expressed as a percentage.
Out-of-Pocket Maximum
The most you'll ever pay in a plan year for covered services.
HMO (Health Maintenance Organization)
A plan that requires you to use a specific network of doctors and get referrals for specialists.
PPO (Preferred Provider Organization)
A flexible plan that lets you see any doctor without a referral, with lower costs in-network.
EPO (Exclusive Provider Organization)
A plan with no referrals required but no out-of-network coverage except emergencies.
POS Plan (Point of Service)
A hybrid plan requiring a PCP and referrals for specialists, but allowing some out-of-network care.
HDHP (High-Deductible Health Plan)
A plan with lower premiums but a higher deductible, often paired with an HSA.
HSA (Health Savings Account)
A tax-advantaged savings account for medical expenses, available with HDHPs.
FSA (Flexible Spending Account)
A tax-advantaged account for medical expenses that doesn't require an HDHP.
Medicare Part A
Hospital insurance covering inpatient stays, skilled nursing, and some home health care.
Medicare Part B
Medical insurance covering doctor visits, outpatient care, and preventive services.
Medicare Advantage (Part C)
Private insurance plans that bundle Parts A and B, often with extra benefits.
Medicare Part D
Prescription drug coverage available as a standalone plan or bundled with Medicare Advantage.
Medicaid
A joint federal-state program providing health coverage to low-income individuals and families.
CHIP (Children's Health Insurance Program)
A program providing low-cost health coverage to children in families that earn too much for Medicaid.
ACA (Affordable Care Act)
The 2010 law that expanded health coverage access and established consumer protections.
Marketplace Plan
Health insurance plans sold through government-run exchanges under the ACA.
Prior Authorization
Approval required from your insurer before receiving certain services or medications.
Formulary
Your insurance plan's list of covered prescription drugs, organized by cost tiers.
EOB (Explanation of Benefits)
A statement from your insurer explaining what was billed, covered, and what you owe.
COBRA
A law allowing you to keep employer-sponsored insurance after leaving a job, at full cost.
HIPAA
Federal law protecting the privacy and security of your health information.
Visitor Health Insurance
Short-term medical coverage for non-US residents visiting the United States.
Comprehensive Visitor Plan
A visitor insurance plan that covers a broad range of medical expenses, similar to regular insurance.
Fixed Benefit Plan
A visitor insurance plan that pays a set dollar amount per service, regardless of actual cost.
Acute Onset of Pre-Existing Condition
A sudden, unexpected flare-up of a known condition that some visitor plans cover.
Waiting Period
A period after your coverage starts during which certain conditions are not yet covered.
Policy Maximum
The maximum dollar amount your visitor insurance plan will pay for covered expenses.
Medical Evacuation
Coverage that pays to transport you to an appropriate medical facility or back home if medically necessary.
Visa Insurance Requirement
Mandatory health insurance required by certain US visa types, particularly J-1 and J-2.
In-Network
Doctors and facilities that have a contract with your insurance plan, offering lower costs.
Out-of-Network
Providers without a contract with your plan, typically resulting in higher costs or no coverage.
Provider Network
The group of doctors, hospitals, and facilities contracted with your insurance plan.
Insurance Claim
A request submitted to your insurer to pay for a medical service you received.
Allowed Amount
The maximum amount your insurer will pay for a covered service from an in-network provider.
Open Enrollment Period
The annual window when you can sign up for or change your health insurance plan.
Qualifying Life Event
A major life change that triggers a special enrollment period outside of open enrollment.
Special Enrollment Period
A limited window to enroll in health insurance outside of open enrollment after a qualifying life event.
Dependent
A family member — typically a spouse or child — covered under your health insurance plan.
Grace Period
A short window after a missed premium payment during which your coverage remains active.
Preventive Care
Routine health services — like annual checkups and screenings — covered at no cost under ACA plans.
Primary Care Physician (PCP)
Your main doctor who provides routine care and coordinates referrals to specialists.
Referral
A written authorization from your primary care doctor to see a specialist, required by some plans.
Specialist
A doctor with advanced training in a specific area of medicine, such as cardiology or dermatology.
Telehealth
Healthcare delivered remotely via video, phone, or app — often at lower cost than an in-person visit.
Catastrophic Plan
A low-premium, very high-deductible plan available to people under 30 or with hardship exemptions.
Bronze Plan
The lowest-premium ACA metal tier, covering roughly 60% of average healthcare costs.
Silver Plan
The mid-tier ACA plan — the only tier eligible for cost-sharing reductions based on income.
Gold Plan
A higher-premium ACA plan that covers roughly 80% of average healthcare costs.
Platinum Plan
The highest-premium ACA plan, covering roughly 90% of average healthcare costs.
Indemnity Plan (Fee-for-Service)
A traditional plan letting you see any doctor and getting reimbursed a set amount per service.
HRA (Health Reimbursement Arrangement)
An employer-funded account that reimburses you for qualified medical expenses tax-free.
Dependent Care FSA
A pre-tax account for childcare and elder care expenses — separate from a medical FSA.
Medigap (Medicare Supplement Insurance)
Private insurance that covers the gaps in Original Medicare — deductibles, coinsurance, and copays.
Coverage Gap (Donut Hole)
A phase in Medicare Part D where you pay more for prescriptions until catastrophic coverage kicks in.
IRMAA (Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount)
A Medicare surcharge added to your Part B and Part D premiums if your income exceeds certain thresholds.
Annual Enrollment Period (Medicare)
The October 15–December 7 window when Medicare beneficiaries can change their coverage.
Dual Eligible
A person who qualifies for both Medicare and Medicaid, receiving benefits from both programs.
Advance Premium Tax Credit (APTC)
A federal subsidy that reduces your monthly marketplace plan premium based on your income.
Cost-Sharing Reduction (CSR)
Extra savings on deductibles, copays, and out-of-pocket maximums for Silver plan enrollees with lower incomes.
Essential Health Benefits (EHBs)
Ten categories of services that ACA-compliant plans must cover.
Pre-Existing Condition
A health condition you had before your insurance coverage started.
Creditable Coverage
Health coverage that meets minimum standards, preventing late enrollment penalties in Medicare.
Medical Necessity
The standard insurers use to determine whether a service is appropriate and required for your condition.
Coordination of Benefits
Rules that determine which insurer pays first when you're covered by more than one health plan.
Balance Billing
When an out-of-network provider bills you for the difference between their charge and your insurer's payment.
Surprise Billing (No Surprises Act)
Unexpected medical bills from out-of-network providers — now largely prohibited by the No Surprises Act.
Utilization Review
An insurer's evaluation of whether a healthcare service is medically necessary and appropriate.
Appeal (Claim Denial)
A formal process to challenge your insurer's decision to deny a claim or service.
Durable Medical Equipment (DME)
Reusable medical items — like wheelchairs, CPAP machines, and blood glucose monitors — covered by insurance.
TRICARE
Health insurance coverage for active-duty military members, veterans, and their families.
No Surprises Act
A 2022 federal law that protects patients from unexpected out-of-network medical bills.
Form 1095-A
A tax form from the Health Insurance Marketplace showing your coverage and any premium tax credits received.
Form 1095-B
A tax form confirming you had minimum essential health coverage during the year.
Form 1095-C
A tax form from large employers showing what health coverage they offered to employees.
Network Adequacy
The requirement that an insurance plan's provider network has enough doctors and facilities to serve its members.
Step Therapy
An insurer's requirement to try lower-cost medications before approving a more expensive drug.
Medigap Plan Types (A, B, D, F, G, K, L, M, N)
The standardized supplemental Medicare plans that help cover Original Medicare cost-sharing gaps.
Medicare Savings Programs (MSP)
State programs that help low-income Medicare beneficiaries pay their premiums, deductibles, and copays.
Extra Help (Low Income Subsidy)
A federal program that reduces Medicare Part D prescription drug costs for people with limited income.
Health Insurance for Self-Employed
Coverage options for freelancers, independent contractors, and small business owners without employer coverage.
Qualifying Life Event — Job Loss
Losing job-based health coverage triggers a Special Enrollment Period to get new insurance outside open enrollment.
Turning 26 — Losing Parental Coverage
At 26, you age off your parent's health plan and must find your own coverage within 60 days.
Short-Term Health Insurance
Temporary health coverage for gaps between plans — cheaper but with significant coverage limitations.
Premium Tax Credit Eligibility
ACA subsidies that reduce marketplace plan premiums based on your household income and size.
Mental Health Parity
A federal law requiring insurers to cover mental health and substance use disorders no more restrictively than physical health conditions.
Medicaid Expansion
The ACA provision that allowed states to extend Medicaid to adults earning up to 138% of the Federal Poverty Level.
Health Reimbursement Arrangement (HRA)
An employer-funded account that reimburses employees for qualified medical expenses tax-free.