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Tuesday, November 16, 2010

High Deductible Health Plans

I'm looking at these again--there are days that I am not sure that I can justify the stress of my day job enough to keep doing it.  I much prefer teaching, but between preparing for classes and working full-time at a job that I hate (mostly because I hate JSPs so much), this is just too much.

If you can handle a $10,000 annual deductible, you can get coverage for a family for less than $500 a month.  A Health Savings Account provides a way to accumulate tax-free money to cover the deductible and copayments--and it carries over from year to year, so that if you have one really bad year where you actually hit the $10,000 deductible, it is only an "ouch" instead of a disaster.

I'm waiting for the 30 year Treasury bonds to get 8% yield.  Or maybe even 6%.  If I have to spend much more time trying to figure out these undocumented JSPs, maybe 5%.

3 comments:

  1. I have a $5,000 deductible plan that covers myself and my wife for about $90 per month (we're both about 30). It's not bad; the plan also gets us on a PPO that provides very good discounts, so you get a benefit even if you don't make the deductible.

    It's a shame that Obamacare will slowly do away with most of these plans.

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  2. I'm surprised Obamacare isn't going to outlaw these (high deductible plans (which I've used in times past between jobs) and HSAs).

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  3. I've wondered how many corporations announced the changes to their health plans prior to the election, and how many votes were swayed by the news.

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