I stumbled across this on Yahoo this morning and thought I would share.
The multistate dweller aspect never crossed my mind until I read this. Details yet to come.
Please don't let this become a political red vs. blue bashing thread, just posting information some may find interesting or informative:
You need to enroll in the โrightโ stateEach state will have a health-insurance marketplace, and people must sign up for insurance in the state of their primary residence. Plans will include coverage for any emergencies that happen when youโre traveling out-of-state.
Snowbirds who split their time between states will likely have multistate plans to choose from on the marketplaces. Details for these plans will become available later this month, when the Office of Personnel Management announces the contracts, according to a spokesperson. Some may be regional plans that cover a large metropolitan area that crosses state boundaries. But itโs possible that a given multistate plan may not meet the needs of someone who spends, say, half the year in New York and the other half in Florida.
Currently, some snowbirds are served by whatโs known as a โwraparound network,โ whereby a claims-management company contracts with the primary insurer to lease a provider network that the insurerโs members can access when they travel outside the primary network area, said Terri Welter, principal at ECG Management Consultants, a Seattle-based consulting firm to the health-care industry. While itโs not clear yet, itโs possible this type of system may continue with some plans on the exchanges, she said.
If you move out of state, youโll need to re-enroll for coverage in your new place of residence. A move will be considered a โqualifying life eventโ that will allow you to sign up for coverage outside of the open enrollment period..
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