I checked out every health insurer I could find about 2 years ago. Blue Cross of MO was the best I found, great PPO and rates about half what I was charged when I had a "job".
as a full time self employed trader .... so my question would be if I am allowed to contribute to an HSA ?
Just went thru all of this with my company plan, so I'll add $0.02. HSAs are a nice option for some people. The basic concept is that they are tied to a high deductible ($1000 or more) insurance plan. You can then "save" up to your deductible amount in an IRA type of account. As far as paying for ordinary doctor visits, if you go to a doctor in your plan you should get the plan rate if you have the doctor submit the bill thru your insurer. They apply your deductible and you pay the plan rate. Obviously, you may want to check this over closely. There is one drawback, you cannot have prescription drug coverage (ie; $15, $30, $50 drug card). Drugs are paid out of your HSA and then picked up by the insurance after you reach your limits. Bottom line, if you are young, don't need drugs, and never see the doctor it is probably a good deal. If you use the system and have a regular prescription, then the old way may be better. You have to do the numbers. Frankly, when I looked at the premium rates for my company I didn't feel that they where discounted enough. If you want more info, HSAbank.com has some. Good luck.
a bank is selling these ? ok ... I better check with my HMO first then with this bank to see if any of this makes sense for me and if it is allowed in my state ( N.Y. ) for a self employed person without an IRA www.hsabankusa.com -HSA Bank â¢, also known as MSA Bankâ¢, is a national leader in Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) and Medical Savings Accounts (MSA)-
Seth, the bank just works the HSA. The insurance comes from an regular insurance company. They are two separate things. YOu can have the high deductible plan, without the HSA if you want. In fact, I have a high deductibe plan but no HSA because the coverage is better and the premium discount between the HSA eligible plan and non-eligible plan is not that much. You should be ok as a self emloyed person. However, your HMO will probably not qualify. You will need to chose a high deductible plan which complies with the HSA regs. Good luck.
NEW YORK State offers "small companies"/self employed individuals very reasonable insurance and offers a choice of 8 HMO's. It's like $180 with Rx coverage for Aetna/US Healthcare.
insurance for self employed is very expensive. I found a free Prescription Discount Card that gives me pretty big discounts on some of my meds. For anyone who wants to know about it. OptionPrescriptionCard is the name on the web
I found insurance for the self employed much cheaper than my old group plan. Blue Cross, with tons of providers and very favorable terms for about $160/month.