FL Health Guide 📞 (954) 998-6720Licensed Florida Agent

Self-Employed Florida Health Insurance — Plans That Actually Make Sense

When you're your own boss, no HR department picks your plan and no employer subsidizes the premium. I help self-employed Floridians compare short-term medical, ACA marketplace, and supplemental indemnity — and figure out which combination actually fits.

  • I'm Benjamin Turner, a Coral Springs-based licensed Florida agent.
  • ACA, short-term medical (STM), and hospital indemnity in one conversation.
  • Same plan price as Healthcare.gov. Carriers pay the commission.
  • Your info is not sold to other agents. One call, one agent.

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Why self-employed health insurance is its own problem

If you're self-employed in Florida and earn enough to be successful but not enough that money is irrelevant, you're stuck in the worst spot for ACA marketplace pricing. You earn too much for big subsidies, but unsubsidized ACA premiums are brutal — a healthy 40-year-old in Florida can easily see a $500–$800/month Silver plan at full price. For a lot of self-employed folks, paying $7,000+ a year for coverage they barely use isn't the right call. Here's how the trade-offs actually look:

ACA marketplace plan

Best when you qualify for subsidies, have ongoing health needs, or are 50+
  • Covers pre-existing conditions, no underwriting
  • 10 essential health benefits required by federal law
  • Subsidies available below ~400% FPL (varies); zero subsidy above that threshold
  • Limited to Open Enrollment unless you have a qualifying life event
  • Premiums for self-employed at full price: typically $400–$800+/month
  • Eligible for the self-employed health insurance tax deduction

Short-term medical (STM)

Best for healthy adults without subsidies, gap coverage, between jobs
  • Often $80–$300/month for a healthy adult (a fraction of unsubsidized ACA)
  • 30 to 364 days of coverage per policy term
  • Year-round enrollment — no Open Enrollment window
  • Underwritten: may decline or exclude pre-existing conditions
  • Benefit caps and exclusions; not ACA-compliant
  • Carriers I write: National General / Allstate, Pivot Health, UnitedHealthcare / Golden Rule
Important: Short-term medical is NOT major medical and is NOT ACA-compliant. It may not cover pre-existing conditions, may have annual or lifetime benefit caps, and does not satisfy ACA essential health benefit requirements. STM is meant for limited gap or transitional use, not as a permanent replacement for major medical insurance. The right product depends on your specific health, income, and risk tolerance. Call me at (954) 998-6720 and I'll walk through which actually fits your situation.

Hospital indemnity: the supplement most self-employed people overlook

If you've got a high-deductible plan (ACA or STM), a single hospital stay can drain your savings before your insurance picks up. Hospital indemnity insurance pays you a fixed cash benefit when you're admitted — $500, $1,000, sometimes $2,000 per day — that you can use for anything: the deductible, lost income, bills at home. For self-employed people without short-term disability through an employer, this is one of the most practical add-ons.

It's not a replacement for major medical. It's the layer you put underneath your high-deductible plan so a hospital stay doesn't wipe you out. Premiums are typically $30–$100/month. Carrier I write: Allstate Health Solutions / National General.

Important: Hospital indemnity and fixed indemnity policies pay a fixed cash benefit per covered event. They are NOT a substitute for major medical insurance. They are typically a supplement to existing major medical coverage, not a standalone health plan.

The tax break self-employed people forget about

💰 Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction

If you're self-employed and you pay your own premiums, you can generally deduct what you pay for health, dental, and qualifying long-term care insurance for yourself and your family as an above-the-line deduction on your federal taxes (Schedule 1, Line 17). This reduces your AGI directly, which often means a real savings of 22%+ on the premium cost.

The deduction applies to ACA marketplace plans, off-exchange plans, and (depending on situation) short-term medical premiums. There are eligibility rules — you can't claim it for any month you were eligible for an employer-sponsored plan through a spouse, for example.

I'm an insurance agent, not a CPA. Confirm the deduction specifics with your tax preparer before assuming a specific savings amount. The point is just that the after-tax cost of your premium is often lower than the sticker price.

Florida self-employed people I work with

If you're in one of these situations, you're in the demographic I help most often. None of these are restrictive — if you're self-employed in Florida in any industry, this applies.

🏠 Real estate agents
🛠️ Contractors & tradespeople
💼 Freelancers & consultants
🚗 Rideshare / delivery drivers
💇 Beauty & wellness pros
📷 Photographers & creatives
🍽️ Restaurant & bar owners
🏋️ Personal trainers & coaches
🐶 Pet professionals (sitters, groomers)

Common questions from self-employed Floridians

Best estimate based on the previous tax year, adjusted up or down for what you actually expect this year. You can update your reported income on the marketplace any time during the year and subsidies recalculate. Underestimating means you owe at tax time; overestimating means you get a tax credit. For self-employed people whose income swings — especially real estate agents, contractors, freelancers — this is normal and the marketplace handles it. We can discuss specifically how to estimate during the call.
Depends. At $90K single, you probably qualify for a small subsidy under enhanced ACA rules in effect for 2026, but it shrinks the premium by a much smaller amount than for lower-income enrollees. For a healthy 35-year-old in this income range, a short-term medical plan at $120–$200/month often beats a partially-subsidized ACA Silver at $400–$500/month for total annual cost — if you don't have ongoing health needs and you're OK with STM's limitations (no pre-existing coverage, benefit caps, not ACA-compliant). For 50+ or anyone with chronic conditions, ACA almost always wins. I'll show you the actual math for your specific situation.
Two options. (1) Short-term medical, available year-round, gets you covered immediately. (2) Check if you have a qualifying life event in the last 60 days — loss of other coverage, marriage, new baby, move, significant income change — that opens a Special Enrollment Period for an ACA plan. Self-employed income changes can sometimes qualify; we'd discuss the specifics on the call.
Generally yes, if you're self-employed and not eligible for an employer plan through a spouse. The self-employed health insurance deduction is taken on Schedule 1 of your 1040 (it's an above-the-line deduction, so it reduces your AGI directly). Applies to medical, dental, and qualifying long-term care premiums for you, your spouse, and dependents. I'm not a CPA — confirm specifics with your tax preparer — but the after-tax cost of your premium is often meaningfully lower than the sticker price.
A few moving parts. If your spouse's employer plan is "affordable" under federal rules and you're eligible for it, you generally can't get ACA subsidies. But the family premium might be expensive enough that going on your own private plan is still cheaper. And the self-employed health insurance deduction has specific rules about spouse coverage availability. Bring me the rough numbers (your spouse's employee-only premium, family premium if you'd be added) and I'll show you the comparison.
No. I'm a one-person agency — Turner Risk & Wealth LLC, FL License #G227271. When you fill out the form on this site, I'm the only person who gets your information. It is not sold, transferred, or shared with other agents, agencies, or lead aggregators. You won't get the swarm of follow-up calls you'd get from a "compare plans" lead-gen site. See the Privacy Policy for the full no-sale disclosure.

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