With the passage of the Affordable Care Act, insurers must spend at least 80 percent of premiums, they collect each year, to pay for medical claims or initiatives such as wellness programs that improve quality of care for people who buy their own health insurance.
If your insurer spends less than that amount, it owes you a refund.
For 2018, insurers owed a record $743 million – four times what they paid in 2017 – to 2.7 million individual policyholders. That’s nearly a third of people who had ACA (Affordable Care Act) plans in 2018.
Insurers must begin issuing the rebates by September 30th, 2019 and the refunds can be substantial:
An average of $270 for an individual, and up to $2,000. How much you get depends in part on your insurer and where you live.
Although the record $743 million is significant, the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) analysis uncovered an even more startling fact:
Millions of dollars in refunds go unclaimed every year.
Few people realize they may be due a refund, so they don’t know to look for a check from their insurer. Some might even throw it out, assuming it’s junk mail.