Insurance guide

Health insurance options after leaving a job.

Losing employer coverage doesn't have to mean paying COBRA prices. You typically have several options — but the clock is short.

By Jerry Quince, Licensed Health Insurance Advisor·Published July 15, 2026

COBRA continuation

Keeps your exact employer plan, network, and deductible progress — but you now pay the full premium (plus a small admin fee). Often the most expensive option. Worth it if you're mid-treatment or specifically need to keep the same network.

ACA marketplace with a Special Enrollment Period

Losing coverage typically opens a 60-day Special Enrollment Period. If your income after leaving qualifies for premium tax credits, the marketplace is often dramatically cheaper than COBRA.

Private (off-exchange) plans

Private plans skip subsidies but can enroll year-round and often offer broader PPO networks. A common fit for people who don't qualify for subsidies or missed the SEP.

A spouse's employer plan

If your spouse has group coverage, your job loss is usually a qualifying event to enroll mid-year. Sometimes the cheapest and simplest path.

Short-term plans

Cheap monthly premiums but limited coverage — usually no pre-existing condition coverage and no ACA essential benefits. Can bridge a short gap; not a long-term solution.

Why you have to act fast

Both COBRA and marketplace SEPs typically give you 60 days. Miss the window and your options narrow. A quick 15-minute call with an advisor is usually enough to compare all five paths.

The information on this website is for general educational purposes only and is not medical, tax, legal, or individualized insurance advice.

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