The Short Version
Health insurance spreads your costs across four buckets: your premium
(monthly payment to keep coverage active), your deductible (what you pay
first before insurance kicks in), your copay (a flat fee per visit), and
coinsurance (a percentage after the deductible). There is also an
out-of-pocket maximum that caps your total annual exposure.
Deductible: What You Pay First
A deductible is the amount you must pay for covered services before your insurer starts
sharing costs. If your deductible is $1,500, you pay the first $1,500 of covered medical
bills in a plan year. Routine preventive care is typically exempt and covered before the
deductible is met.
Copay: A Flat Fee Per Visit
A copay is a fixed dollar amount paid for a specific service — typically $20–$50
for a primary care visit, $40–$80 for a specialist, or a set amount per prescription.
You know the cost before you walk in. Whether it counts toward your deductible depends on
the plan.
Coinsurance: Your Percentage After the Deductible
Once you have met your deductible, coinsurance is the share you continue to pay. An 80/20
plan means your insurer pays 80% and you pay 20% of each covered bill, until you hit your
out-of-pocket maximum.
Out-of-Pocket Maximum: Your Annual Cap
The out-of-pocket maximum is the most you will pay for covered services in a year. It
includes your deductible, copays, and coinsurance. Once you reach it, your plan covers 100%
of additional covered costs. Monthly premiums do not count toward this limit.
How They Work Together: A Quick Example
You have a $1,000 deductible, 20% coinsurance, and a $6,000 out-of-pocket maximum.
You have a surgery billed at $15,000.
- You pay the first $1,000 (deductible).
- On the remaining $14,000, you pay 20% = $2,800 (coinsurance).
- Total out of pocket: $3,800 — under your $6,000 maximum.
- Your insurer covers the remaining $11,200.