Health Insurance in South Carolina Making $65,000 a Year

Coverage options, costs, and subsidies for South Carolina residents earning $65,000 annually.

Your Income and ACA Subsidies in South Carolina

At $65,000 annual income (about 415% FPL for a single adult), you are above the traditional 400% FPL subsidy cap, but the American Rescue Plan Act changes (extended through 2025) cap premium costs at 8.5% of income. You may still qualify for modest subsidies depending on your state and plan.

The federal poverty level (FPL) benchmarks for a single adult in 2026 are approximately: 100% FPL = $15,650, 138% FPL = $21,597, 200% FPL = $31,300, 250% FPL = $39,125, 400% FPL = $62,600. Your $65,000 income falls at approximately 415% FPL for a single adult (exact FPL percentage varies by household size).

South Carolina Medicaid: Non-Expansion State

South Carolina has not expanded Medicaid under the ACA. The standard Medicaid income limit for non-disabled, non-pregnant adults without dependents is approximately $9,326 per year. At $65,000 annual income, you almost certainly do not qualify for South Carolina Medicaid.

South Carolina has not expanded Medicaid. Non-disabled childless adults generally cannot qualify for South Carolina Medicaid regardless of income.

Marketplace Plans in South Carolina

The main carriers offering marketplace plans in South Carolina include: BlueCross BlueShield of South Carolina, Ambetter from Absolute Total Care, Molina Healthcare. The dominant carrier in most South Carolina counties is BlueCross BlueShield of South Carolina. Plan availability varies significantly by county — the plan options in major metro areas are typically broader than in rural counties.

During Open Enrollment (November 1 – January 15), you can compare all plans available in your ZIP code at healthcare.gov or through a licensed broker. An independent broker like Health Advisory LLC can show you every plan available in your county without charging fees.

What You Should Expect to Pay

Exact premium costs depend on your age, household size, ZIP code, and chosen plan. As a general guide for a 40-year-old single adult making $65,000 in South Carolina:

  • Bronze plan: Lowest premium, highest deductible ($7,000–$9,000 deductible typical). Best if you are healthy and rarely need care.
  • Silver plan: Mid-range premium with access to cost-sharing reductions (CSR) at lower incomes. Usually the best overall value for most buyers.
  • Gold plan: Higher premium but lower cost-sharing. Better if you use healthcare regularly.

The best way to see exact costs for your situation is to run a quote with your specific ZIP code and household details.

Self-Employed or Independent Contractor in South Carolina?

If you are self-employed in South Carolina, your income for subsidy purposes is based on net income after deductible business expenses, not gross revenue. Self-employed individuals can also deduct 100% of health insurance premiums paid as a self-employment deduction, further reducing taxable income. A licensed broker can help you understand how your business deductions affect your net income and subsidy eligibility.

Get a free quote for your South Carolina health insurance options.

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