Two Paths for Self-Employed Floridians
Florida is one of the most active states for self-employment — real estate agents, consultants, contractors, franchise owners, healthcare practitioners, and gig workers all need to find coverage on their own. The good news is that Florida offers more health insurance options than most states, both on and off the ACA marketplace.
The right path depends primarily on one number: your net self-employment income. Here's how to think about it.
The $62,600 Income Threshold
For 2026, ACA premium tax credits phase out at approximately $62,600 for a single adult (400% of the Federal Poverty Level). Below this threshold, marketplace subsidies can reduce your monthly premium significantly — sometimes to under $100/month.
Above $62,600, the calculation changes. The Inflation Reduction Act caps your maximum marketplace premium contribution at 8.5% of income, but in many Florida counties, benchmark plan premiums are already below that cap at higher incomes — meaning you receive no subsidy at all. At that point, a full-price ACA marketplace plan and a private off-exchange plan become directly comparable in price, but the private plan often provides broader network access.
Your subsidy is calculated on net income — gross revenue minus business expenses. Many self-employed Floridians who assume they earn too much for a subsidy are surprised when a broker runs the actual numbers after accounting for deductions.
ACA Marketplace vs. Private Plans in Florida
| ACA Marketplace (FL) | Private Off-Exchange (FL) | |
|---|---|---|
| Plan types | HMO, EPO, PPO (varies by carrier/county) | PPO available statewide |
| Best income range (single) | Under ~$62,600/yr net income | Over ~$62,600/yr net income |
| Federal subsidies | Yes, income-based | No |
| Network flexibility | In-network only (HMO/EPO) or broader (PPO) | Any doctor, any hospital (PPO) |
| Income reporting | Required — reconciled at tax time | Not required |
| Tax deductible | Yes, 100% | Yes, 100% |
| Enrollment period | Nov 1 – Jan 15 (Open Enrollment) | Year-round |
Tampa & Hillsborough County
The Tampa Bay area is one of Florida's largest self-employment markets, with a significant concentration of real estate agents, healthcare contractors, IT consultants, and small business owners. Hillsborough County has strong marketplace carrier participation, including Florida Blue, Ambetter, Molina, and Oscar.
Major hospital systems in the Tampa area include Tampa General Hospital (the region's only Level I Trauma Center), AdventHealth Tampa, and the BayCare Health System (10 hospitals across the region). Before enrolling in any plan, I verify that your current doctors and preferred hospitals are in-network for the specific plan ID you choose.
I am a Tampa-based advisor and serve all Hillsborough County zip codes directly. Call (813) 476-1312 for a free same-day comparison.
Pinellas County (St. Petersburg / Clearwater)
Pinellas County has a large self-employed population in tourism, hospitality, and healthcare. Marketplace options in Pinellas generally mirror Hillsborough, with Florida Blue and Ambetter as the primary carriers. BayCare and AdventHealth both operate major facilities in Pinellas. I serve all Pinellas County zip codes.
Pasco County
Pasco County is part of the greater Tampa Bay metro. Carrier availability is slightly more limited than Hillsborough, but both marketplace and private plan options are available. AdventHealth Zephyrhills and Advent Health Wesley Chapel serve most of northern Pasco. I serve all Pasco County zip codes.
Orange County (Orlando)
Orlando has a large freelance and gig economy tied to hospitality, entertainment, and tech. Orange County marketplace options include Florida Blue, Ambetter, Molina, and Oscar. Major hospital systems include Orlando Health and AdventHealth Orlando (formerly Florida Hospital). I serve all Orange County and greater Orlando metro zip codes.
Miami-Dade & Broward Counties
South Florida has the most competitive marketplace in the state, with the widest carrier selection. Self-employed entrepreneurs and independent contractors in Miami and Fort Lauderdale often have more plan options than anywhere else in Florida. Major systems include Jackson Health System, Baptist Health South Florida, Memorial Healthcare System, and Broward Health. I serve all South Florida counties.
Jacksonville (Duval County)
Jacksonville's self-employed population skews toward healthcare, finance, and military-adjacent contracting. Florida Blue (the dominant Florida insurer) has a particularly strong network in Northeast Florida. Major systems include Baptist Health Jacksonville, UF Health Jacksonville, and Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville. I serve all Duval County and Northeast Florida zip codes.
The Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction
Florida has no state income tax, which means your health insurance deduction is a federal-only calculation. If you are self-employed and not eligible for coverage through a spouse's employer, you can deduct 100% of health insurance premiums on Schedule 1 of Form 1040, line 17.
This applies to both marketplace and private off-exchange plans. The deduction reduces your Adjusted Gross Income, which also affects your ACA subsidy calculation — so it's worth running the numbers with an advisor before assuming you're over the subsidy income limit.
Who I Serve
I work with self-employed Floridians across every industry and every county. Common situations I help with include:
- Freelancers and 1099 contractors leaving W-2 jobs
- Real estate agents and mortgage brokers
- S-corp and LLC owners whose income varies month to month
- Healthcare practitioners in private practice
- Early retirees (under 65) not yet eligible for Medicare
- Small business owners without group plan options
My service is free. I'm compensated equally by all carriers regardless of which plan you choose.