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How to choose a health plan without the headache

By Julia ยท May 22, 2026

Open enrollment is short, the options look the same, and the language is awful. Here's how I actually think about it.

Don't pick on the premium alone

The premium is what you pay every month. It's the easiest number to compare, so most people grab the lowest one. That's usually a mistake. A cheap premium often comes with a high deductible, which means you pay more out of your own pocket before the plan helps. The real question is what a plan costs you across the whole year, not just each month.

Three numbers that actually matter

  • Premium. What you pay every month, even if you never see a doctor.
  • Deductible. What you pay yourself before the plan starts covering things.
  • Out-of-pocket max. The most you can pay in a year. After that, the plan covers the rest. This is your worst case.

Start with how you actually use care

Look at last year. Did you go to the doctor often? Do you take regular medications? Is anything planned this year, like a surgery or a baby? If you use a lot of care, a higher premium with a lower deductible usually wins. If you barely go, a lower premium with a higher deductible can be fine.

Check the things people forget

  • Are your doctors in network?
  • Are your medications covered, and at what tier?
  • Is there an HSA or FSA option, and does it fit your plan?

A quick checklist

  1. Add up the yearly cost, not just the premium.
  2. Match the plan to how much care you actually use.
  3. Confirm your doctors and medications are covered.
  4. Check the out-of-pocket max. That's the most this can cost you.

This is exactly the kind of decision mhico is built for. Tell it about your year and your plan options, and it walks you through the tradeoffs in plain language. No jargon, no guessing.

Julia