blackshoe, on 2013-November-22, 01:29, said:
What percentage of your income goes for healthcare premiums now, Winston? What percentage before ACA?
Those percentages really are not important statistics (and a little too personal of information for me to be comfortable with sharing) as the pre-ACA policies did not cover all things the ACA requires and had deductibles higher than is allowed by the ACA, so it is truly an apples-to-oranges comparison. I live in Oklahoma, a red state that refused to start a state exchange and refused the Medicaid expansion, so I had to go through the federal healthcare.gov website that is the subject of so much controversy.
It took me about 10 days to get my account straight, and then another week to get the side-by-side comparisons and ability to choose a plan - this may have been slowed because navigational directions within the website are quite unclear. (you have to figure out without prompting that to get the comparison you click on your name).
Once in, though, the site was quite easy to use - every plan available to me in my state was shown by type (bronze, silver, gold, platinum), along with the pertinent details (deductibles, co-pays, etc.), and the site automatically figured any tax credit available and automatically sends it to the plan-operator chosen.
In my case, I was able to chose a plan which I believe is better from a company that did not operate in Oklahoma prior to the ACA - and even the Blue Cross plans on the website were less costly that the one I had previously, although Blue Cross neglected to inform me of those policy choices when they notified me of the rate increase for my old plan.