| It's possible that a change
in your job or schooling status has just made
you eligible to own the lowest-cost health insurance
available. If you are healthy and unemployed,
employed part-time, going to school, graduating
from college, leaving home for the first time,
or even retiring early, you might consider carrying
short-term health insurance coverage.
Designed for healthy individuals and families
who do not need coverage for pre-existing conditions,
short-term policies can provide a low-cost safety
net in case of illness or injury that might
develop during the coverage period. Depending
upon the plan, benefits can be generous and
wide-ranging, with most policies providing up
to $1 million or $2 million per person.
However, just as the name implies, short-term
health policies are a temporary solution. Most
short-term policies limit the amount of time
that you can keep the policy to 12 months or
less.
The most important thing to remember when buying
short-term coverage is that these low-cost plans
are not designed to cover any pre-existing conditions.
This limitation explains why the monthly premiums
are so low for this kind of coverage.
Most insurers only sell short-term health policies
to people under the age of 65. And if you have
ever been denied health insurance, you probably
won’t qualify for short-term insurance.
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