Health insurance after losing your job in Maine
Updated for plan year 2026
The first week after a layoff is full of paperwork that all seems urgent, so here is the honest priority order for health coverage. Day one: find out the exact date your employer plan ends — some plans run through the end of the month, others stop on your last day, and everything else on this page keys off that date. Day two: start counting your 60-day enrollment window from there. That's the federal special enrollment period for losing job-based coverage, and it applies in Maine the same as everywhere else.
After that, slow down — you have more room than the COBRA packet's tone suggests. Price a marketplace plan on CoverME.gov before you commit to anything: multiple plans are on offer for 2026, and a subsidy based on your reduced annual income can change the comparison entirely. Unemployment benefits count toward that income estimate; so does severance; so do the paychecks you already earned this year. The number that comes out the other end is frequently smaller than people braced for.
What you should not do is nothing. Going uninsured between jobs feels survivable right up until it isn't, and while the federal penalty for skipping coverage is gone, an ER bill doesn't care about your employment status. The sections below walk the deadlines, the COBRA-versus-marketplace math, and the enrollment steps in order — one evening of reading, one decision made on purpose.
What you would actually pay in Maine
Pre-filled with a Maine ZIP — change it to yours for exact results.
Before going further, make sure the income you entered is the income that counts. The marketplace uses modified adjusted gross income for your household: wages, self-employment net profit, unemployment compensation, severance, plus a few add-backs like tax-exempt interest and the non-taxable portion of Social Security. It does not include SNAP benefits, child support you receive, or gifts. And it covers the full calendar year — the months already earned plus the months ahead, not a snapshot of this month multiplied by twelve. Getting the definition right matters twice. It sets the estimate above, and at tax time the marketplace's advance payments get reconciled against the real figure — overshoot your guess and money comes back to you, undershoot and you owe the difference. If the figure you typed was rough, refine it before you enroll on CoverME.gov; the sections below assume the number is solid and build the plan decision on top of it. Five careful minutes here protects both your monthly budget and next spring's tax return. If you share finances with anyone, do this part together. Household income means everyone on the tax return — a spouse's wages included — and the most common correction households make is adding income somebody forgot to count. Better that addition comes from you, now, than from the reconciliation later.
The marketplace in Maine
Maine runs its own exchange, CoverME.gov — that is where you compare plans and enroll.
Maine expanded Medicaid, so if your household income falls below about 138% of the federal poverty level you likely qualify for free or very low-cost coverage — check the state Medicaid office before buying a marketplace plan. The next open enrollment window runs from November 1, 2026 to December 31, 2026. This state has historically extended enrollment into January; under the 2025 federal rule (unstayed), PY2027 enrollment must end by Dec 31, 2026. Final dates not yet announced — based on the legal maximum.
A worked example
A single adult earning $39,100 a year — about 250% of the federal poverty level — would get an estimated subsidy of $434/month against the typical Silver benchmark in Maine. Maine runs its own exchange, so this is a state-average estimate — rougher than the figures for federal-marketplace states.
Your number depends on your actual income, household, and ZIP — run it above.
How to enroll in Maine
- 01
Check your window
Losing job-based coverage opens a special enrollment period: you can apply up to 60 days before your coverage ends and up to 60 days after it ends. Miss that window and you generally wait for the next open enrollment.
- 02
Gather your documents
After applying, your Marketplace Eligibility Notice tells you whether you must submit documents confirming the loss of coverage and the date it ends — you have 30 days after picking a plan to send them, and coverage can't be used until eligibility is confirmed and the first premium is paid. Acceptable documents include a letter or premium bill from the insurance company showing cancellation/termination, a letter from the employer on official letterhead confirming coverage was or will be dropped, a letter about COBRA coverage, or pay stubs showing a health-coverage deduction that ended in the past 60 days. If none are available, a letter of explanation can be submitted.
- 03
Estimate your income honestly
Your subsidy is based on what you expect to earn this calendar year, not last year — estimating low means repaying the difference at tax time. Use the calculator above to see your number first.
- 04
Apply at CoverME.gov
Enroll through CoverME.gov, or by phone at 1-866-636-0355.
- 05
Pick by total cost, not premium
The real annual cost is premium plus deductible, copays, and coinsurance — a cheaper-premium plan can cost more overall if you use care.
Marketplace coverage takes effect the first day of the month after job-based coverage ends and a plan is selected — it cannot start the same day the old coverage ends. If coverage was already lost, picking a plan by the end of the month starts coverage the first of the next month (e.g., lose coverage March 7, pick a plan by March 31, coverage starts April 1). If applying before a future loss, coverage starts the first day of the month after the old coverage ends.
COBRA vs the marketplace, honestly
COBRA's sticker shock has a simple cause. While you were employed, your employer paid a large share of your premium — often most of it — and you saw only your slice in each paycheck. COBRA lets you keep the identical plan, but you take over the entire premium yourself, and the plan can add an administrative charge of up to 2 percent on top. Same card, same network, same deductible progress — at up to 102 percent of the plan's true cost. The plan didn't get worse; the employer subsidy you didn't see is gone.
The marketplace replaces that employer subsidy with an income-based one. Your premium tax credit is set by your expected income for the calendar year, and a year that includes months without a paycheck often lands in subsidy range even if the salary before it was comfortable. As a reference point, a 40-year-old in Maine earning $39,100 — around 250% of the federal poverty level — would get roughly $434 per month toward the benchmark silver plan, which costs around $709 before subsidies. Run your own numbers before assuming COBRA is even close.
Two separate 60-day clocks start around the time coverage ends: one to elect COBRA, and one — 60 days — to use your marketplace enrollment window. While both are open you can change course freely: skip COBRA and enroll in the marketplace, or elect COBRA and still switch. But once you've elected COBRA and your 60 days run out, you're generally committed until open enrollment. Dropping COBRA early by choice doesn't create a new enrollment right; the main mid-year exits are COBRA running out on its own or your former employer ending its contribution (other qualifying life events, like marriage or a move, can also open a window).
Which is why COBRA, despite the price, is sometimes the right call. If you're mid-treatment — chemotherapy, a pregnancy, a scheduled surgery — COBRA keeps your doctors, your prior authorizations, and your accumulated deductible intact. A new marketplace plan starts the deductible at zero, and switching networks mid-care has costs that never show up in a premium comparison. If you've already met your deductible for the year, finishing the year on COBRA can beat starting over on a cheaper plan. The honest comparison is total cost for the rest of the year, not premium against premium.
What to watch out for
COBRA looks familiar — check the price before you sign
The COBRA election notice offers the exact plan you already know, which makes it the path of least resistance. The price is the catch: you pay the full premium, including the share your employer used to cover, plus an administrative charge of up to 2 percent. Many people see a bill several times their old payroll deduction. Before electing, get a subsidized quote through CoverME.gov — a year with unemployment in it often qualifies for real help, and the comparison takes minutes. COBRA can still win on continuity of care, but it should win a comparison, not a coin flip.
Two 60-day clocks that don't wait for each other
Losing job-based coverage starts two windows at once: 60 days to elect COBRA and 60 days to enroll in a marketplace plan. While both are open, you can change your mind freely — elect COBRA and still move to the marketplace, or the reverse. Once the marketplace window closes, electing COBRA becomes a commitment: dropping it voluntarily doesn't open a new enrollment window, so you'd wait for open enrollment, which starts November 1, 2026 for next year's coverage. Put your coverage end date on a calendar and work backward. The deadline doesn't extend because the decision was hard.
A coverage gap breaks more than peace of mind
Marketplace coverage starts the first day of the month after you pick a plan — it can't start mid-month. If your job-based coverage ends on the 7th and you enroll that week, you're still uncovered until the 1st of the next month. That gap is where things break: prescription refills get denied at the pharmacy, ongoing care gets billed at full price, and a bad-luck ER visit lands entirely on you. Before your old coverage ends, ask your doctor about refills that bridge the gap, and time your enrollment so the handoff is as close to seamless as the rules allow.
Severance and unemployment checks count as income
Subsidies are based on your household's expected income for the whole calendar year, and that includes money people forget: severance pay, unemployment benefits, a spouse's wages, freelance work picked up between jobs. Leaving these out makes your estimate too low, which inflates your monthly subsidy — and the difference gets repaid when you file taxes. Add up what you earned before the layoff, what's coming in severance and unemployment, and a realistic guess at the rest of the year. If a new job lands, update your estimate the same month.
Estimating income for a partial year
The number the marketplace wants is your income for the full calendar year — not your income now, which may be close to zero. Someone laid off in June has already earned half a year's salary, and that money counts even though it's gone. This cuts both ways: it can make your subsidy smaller than your empty bank account suggests, but it can also keep you above the threshold for marketplace help in states where Medicaid wasn't expanded. Count what's already earned, add severance and unemployment, estimate the rest honestly, and revise when reality changes.
If your income drops near zero, check Medicaid first
Some people who lose a job shouldn't buy a marketplace plan at all. In states that expanded Medicaid, adults qualify with household income up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level — and Medicaid has no premium and no enrollment deadline. In states that didn't expand, marketplace subsidies generally require estimated annual income at least around the poverty level, and people below it can fall into a gap with no help from either program. The CoverME.gov application screens for both, so answer the income questions honestly and let it route you before you pay for anything.
Mistakes people make
Electing COBRA by default
The COBRA notice arrives with a deadline and a familiar plan name, and a lot of people sign it the way they'd renew a lease — without shopping. That reflex can cost hundreds of dollars a month, because COBRA bills the full premium your employer used to share. Get a subsidized marketplace quote first; it takes minutes through CoverME.gov. If COBRA still wins on your numbers — and for some people it does — sign it knowing why.
Letting the marketplace window close while deciding about COBRA
The two deadlines overlap, and the marketplace one is the door that locks. You can elect COBRA and still switch to a marketplace plan while your 60-day window is open — but once it closes, dropping COBRA by choice doesn't reopen it. People who spend two months deliberating wake up committed to COBRA's full premium until open enrollment. Decide inside the window, even if the decision is to stay put.
Underestimating income to get a bigger subsidy
Telling the marketplace a lower number than you expect to earn buys a cheaper premium now and a bill later. Advance subsidies are reconciled on your tax return: if your actual income comes in higher than your estimate, you repay some or all of the extra help you received. After a layoff it's genuinely easy to underestimate by accident — severance, unemployment benefits, and the months you already worked all count. Estimate the full year honestly. The subsidy you keep is the one you were entitled to.
Assuming new coverage starts the day the old plan ends
Marketplace coverage begins the first day of the month after you pick a plan — never mid-month, and never the same day your job-based coverage ends. Lose coverage on March 7, enroll March 20, and you're covered April 1, not March 21. People discover this at the pharmacy counter with an expired card. If your coverage ends mid-month, plan for the gap: refill prescriptions early, reschedule routine care, and know what an uninsured week would mean for anything ongoing.
Dropping COBRA mid-year without doing the deductible math
If you've been on COBRA a few months and already paid most of your deductible, switching to a cheaper plan resets that progress to zero — the new plan starts a fresh deductible. For someone with surgery scheduled or treatment underway, the premium savings can be smaller than the deductible they'd pay twice. Before leaving COBRA, compare what the rest of the year costs on each plan, deductibles included, not just the monthly bills. Sometimes the expensive plan is the cheaper year.
Frequently asked questions
Can I get health insurance between jobs?
- Yes. Losing job-based coverage qualifies you for a special enrollment period: you have 60 days from the date your coverage ends to pick a marketplace plan, and you can apply up to 60 days before a known end date. This applies whether you quit, were laid off, or were fired. Coverage starts the first of the month after you choose a plan, so a short gap is possible if your old coverage ends mid-month — plan prescriptions and appointments around it.
Is COBRA cheaper than an Obamacare plan?
- Usually not, but check both. COBRA charges the full premium — your old share plus everything your employer paid — and can add up to 2 percent in administrative fees. Marketplace subsidies are based on your income for the calendar year, which a job loss often lowers enough to qualify for real help. COBRA can still win if you're mid-treatment, you've met your deductible, or your doctors aren't in any marketplace network. Price both before signing either.
How long do I have to enroll after losing job coverage?
- You have 60 days from the day your job-based coverage ends. You can also enroll up to 60 days ahead of a loss you know is coming, which is the most reliable way to avoid a gap. Miss the window, and you generally wait for open enrollment — November 1, 2026 to December 31, 2026 for next year's coverage — unless another qualifying event, like marriage or a move, opens a new one.
Do I qualify if I quit my job?
- Yes. The special enrollment period applies whether you quit, were laid off, or were fired — what matters is that you lost qualifying job-based coverage, not why. One exception: voluntarily dropping coverage you have as someone's dependent, while you're still eligible for it, doesn't qualify on its own. If the coverage itself is ending — your hours dropped, the plan was discontinued, a divorce ended your eligibility — you're covered by the same 60-day window.
When does my new coverage start after I enroll?
- The first day of the month after you pick a plan. It can't start the same day your job-based coverage ends, and it can't start mid-month. If you lose coverage March 7 and pick a plan by March 31, you're covered April 1. If you apply before a future loss, coverage starts the first of the month after the old plan ends. The earlier in your window you enroll, the smaller any gap.
Do I need documents to prove I lost coverage?
- Sometimes. After you apply, your eligibility notice tells you whether documents are required — if they are, you have 30 days after picking a plan to send them, and you can't use the coverage until eligibility is confirmed and the first premium is paid. Acceptable proof includes a cancellation letter or premium bill from the insurer, a letter from your employer on letterhead, a COBRA notice, or pay stubs showing a health-coverage deduction that ended. If none exist, you can submit a letter of explanation.
Do unemployment benefits count as income for subsidies?
- Yes. Unemployment compensation counts toward the household income your subsidy is based on, along with wages you earned before the layoff, severance pay, and anything you expect to earn later in the year. The marketplace asks for your estimate for the whole calendar year, not your income this month. Leaving unemployment checks out makes your estimate too low — and the extra subsidy that buys gets repaid on your tax return.
Does severance pay count against my subsidy?
- Yes — severance is taxable income, and it counts toward the annual household income that sets your subsidy. So do the paychecks you already earned this year before the layoff. That can make your subsidy smaller than your current bank balance suggests, since the marketplace looks at the full calendar year rather than the months you'll spend job hunting. Estimate the whole year, severance included, and update the number if a new job changes the picture.
Can I switch from COBRA to a marketplace plan later?
- Only in specific situations. Within 60 days of losing your job-based coverage, you can still switch freely. After that, you can leave COBRA for a marketplace plan only when COBRA runs out, when your former employer stops contributing to the premium, when a government subsidy that was paying part of your COBRA premium ends, or during open enrollment, when anyone can switch for any reason. Dropping COBRA early just because you found something cheaper doesn't qualify — so do the comparison before your window closes.
What if I missed the 60-day deadline?
- You generally wait for open enrollment, which runs November 1, 2026 to December 31, 2026 for coverage starting next year. The exceptions are other qualifying life events — getting married, having a baby, moving to a new coverage area, or losing other qualifying coverage — each of which opens its own enrollment window. In the meantime, check whether you qualify for Medicaid, which has no enrollment deadline, and know that any care you get while uninsured is billed at full price.
Is there a penalty for having a gap in coverage?
- There's no federal penalty — that ended in 2019. A few states and the District of Columbia run their own coverage requirements with tax penalties, so check your state's rules. The bigger cost of a gap isn't a fine, though: it's paying list price for prescriptions, appointments, and anything unexpected. If you're between jobs, the 60-day window exists so the gap can be short or zero — use it early rather than at the deadline.
Can my spouse and kids enroll too?
- Yes. If your family was covered under your job-based plan, everyone who lost that coverage qualifies for the same 60-day enrollment window. You can put the whole household on one marketplace application, and your subsidy is based on combined household income and size. Children may qualify for Medicaid or CHIP at income levels where adults don't — the application checks automatically and routes each person to what they're eligible for.
Related guides
Close with the plan-picking rule that earns its repetition: buy the year, not the month. Take each finalist plan and add twelve premiums to the care you can already predict — the prescription you refill monthly, the specialist you see each quarter, the deductible you'd face if the predictable turned serious. Ranked that way, the lineup in Maine usually reshuffles, and the plan with the third-cheapest premium quietly wins. One ranking note while you're at it: if your income qualifies you for cost-sharing reductions, look hard at silver plans specifically — the reductions attach only to silver, and they shrink deductibles and copays in ways a bronze plan's lower premium can't match. The marketplace applies them automatically when you enroll through CoverME.gov; your job is simply not to dismiss silver on premium alone. That's the whole exit checklist: total cost, silver check, honest income figure, enrolled before day 60. The month after a job ends asks a lot of you. This part, at least, is solvable with arithmetic. If two finalists still tie after the total-cost pass, break the tie on the out-of-pocket maximum — the ceiling on what a catastrophic year can cost you — and on whether your hospital of choice is in network. Premiums repeat monthly, but those two numbers decide whether a bad year stays merely bad.
See your real number — the estimate takes about a minute and shows prices for your actual ZIP.
All Maine figures here are estimates, not quotes — final premiums are set at enrollment.