Health insurance after getting married in New Hampshire
Updated for plan year 2026
The clocks around a wedding are strict, so meet them before the plans. The marketplace window is 60 days, counted from the wedding day itself — there's no applying ahead of the date, however long it's been set. Coverage from a plan you pick takes effect the first of the month after you pick it; marriage gets an accelerated start that ignores the usual mid-month cutoffs, but it is never retroactive — nothing reaches back to the wedding day. (A new baby's coverage can reach back to the birth; a marriage's cannot.) If a work plan is in play, its clock is shorter still — at least 30 days to add a spouse.
Practical consequences: a couple deciding in month two can still enroll, but the stretch between the wedding and the start date is theirs to manage, so don't cancel existing coverage early. And each month of drift pushes the start another month. New Hampshire runs enrollment through HealthCare.gov — 46 plans for 2026 — and the prior-coverage rule in the next section decides whether the window opened at all.
What you would actually pay in New Hampshire
Pre-filled with a New Hampshire ZIP — change it to yours for exact results.
Here's how to use the rest of this page, depending on what the number above just told you. If the subsidized premium looks manageable, your remaining work is plan selection — read the cost and enrollment sections, then the mistakes list, and you can realistically finish on HealthCare.gov within the hour. If the number looks high, the worked example and the deep-dive section explain the levers that actually move it: your income estimate, your household details, and in some cases the calendar itself. And if the number looks too good, trust it provisionally — then verify the income you entered, because optimistic estimates are the single most common source of tax-time regret in this system. The marketplace pays your subsidy in advance against the figure you give it, and the reconciliation at filing season is indifferent to good intentions. Whichever bucket you're in, New Hampshire's specifics are below: the actual market, the real prices, the deadlines that govern your situation, and answers to the questions people in your position ask most often. One habit serves all three buckets: write down the income figure you used today. When your situation changes — and it will — knowing exactly what the marketplace thinks you earn makes the update a two-minute correction instead of an archaeology project, and it keeps the advance subsidy honest all year.
The marketplace in New Hampshire
New Hampshire uses the federal marketplace, HealthCare.gov — that is where you compare plans and enroll. For plan year 2026, 46 plans from 4 insurers are filed statewide.
New Hampshire 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 15, 2026. PY2027 window: shortened to Nov 1 - Dec 15, 2026 by the 2025 CMS Marketplace Integrity and Affordability final rule (previous standard window was Nov 1 - Jan 15). Coverage starts Jan 1, 2027.
What a Silver plan costs in New Hampshire
| Age | Silver from | Silver typical |
|---|---|---|
| 30 | $345/mo | $399/mo |
| 40 | $388/mo | $450/mo |
| 50 | $542/mo | $628/mo |
| 60 | $824/mo | $955/mo |
Bronze plans start at $317/month at age 40.
Statewide range across rating areas for plan year 2026 — your area may differ; the calculator above uses your actual ZIP. Source: CMS Marketplace public use files.
A worked example
A married couple earning $63,500 a year — about 300% of the federal poverty level — their estimated subsidy against a typical Silver benchmark in New Hampshire is $0/month.
Your number depends on your actual income, household, and ZIP — run it above.
How to enroll in New Hampshire
- 01
Check your window
This qualifying event opens a special enrollment period: you have up to 60 days after it to pick a plan — there is no apply-ahead window. Miss it and you generally wait for the next open enrollment.
- 02
Gather your documents
Same notice-driven process as other life events: after applying, your Marketplace Eligibility Notice tells you whether you must submit documents — 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. To confirm the marriage, acceptable documents must show the names of the people who married and the date of the marriage: a marriage certificate, marriage license, official public record of the marriage, a marriage affidavit signed and dated by the person who officiated or an official witness, or a religious document. If two people on the same application married each other, one document showing both names is enough; a letter of explanation can be submitted if none are available. HealthCare.gov's published marriage-document list covers the marriage itself — it doesn't list separate proof for the prior-coverage requirement.
- 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 HealthCare.gov
Enroll through HealthCare.gov, or by phone at 1-800-318-2596.
- 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.
Marriage gets an accelerated start date: coverage takes effect the first day of the month after you pick a plan, no matter what day of the month you pick it (the usual mid-month cutoff doesn't apply — 45 CFR 155.420(b)(2)(ii) requires the first day of the month following plan selection). HealthCare.gov puts it simply: pick a plan by the last day of the month and your coverage can start the first day of the next month. Coverage is not retroactive to the wedding date.
Two coverages becoming one — honestly
Two coverage situations walk into a marriage; here's the matrix for merging them, organized by total yearly cost rather than reflex.
Both spouses have employer plans. The options: keep both as they are, or move one spouse onto the other's family tier — work plans must allow at least 30 days after the marriage for that. Compare each spouse's premium share, what each employer contributes, and the deductibles you'd face separately versus together. Two single-coverage plans frequently beat one family tier; sometimes the reverse. The marketplace rarely wins this branch, because an affordable employer offer generally ends subsidy eligibility for whoever it covers — but rarely isn't never, and unsubsidized marketplace plans occasionally beat a thin work plan on total cost.
One employer plan, one marketplace plan. The live questions: what does adding the spouse at work cost, and what happens to the marketplace subsidy now that it's figured on joint income? Run both honestly — the joint income often shrinks the marketplace help, since the poverty line for two isn't double the line for one, and that can tilt the answer toward the work plan even when it didn't look that way before the wedding. Answer the application's employer-offer questions exactly as written: the affordability test has a precise definition, and the application applies it for you.
Both on the marketplace, or one uninsured. The marriage window — 60 days from the wedding, generally requiring that at least one of you had coverage in the prior 60 days — handles enrollment through HealthCare.gov. Report the marriage either way: every subsidy in the household now runs on the joint number, and New Hampshire's recalculation can move premiums in either direction.
Whatever branch you're in, the method is constant: take each realistic arrangement, add twelve months of premiums to the deductibles and the care you can already predict, and put the arrangements side by side. New Hampshire's marketplace inputs — 46 plans from 4 insurers, benchmark silver at $450 — are in the estimator above. The work side takes one email to HR. An evening total, for a decision that runs all year.
Check your enrollment deadline
Enter your qualifying event and date to see how many days you have left and what you will need to document.
Check my SEP deadlineWhat to watch out for
The one-spouse coverage rule comes first
Marriage opens an enrollment window only if at least one spouse had qualifying health coverage — an employer plan, a marketplace plan, Medicaid, and similar — for one or more days during the 60 days before the wedding. Either spouse satisfies it, and the coverage needn't have lasted to the wedding day. The exceptions: living in a foreign country or U.S. territory during that stretch, membership in a federally recognized tribe or ANCSA corporation, or living where no marketplace plan was available. Two people who were both uninsured generally can't create the window by marrying. Keep a bill or letter proving the qualifying coverage.
Coverage starts forward, never backward
A plan picked through the marriage window takes effect the first day of the month after you pick it — marriage gets an accelerated start, so the usual mid-month cutoffs don't apply, but nothing is retroactive to the wedding day. (Contrast the new-baby window, where coverage can reach back to the birth.) The weeks between the wedding and the start date are covered by whatever plans you already have, so keep existing coverage running through the transition — and note that drifting past a month-end delays the start by exactly one month.
Marrying can change your subsidy — in either direction
Subsidies compare household income to the poverty level for the household's size, and the poverty line for a couple is well below double the single line. Combine two incomes and the joint figure often lands at a higher percentage of the poverty level than either did alone — less help, and above 400% of the poverty level in 2026, none. Marry someone earning much less and the math can improve instead. Either way, report the marriage and reset the income estimate to the joint number; the tax return reconciles against household income on a joint filing.
The work-plan clock is half as long
If either spouse can join an employer plan, that path runs on its own deadline: job-based plans must allow at least 30 days after the marriage to request enrollment for the employee or new spouse, with coverage starting no later than the first of the month after the request. Thirty days against the marketplace's 60, both from the wedding day — and the employer path has no prior-coverage requirement. Get the work plan's quote first, while both windows are still open, then compare total yearly cost.
Proof of marriage, if asked
Documents are requested only when your eligibility notice says so, with 30 days after plan selection to submit. The acceptable list: a marriage certificate or license, an official public record, a marriage affidavit signed by the officiant or an official witness, or a religious document — anything showing both names and the date. If you both enrolled on the same application, one document covers the pair, and a letter of explanation can substitute if nothing on the list exists for you. Enroll first; the paperwork follows the pick, not the other way around.
Filing jointly is part of the subsidy deal
The premium tax credit for a married couple generally requires filing a joint federal tax return for the year — the reconciliation of any advance subsidy runs through that joint filing, measured against the household's combined income. Couples planning to file separately should know that path generally forfeits the credit; if joint filing isn't safe or possible in your situation, special rules may apply, and the marketplace or a tax professional can walk through them. Build the filing decision into the coverage decision rather than discovering the link in April.
Mistakes people make
Assuming the wedding alone opens the window
The marriage window has a gate: generally, at least one spouse must have had qualifying coverage for a day or more in the 60 days before the wedding. Couples where both were uninsured plan their enrollment around an event that opens nothing — and discover it after the honeymoon. Check the gate first; if it's closed, the real paths are Medicaid (no window), another qualifying event, or open enrollment.
Letting the newlywed months eat the window
60 days from the wedding sounds long until it competes with thank-you notes, a honeymoon, and a merged apartment. The clock doesn't pause, and there's a second cost to drifting: coverage starts the first of the month after you pick, so each month-end you slip past delays the start by a month. Put day 60 and the next month-end on the calendar the week you're back.
Keeping the old, single income estimate
Marketplace subsidies now run on the household's joint income, and the tax-time reconciliation measures against that joint figure on a joint return. A couple that leaves each application running on one salary keeps collecting advance credit calculated for a household that no longer exists — and repays the difference at filing. Report the marriage and reset the estimate to the combined number the same week.
Deliberating past the work plan's 30 days
The employer path expires first: as few as 30 days from the wedding to add a spouse to a job-based plan, against the marketplace's 60. Couples comparing carefully but slowly can lose the cheaper option while perfecting the comparison. Get the work-plan quote in week one, decide inside its window, and let the marketplace's longer clock be the backup rather than the excuse.
Expecting coverage back to the wedding date
Nothing about this window is retroactive — a plan picked through it starts the first of the month after the pick. Couples who cancel old coverage at the wedding, assuming the new plan reaches back, hand themselves an uninsured stretch. Keep existing plans running until the new start date is confirmed; the overlap premium is cheaper than any gap it prevents.
Frequently asked questions
What if I missed the 60-day deadline?
- You generally wait for open enrollment, which runs November 1, 2026 to December 15, 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.
How are marketplace subsidies actually calculated?
- The subsidy is the gap between a benchmark premium and what the law says your household should pay. The marketplace finds the second-lowest-cost silver plan in your area — the benchmark — and caps your share of it at a percentage of your income that rises with earnings. The difference is your premium tax credit, and you can apply it to any metal tier, not just silver. In New Hampshire, the benchmark for a 40-year-old runs $450 a month before subsidies, which is why the same plan costs different households very different amounts.
What counts as income for marketplace subsidies?
- Modified adjusted gross income for your household: adjusted gross income from your tax return, plus tax-exempt interest, untaxed foreign income, and non-taxable Social Security benefits. In practice that means wages, self-employment profit, unemployment compensation, severance, investment income, and retirement distributions all count; SNAP benefits, child support received, and gifts don't. It's the expected total for the calendar year across everyone on your tax return — not your income this month, and not just the applicant's.
What's the difference between bronze, silver, and gold plans?
- The split between premium and out-of-pocket costs. Bronze plans have the lowest premiums and the highest deductibles; gold (and platinum, where offered) reverse that; silver sits between. The metal says nothing about care quality or network size — those vary plan by plan. Silver has one special property: if your income qualifies, extra cost-sharing reductions apply only to silver plans, lowering deductibles and copays substantially. Among the 46 plans in New Hampshire, compare total annual cost — premiums plus expected care — rather than premium alone.
Do marketplace plans cover pre-existing conditions?
- Yes, all of them. Every marketplace plan must cover treatment for conditions you had before enrolling, can't charge you more for them, and can't refuse to sell to you because of them. Pregnancy is covered from the day your plan starts, even if it began earlier. This is a legal requirement, not a plan feature to shop for — which means the real comparison points are premiums, deductibles, networks, and drug lists, where plans genuinely differ.
When is open enrollment in New Hampshire?
- Open enrollment runs November 1, 2026 to December 15, 2026 for coverage starting next year, through HealthCare.gov. Note that these windows are shorter than in past years — federal rules tightened enrollment deadlines starting with 2027 coverage, so a January deadline you remember may no longer exist. Outside the window, you need a qualifying life event — losing coverage, marriage, a move, a birth — to enroll. If one applies to you, you don't have to wait.
Can I change plans in the middle of the year?
- Generally no. Once enrolled, you keep your plan until the next open enrollment unless a qualifying life event — a move, marriage, a baby, losing other coverage — opens a special enrollment window. Income changes are different: you can and should report them any time, and your subsidy adjusts, but the plan itself stays. That's a reason to choose carefully up front: the deductible and network you pick are usually yours for the rest of the year.
What if my income lands near the Medicaid cutoff?
- Apply and let the application sort it out — New Hampshire expanded Medicaid, so the marketplace checks your estimate against the 138-percent-of-poverty threshold and routes you to Medicaid or a subsidized plan accordingly. If your income moves across the line mid-year, report it: people shift between Medicaid and marketplace coverage as income changes, and both directions are normal. Don't shade your estimate to land on the side you prefer; the reconciliation on your tax return trues up subsidy dollars either way.
Is HealthCare.gov the same thing as Obamacare?
- Effectively, yes. Obamacare is the nickname for the Affordable Care Act, and HealthCare.gov is the federal marketplace the law created — it's where residents of New Hampshire shop for ACA plans, since the state uses the federal platform rather than running its own. The plans, the subsidies, and the protections like pre-existing condition coverage all come from the same law. There is no separate, better version of these plans sold elsewhere; off-marketplace plans exist but can't offer subsidies.
Does getting married qualify me for a special enrollment period?
- Generally yes, with one condition most pages skip: at least one spouse must have had qualifying health coverage for one or more days during the 60 days before the wedding (exceptions for time abroad or in a U.S. territory, tribal membership, or living where no plan was available). Clear that, and you have 60 days from the wedding to enroll through HealthCare.gov, with coverage starting the first of the month after you pick a plan.
We were both uninsured before the wedding. Can we enroll now?
- Generally no — the marriage window requires that at least one of you had qualifying coverage during the 60 days before the wedding, and two uninsured people can't create the opportunity by marrying. Exceptions: living abroad or in a U.S. territory during that stretch, tribal or ANCSA membership, or living where no marketplace plan was available. Otherwise, check Medicaid — no enrollment window, income-based — and plan for open enrollment, November 1, 2026 to December 15, 2026.
When does coverage start after getting married?
- The first day of the month after you pick a plan — no matter what day of the month you pick it. Marriage gets an accelerated start date: the mid-month cutoffs that delay other enrollments don't apply, so picking on the last day of a month still starts coverage the next day. It is never retroactive to the wedding itself, so keep existing coverage running through the transition.
Related guides
For the administrative aftermath, keep the categories straight. The marriage was the qualifying event; everything downstream is reporting. A name change opens no window — it's a correction to file with the marketplace so your records match your documents. A move across town is likewise a report, not an event; only a move to a new ZIP code or county with different plan options carries its own enrollment rights, with its own rules. The household change itself — income and size — is the report with money attached: every advance subsidy in the house gets refigured on the joint numbers. So batch the chores: one session with HealthCare.gov to report the marriage, correct names, update the address, and set the income estimate to the combined figure. If you're making an enrollment change too, the 60-day window from the wedding is the deadline that matters; the corrections have none, but they protect the enrollment that does. New Hampshire coverage runs cleaner when the records do.
See your real number — the estimate takes about a minute and shows prices for your actual ZIP.
All New Hampshire figures here are estimates, not quotes — final premiums are set at enrollment.