Health insurance for the self-employed in Alabama (2026)
Updated for plan year 2026
Start with the real number: in Alabama, the benchmark silver plan for a 40-year-old sits at $688 a month before subsidies, with 54 plans available through HealthCare.gov from 4 insurers. Whether you pay sticker price depends on your income — and for self-employed people, income is exactly the complicated part.
Marketplace subsidies key off your expected income for the whole calendar year, not what this month looks like. A strong quarter doesn't disqualify you, and a weak one doesn't lock in a bigger subsidy. What matters is an honest annual estimate, updated when things change, with the final accounting settled on your tax return.
There's also a tax break worth knowing before you compare a single plan: self-employed people can generally deduct health premiums directly from income, whether or not they itemize. Between the subsidy and the deduction, the list price you see first is rarely what you actually pay. This page works through all of it.
It helps to know what doesn't count, too. SNAP benefits, child support you receive, and gifts stay out of the income picture entirely; unemployment compensation and severance go in. The marketplace wants modified adjusted gross income for the household — if your spouse earns a salary, that goes in the same pot, and the subsidy is figured on the total.
What you would actually pay in Alabama
Pre-filled with a Alabama ZIP — change it to yours for exact results.
Before you act on that estimate, two checks are worth a minute. First, the income figure. Subsidies are based on your expected income for the whole calendar year — every job, every household member who files with you — not your income this month. If you guessed low to be safe, the estimate is too generous, and the difference gets settled on your tax return. Second, the plan behind the number. The cheapest premium on the list is not the cheapest plan for everyone: a plan you'd actually use has a deductible, a copay structure, and a network, and those decide your real cost for the year. The sections below take these in order — what coverage costs in Alabama beyond the premium, the deadlines that apply to your situation, and the mistakes that show up most often. There's also what the estimate deliberately leaves out: cost-sharing help. If your income qualifies, silver plans carry built-in reductions that shrink deductibles and copays — sometimes dramatically — and that value never shows up in a premium estimate. A silver plan that looks mid-pack on monthly price can be the standout once those reductions are priced in, so don't rank plans on premium alone. Keep the reconciliation in view as you weigh all this: whatever subsidy the estimate shows gets paid in advance against your stated income, then squared with your real income on next year's tax return. The plan choice is yours to optimize; the income figure is yours to get right.
The marketplace in Alabama
Alabama uses the federal marketplace, HealthCare.gov — that is where you compare plans and enroll. For plan year 2026, 54 plans from 4 insurers are filed statewide.
Alabama has not expanded Medicaid, so if your income falls below the federal poverty level you may land in the coverage gap. Honest answer: a marketplace plan without subsidies may not be affordable — check Medicaid and local options first. 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 Alabama
| Age | Silver from | Silver typical |
|---|---|---|
| 30 | $518/mo | $611/mo |
| 40 | $583/mo | $688/mo |
| 50 | $815/mo | $962/mo |
| 60 | $1,238/mo | $1,461/mo |
Bronze plans start at $366/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 single adult earning $47,000 a year — about 300% of the federal poverty level — would get an estimated subsidy of $298/month against the typical Silver benchmark in Alabama.
Your number depends on your actual income, household, and ZIP — run it above.
How to enroll in Alabama
- 01
Check your window
Open enrollment 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. Outside that window you need a qualifying life event to enroll.
- 02
Gather your documents
Have proof of your expected income ready — a recent tax return, 1099s, or current profit-and-loss records all work for self-employment income.
- 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.
The self-employed money mechanics
Every employee who buys marketplace coverage gets asked their income; you get asked to predict it. The marketplace wants your expected modified adjusted gross income for the calendar year, and for the self-employed that means net profit — revenue minus business expenses — plus any other income on your household's return. Nobody invoicing clients knows that number in February. The system is built for that: you're asked for a reasonable estimate, not a promise, and you can revise it all year on HealthCare.gov as the picture sharpens.
What makes honesty profitable is the reconciliation. Subsidies are paid in advance against your estimate, then squared with reality on your tax return. Earn more than you estimated and you repay some or all of the excess; earn less and the difference comes back to you as a credit. The expensive failure mode is lowballing the estimate for a cheaper monthly premium and meeting a four-figure repayment in April. The cheap habit is updating your estimate within a month of any real change — a refund at filing is a fine surprise, a clawback is not.
The deduction is the half of this most self-employed people learn about late. Premiums you pay for yourself and your family are generally deductible directly against income — no itemizing — up to your net profit, for any month you weren't eligible for employer coverage through a job or a spouse. And because the deduction lowers the very income your subsidy is computed from, the two feed each other: lower income, higher subsidy, different net premium, recalculated deduction. The IRS documents an iterative method for settling the circle; in practice, tax software runs the loop and you simply claim both.
If your medical spending is light or unpredictable, look at HSA-eligible plans before settling on a richer one. Paired with a health savings account, the combination works out to contributions you deduct, growth that isn't taxed, and medical withdrawals that aren't taxed either. The IRS sets the contribution limits each year — use the current figures, not a remembered one. In strong months you shelter income; in lean months you skip contributions with no penalty. That flexibility fits self-employment better than most benefits designed around steady paychecks.
What to watch out for
Estimating income that won't sit still
The marketplace asks what you'll earn this calendar year, and self-employment makes that a genuine estimate, not a lookup. Start with last year's net profit — after business expenses, not gross revenue — then adjust for what you already know: a contract that ended, a client that signed, rates that changed. You won't be exactly right, and you don't need to be. Subsidies paid during the year are reconciled against your actual return at tax time, so the goal is an estimate honest enough that the true-up is small in either direction.
The premium deduction, in plain terms
If you're self-employed with a net profit, you can generally deduct the health premiums you pay for yourself, your spouse, and your dependents directly from your income — no itemizing needed. Two limits: the deduction can't exceed your self-employment profit, and it's off the table for any month you were eligible for an employer plan, including through a spouse. There's a useful side effect, too. The deduction lowers the income your subsidy is based on, which can raise the subsidy itself; tax software settles the circular math automatically.
Pairing an HSA with the right plan
A health savings account works only alongside a plan flagged HSA-eligible — a high deductible by itself isn't enough, so check the label when you compare plans. The tax treatment is the draw, and it's threefold: contributions reduce your taxable income, the balance grows untaxed, and withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are untaxed as well. Contribution limits are set by the IRS each year, so use the current figures. For self-employed people with uneven income, the flexibility matters as much as the tax break — contribute in strong months, skip lean ones, no penalty either way.
Report changes during the year, not at tax time
Your subsidy is only as accurate as your last income update. When a big project lands, a client leaves, or you take a part-time W-2 job on the side, report it to HealthCare.gov within the month — the subsidy adjusts going forward, and the year-end reconciliation stays small. Waiting until tax season means months of subsidy paid on stale numbers, and if the drift ran in your favor, the IRS collects the difference when you file. A quarterly calendar reminder to sanity-check your estimate costs five minutes and prevents the most common unpleasant surprise in this system.
Choose by total cost, not premium
The premium is the only number on the comparison page that arrives every month, so it dominates the decision — and it shouldn't. Your real cost for the year is premiums times twelve, plus what you'll actually spend on care under each plan's deductible and copays. A bronze plan that saves money on premiums can give it all back, and more, if you take a daily prescription or see a specialist regularly. Price two or three plans against your known care for the year. The cheapest plan on the list and the cheapest plan for you are often different plans.
The subsidy is an advance, and advances get settled
Marketplace subsidies are paid ahead of time, every month, based on the income you predicted. The final amount you were actually owed is computed on your tax return from the income you actually earned. Earn more than estimated, and you repay some or all of the excess; earn less, and the difference comes back to you as a credit. Nobody withholds anything for you when you're self-employed, so this reconciliation is yours to manage — the same way you manage estimated taxes. Honest estimates and prompt updates keep April boring, which is the goal.
Mistakes people make
Forgetting the premium deduction entirely
Plenty of self-employed people pay marketplace premiums for years without learning that those premiums are generally deductible straight off their income — no itemizing required. On thousands of dollars of annual premiums, that's a real tax difference, every year it's missed. The deduction has limits — it can't exceed your net profit, and employer-plan eligibility through a spouse disqualifies those months — but if you qualify, claiming it is one line on your return. Check past returns too; missed deductions can sometimes be recovered by amending.
Buying bronze for the premium while taking a daily prescription
A bronze plan's premium looks like the obvious choice when cash flow is uneven. But bronze plans carry high deductibles, and if you have a prescription you fill every month or a specialist you see on schedule, you may pay list price for that care until the deductible is met. Run the year's math: premiums plus your known, recurring care under each plan. People with predictable medical costs often come out ahead on silver despite the bigger monthly number.
Setting the income estimate once and never touching it
An estimate made in November is stale by June for most self-employed people. If income rises and the marketplace doesn't know, you're collecting subsidy you'll repay at tax time; if income falls, you're overpaying premiums you didn't owe. Updating your estimate on HealthCare.gov takes a few minutes and adjusts the subsidy going forward. Treat it like invoicing — when the year's trajectory changes, the estimate changes with it.
Contributing to an HSA without an HSA-eligible plan
Not every high-deductible plan qualifies for a health savings account — only plans that meet the IRS's specific definition, and marketplaces label them. Contributing while enrolled in a non-qualifying plan means the contributions aren't deductible and excess amounts can owe an additional tax until withdrawn. Before funding an HSA, confirm the plan is flagged HSA-eligible for the months you're contributing. It's a checkbox-level mistake with paperwork-level consequences.
Reporting gross revenue instead of net profit
The marketplace wants your net self-employment income — revenue minus business expenses — not the top-line number on your invoices. Reporting gross overstates your income, which shrinks the subsidy you're offered and can push you past help you actually qualify for. The reverse error, deducting expenses twice or guessing low, sets up a repayment at tax time. Use the same discipline as your Schedule C: real revenue, real expenses, and a profit figure you could defend.
Frequently asked questions
Can I deduct health insurance premiums if I'm self-employed?
- Generally, yes. Self-employed people with a net profit can deduct premiums paid for themselves, a spouse, and dependents directly from income — it's an above-the-line deduction, so you get it whether or not you itemize. Two limits: the deduction can't exceed your net self-employment earnings, and you can't claim it for any month you were eligible for an employer-subsidized plan, including through a spouse's job. It's one of the most commonly missed tax breaks among freelancers.
Do I need an LLC or business license to buy marketplace coverage?
- No. The marketplace sells to individuals and households — sole proprietors, freelancers, gig workers, and contractors all buy the same plans as everyone else, with the same subsidies. Your business structure doesn't matter for eligibility; what matters is your household income and size. If you have employees, you have a separate option in the small-business marketplace, but for covering yourself and your family, the individual marketplace at HealthCare.gov is the standard route.
How do I estimate income that changes month to month?
- Estimate your net profit for the whole calendar year — last year's figure, adjusted for what you already know about this one, is the standard starting point. You're not promising a number; you're giving a reasonable forecast that you update as the year develops. When something real changes — a contract ends, a client signs — update your estimate with the marketplace and your subsidy adjusts going forward. The final accounting happens on your tax return, so honest estimates keep that settlement small.
What happens if I earn more than I estimated?
- You repay some or all of the extra subsidy when you file taxes. Subsidies are paid in advance against your estimate, then reconciled against your actual income on your return — earn more, and the difference becomes a balance due. Depending on your final income, repayment may be capped or may be the full amount. The fix is cheap: report income changes to the marketplace during the year, and the subsidy adjusts before the gap grows.
What happens if I earn less than I estimated?
- You get the difference back as a credit on your tax return — you were entitled to more subsidy than you received. If the drop is significant, report it during the year instead of waiting: your monthly subsidy increases immediately, and if your income falls far enough, you may qualify for Medicaid, which would cost less than any marketplace plan. A bad year is exactly the situation the income-update process exists for.
Do I report gross revenue or net profit?
- Net profit — your self-employment revenue minus business expenses, the same figure that flows to your tax return. Reporting gross revenue overstates your income and shrinks the subsidy you're offered, sometimes past thresholds you'd otherwise qualify under. Use the discipline you'd use on a Schedule C: real revenue, real expenses, and a defensible profit estimate. If you also have W-2 work, a spouse's income, or investment income, those count toward the household total too.
Can I get the subsidy and the premium deduction at the same time?
- Yes, and you should claim both. They interact: the deduction lowers your income, your subsidy is computed from that income, and the subsidy changes how much premium you actually paid — which changes the deduction. The IRS publishes an iterative method for settling this circle, and tax software runs it automatically. You can't double-dip on the same dollars — you only deduct premiums the subsidy didn't cover — but using both together is exactly how the system is designed to work.
What is an HSA and is it worth it for freelancers?
- A health savings account is a tax-advantaged account that pairs with specific high-deductible plans. The advantage is threefold: contributions reduce your taxable income, the balance grows untaxed, and withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are untaxed too. The IRS sets contribution limits each year — check the current figures. For freelancers, the fit is often good: contribute in strong months, skip lean ones, and the balance rolls over forever. The plan itself must be HSA-eligible, which the marketplace labels.
Can I open an HSA with any high-deductible plan?
- No — only plans that meet the IRS's specific definition of a high-deductible health plan qualify, and a big deductible alone doesn't guarantee that. Marketplaces flag qualifying plans as HSA-eligible, so check the label rather than the deductible. Contributing while enrolled in a non-qualifying plan means the contributions aren't deductible, and excess contributions owe an additional tax until withdrawn. If the HSA is part of your plan strategy, filter for HSA-eligible plans before comparing anything else.
Is a bronze plan a good idea for self-employed people?
- It depends on how much care you actually use. Bronze plans trade low premiums for high deductibles, which works well if you're healthy, rarely see a doctor, and mainly want protection against a catastrophe — especially paired with an HSA when the plan is eligible. It works badly if you take a daily prescription or see a specialist on schedule, because you'll pay full price for that care until the deductible is met. Add up premiums plus your known annual care under each plan before deciding; the answer varies more by prescription list than by income.
Do I have to re-enroll every year?
- You should review every year, even where auto-renewal exists. Open enrollment for Alabama runs November 1, 2026 to December 15, 2026, and it's the one chance to change plans without a qualifying event. Plans change premiums, networks, and drug lists annually, and your income estimate needs a fresh look anyway — especially with self-employment income. Letting a plan auto-renew on a stale income estimate is how people end up with the wrong subsidy and the wrong plan at the same time.
My spouse has employer coverage — can I still get a subsidy?
- Usually not, if you can join that plan and it's considered affordable under the marketplace's rules for your household. Being eligible for an employer plan — even through a spouse — generally blocks subsidies for you, and it also disqualifies the self-employed premium deduction for those months. If the spouse's plan is genuinely unaffordable by the marketplace's definition, subsidies can come back into play; the application walks through that test. Compare joining the spouse's plan against an unsubsidized marketplace plan before assuming either is cheaper.
Related guides
Choose the plan the way you'd price a business decision, because for you it is one. Total annual cost is premiums times twelve, plus the care you already know is coming, measured against each plan's deductible and copays. Run that math for a bronze, a silver, and a gold plan, and the ranking often surprises people — especially anyone with a regular prescription. Then take the tax side seriously. The premium deduction reduces your taxable income directly, the subsidy reduces your monthly bill, and if you pick an HSA-eligible plan, contributions cut your taxes further while building a cushion for future care. Stacked together, these change what coverage actually costs by more than plan-shopping alone ever will. Enrollment for Alabama runs through HealthCare.gov. Estimate income honestly, report changes when they happen, and let the tax return true things up at the end. And once you've picked, automate the premium like any other fixed cost. The plan only protects you while it's paid, and the months you most need the autopay are exactly the months you'd be tempted to skip it. If the premium genuinely stops fitting the budget mid-year, don't just cancel — update your income estimate first. A leaner year usually means a bigger subsidy, and the plan you were about to drop may simply need repricing against reality.
See your real number — the estimate takes about a minute and shows prices for your actual ZIP.
All Alabama figures here are estimates, not quotes — final premiums are set at enrollment.