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Texas Individual Health Insurance Laws & Regulations

If you do not have access to employer-sponsored group health plan, you may want to buy an individual policy from a private health insurer. However, in Texas - as in most other states - you have limited guaranteed access to individual health insurance in the private market. There are some alternatives to private individual health insurance - such as COBRA coverage, state continuation coverage, and Texas Health Insurance Risk Pool coverage. This chapter summarizes your protections under different kinds of health plan coverage.

Eligibility: How Am I Evaluated by Health Insurance Companies?

Each private health insurance company has the flexibility to create their own rules regarding which applicants will be accepted for an individual health insurance policy in Texas. Additionally, an applicant can be turned down by in insurance provider for any reason. The only exception to this is for newborns who are required to be covered under their parent's policy for the first 30 days and disabled, dependent children whose parents have a policy that covers dependents.

Although private insurance in the state is not guarantee issue, to comply with HIPAA Group-to-Individual Portability Coverage regulations, the state does guarantee acceptance into the Texas Health Insurance Risk Pool (the state's high-risk insurance pool), for those who are HIPAA eligible but have been unable to obtain coverage through a private insurer.

What Benefits Are Individual Health Insurers Required to Cover in Texas?

In Texas, individual health insurers are not required to provide standardized health plans, but there are certain benefits that insurers are required to cover, such as diabetes care and mammogram screenings.

How are Health Insurance Companies Allowed to Treat Pre-Existing Conditions in Texas?

In Texas, private insurers are allowed to go as far back as 24-months in an applicant's medical history to uncover a pre-existing condition. They can then either impose a 24-month exclusion period on the condition or add it to the policy's elimination rider (which means that it will likely never be covered). Additionally, if you make a claim for treatment related to a specific condition within the first 2 years of your policy, the insurer can look back up to 24-months prior to your application to see if it was a condition that should have been listed as pre-existing. If so, then your claim can be denied.

However, if the individual health insurer does not ask you questions about your health or medical treatment history when you apply for health coverage and it does not exclude a condition by name on your policy, it can only exclude pre-existing conditions for 12 months.

When determining if a condition is pre-existing, an individual health insurer is allowed to look back 5 years to see if you actually received care for a condition. In addition, the insurer can look for evidence of symptoms for which most people, in the insurer's opinion, would have sought care. This is called the prudent person standard. Individual health insurance policies can count pregnancy as a pre-existing condition, but not genetic information.

If your gap in health coverage was 63 days or more and your most recent coverage was under a group, government, individual, or church plan, you must be given credit for any creditable coverage in effect at any time during the 18 months preceding your application for coverage. This means that although you will have a pre-existing condition exclusion period, it will be shorter than it would otherwise be.

How are Individual Health Insurance Premiums Calculated?

The state allows for private health insurers to set their premiums at whatever rate they see fit, hoping that market competition will help keep them at a reasonable cost. Your insurer will take many factors into consideration when determining your rate, including age, health, and plan type.

There are no laws or restrictions regarding what an individual can be charged for a policy or exclusions on the reasons for quoting a high premium. When it is time to renew your policy, your insurer also has the right to raise your premium for any reason. The good news for health insurance customers is that their provider cannot cancel their policy because they get sick, even at renewal. They can, however, raise your premium to compensate for this increased risk.

Texas Health Insurance Consumer Protections

In Texas, as in many other states, your health insurance options are somewhat dependent on your health status. Even if you are sick, however, the laws protect you in the following ways:

Texas Health Insurance Protection Limitations

As important as they are, the federal and state health insurance reforms are limited. Therefore, you also should understand how the laws do not protect you.