eli5 employee benefits deductible

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i am simply not understanding what exactly a deductible is does that mean
if my deductible is 3,000 and i use to it to go to therapy i have to pay 3,000 in therapy sessions before they start to cover it or like how does it work?
(i’m 25 and don’t rlly have parents to explain it to me and google is just confusing me)

In: Economics

4 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

It kind of depends on how it’s defined, but usually yes. Your deductible is an amount of money that represents the maximum you’re responsible for and after that the insurance provides much more coverage.

Usually policies have one main deductible and anything you pay for out of pocket goes towards that. Sometimes there are funkier terms and conditions that apply. Like, I bet even if I meet my deductible my insurance still won’t start covering my prescription medications differently, and some specific specialist procedures probably still don’t fall under it. Nothing’s ever “standard” in these kinds of deals.

It’s one way the plan can negotiate price. Generally to get a low deductible you have to pay more, because it’s more likely you’ll meet a low deductible. Some plans are “cheap” because they have a very high deductible, but that can mean you owe a lot more if you have a big procedure done.

In a lot of ways, deductibles make buying health insurance a bit like gambling.

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