Health Insurance for the Self-Employed — Private PPO Plans Built Around Your Income
No employer plan? Earning too much for subsidies? Compare real off-exchange PPO coverage with a licensed agent — not a call center.
Yes — if you’re self-employed, you can get full health insurance, and you have more options than the ACA Marketplace.
Beyond on-exchange plans, self-employed individuals can buy private off-exchange PPO plans with broader doctor networks, no referral requirements, and year-round enrollment. These plans are health-based rather than income-based — a strong fit for freelancers, 1099 contractors, and small business owners who earn too much for subsidies.

The Health Insurance Problems Every Self-Employed Person Runs Into
You love the freedom of self-employment, but the health insurance market often feels like it’s working against you.
You pay the whole premium yourself
There’s no employer covering most of the cost the way a W-2 job would — you’re on the hook for 100%.
Your income changes month to month
That makes ACA subsidies a guessing game — and guessing high can mean paying credits back at tax time.
You may earn too much to get help
With enhanced subsidies expired for 2026, many self-employed earners now face full-price Marketplace premiums that have more than doubled on average.
Marketplace networks are often narrow
HMO/EPO plans can mean losing your doctor or needing referrals for every specialist visit.
No HR, no guidance
You’re handed dozens of plans and acronyms with nobody to explain them. Decision fatigue is real.
Your work moves — coverage should too
If you travel or work across state lines, a local-only network is a problem.
Why So Many Self-Employed People Overpay for Health Insurance
If health insurance feels like a punishment for being self-employed, you’re not imagining it — but most of the overpayment is fixable.
- They default to the Marketplace without comparing off-exchange plans. Healthcare.gov only shows on-exchange options — never the private PPO plans an agent can access.
- They assume they don’t qualify for subsidies, so they overbuy. Or they assume they do, and get surprised at tax time.
- They pick a plan on premium alone. A low premium with a $9,000 deductible and a narrow network can cost far more than a smartly chosen PPO once you actually use it.
- They don’t claim the self-employed health insurance deduction — leaving real money on the table.
- They buy a cheap “limited benefit” plan thinking it’s real coverage.
The fix isn’t spending more — it’s comparing every option, on and off the exchange, against how you actually use care.
Your 5 Health Insurance Options When You’re Self-Employed
The right path depends on your income, your health, and how often you actually use care.
| Option | Best for | Network | Enrollment | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ACA Marketplace (on-exchange) | Lower incomes that qualify for subsidies | Often HMO/EPO, narrower | Open Enrollment + SEPs | Only place to use subsidies |
| Private off-exchange PPO | Earn too much for subsidies; want broad networks | Broad PPO, no referrals | Often year-round | Health-based; what we specialize in |
| Spouse’s employer plan | Those with an insured spouse | Varies | Employer windows / SEP | Compare cost vs. your own plan |
| Health sharing ministry | Healthy, budget-driven, accept limits | Open (cash-pay style) | Year-round | Not insurance — limits apply |
| Short-term plan | Brief gaps between coverage | Varies | Year-round | Temporary, not comprehensive |
Private PPO Plans for the Self-Employed
A private off-exchange PPO is health coverage you buy outside Healthcare.gov, directly through a licensed agent. For self-employed professionals, the fit is obvious once you know what to look for.
These plans use nationwide PPO networks — the same ones large Fortune 500 employers use — so you can keep your own doctors, see specialists without a referral, and stay in-network when you travel or work across state lines. Most plans offer year-round enrollment, meaning you’re not locked into a single Open Enrollment window. Coverage is health-based, not income-based, so irregular income doesn’t penalize you and there’s no subsidy clawback at tax time.
Because these plans use medical underwriting, they reward healthy applicants with rates that are often 30–50% lower than full-price Marketplace plans for the same coverage level.
Why a Private PPO Works for Self-Employed People
Nationwide access. No referrals. Income-independent pricing. A real agent. Period.
Keep your own doctors
Broad PPO networks instead of a narrow HMO. Your existing care team stays intact.
No referrals
See specialists directly. You don’t need a gatekeeper’s permission.
Coverage that travels
Works when you’re on the road or across state lines — anywhere in the U.S.
Enroll any time of year
No waiting for Open Enrollment. Coverage often starts within days.
Income-independent pricing
Priced on health, not on a fluctuating income estimate. No subsidy clawback surprises.
A real licensed agent
One person who compares your options and is reachable when you have a claim question.
How Much Does Health Insurance Cost If You’re Self-Employed?
The short answer: for off-exchange PPO plans, your premium depends on age, location, the plan’s network and deductible, and tobacco use — not on your income. That’s a major difference from the Marketplace, where your income drives everything.
What actually moves the price:
- Premium vs. deductible trade-off. A higher deductible lowers your monthly cost; a lower deductible raises it. The right balance depends on how much care you actually use.
- Network breadth. Broader PPO networks generally cost a little more than narrow networks — but the network is what makes the plan usable when you travel or have a preferred specialist.
- Plan structure. Copays vs. coinsurance, out-of-pocket maximum, prescription coverage tiers, and dental/vision riders all shift the price.
The right plan is the one that’s cheapest across the year once you factor in how often you actually visit the doctor — not just the lowest sticker premium. The fastest way to a real number for your situation is a free quote; it takes a few minutes.
Can the Self-Employed Deduct Health Insurance Premiums?
Generally, yes. Self-employed people with a net profit can often deduct health, dental, and qualifying long-term care premiums for themselves, a spouse, and dependents as an above-the-line deduction — meaning you don’t have to itemize to claim it.
A few key conditions usually apply:
- The deduction generally cannot exceed your business’s net profit.
- You usually can’t take it for any month you were eligible for an employer-subsidized plan — including through a spouse’s job.
- The plan should be established in the name of the business (or in your name, for sole proprietors).
Because it’s an above-the-line deduction, it lowers your adjusted gross income — which can also help you qualify for other tax benefits.
This is general information, not tax advice. Confirm the details with a tax professional for your specific situation.
When Can Self-Employed People Sign Up for Coverage?
Private off-exchange PPO plans are typically available year-round. You don’t have to wait for Open Enrollment. ACA Marketplace plans, on the other hand, are limited to Open Enrollment unless you have a Qualifying Life Event that opens a Special Enrollment Period.
Common Qualifying Life Events include:
- Loss of existing health coverage (job loss, COBRA expiring, aging off a parent’s plan)
- Marriage or divorce
- Moving to a new ZIP code or county
- Having a baby or adopting a child
- Significant change in household income
For the self-employed — who often need coverage mid-year between contracts, after a major project, or when an existing plan stops being affordable — year-round availability is one of the biggest practical advantages of private PPO coverage.
Who Is a Good Fit for a Private PPO?
Private PPO plans tend to be the right fit for self-employed professionals who value flexibility, broad networks, and predictable pricing.
Private plans are health-based, so a brief health profile helps determine the best fit — a quick call tells us if it’s a match.
Private PPO vs. the ACA Marketplace — Which Is Cheaper for You?
There’s no universal answer here — the right choice depends on whether you actually qualify for meaningful Marketplace subsidies. Here’s the honest version:
- The Marketplace wins when your income is low enough to qualify for substantial premium tax credits — especially if you also have pre-existing conditions that make underwriting harder.
- A private PPO often wins when you earn too much for meaningful subsidies, want a broad nationwide network, need to enroll outside of Open Enrollment, or are healthy enough to benefit from medically underwritten pricing.
A side-by-side quote on both paths is the only way to know which is genuinely cheaper for your household. We do that comparison for free — and we’ll tell you honestly if the Marketplace is the better deal in your case.
3 Mistakes Self-Employed People Make With Health Insurance
1. Buying a junk plan because it’s cheap
A “limited benefit” plan with a low premium can leave you exposed to catastrophic out-of-pocket costs. Confirm it’s comprehensive major-medical coverage.
2. Underestimating income for subsidies
If you guess low on your ACA income estimate and earn more than expected, you may owe the difference back at tax time — sometimes thousands of dollars.
3. Choosing on premium alone
The cheapest sticker price is rarely the cheapest annual cost. Always weigh deductible, network, and out-of-pocket maximum together.
Self-Employed Health Insurance by State
Plans, networks, and premiums vary by state. Find guidance for yours:

Thyrza
Licensed Health Advisor
NPN: 21702538
Work With a Real Licensed Agent — Not a Call Center
“I started Find Coverage LLC because I saw too many hard-working 1099 contractors getting the short end of the stick. Navigating insurance is confusing enough without being funneled into a massive call center where you’re just a number.”
When you work with me, you get a personal advisor. I live and breathe PPO networks and can help you determine if medical underwriting is the right move for your family or your business. I am a licensed independent agent (NPN 21702538) operating in 50 states, and I specialize exclusively in high-performance private insurance solutions that the average marketplace broker simply doesn’t have access to.
Self-Employed Health Insurance — FAQ
Get a Plan Built Around Your Work, Not the Marketplace
Stop settling for narrow networks. Get a custom PPO quote in minutes — and see exactly how much you could be saving.