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Premium

        The amount you pay for your healthcare every month. It’s the pre-tax and/or post-tax money taken out
        every paycheck.


        Deductible

        The set amount of money you have to pay out-of-pocket before your insurance plan starts paying for
        your care. These only show up on our PPO plans and the cost changes depending on whether you are
        in- or out-of-network.

        In-network

        These are the doctors, labs, physicians, and other healthcare providers that are contracted to provide
        lower rates for you through your plan.



        Out-of-network (or non-network)

        Physicians, hospitals, and other healthcare providers who do not participate in your insurance plan.
        They cost more and are unavailable in our HMO plan. You may need to submit claims to Anthem to get
        reimbursed when seeing an out-of-network provider.



        Co-insurance

        This is the percentage you pay for a covered healthcare service on a PPO plan. The percentage changes
        per service, but could include emergency care, prescriptions, or an office visit. You pay it after you’ve
        met your deductible and it is an out-of-pocket expense.


        Copay


        This is a set dollar amount you pay out-of-pocket for certain healthcare services. Depending on the
        plan, services could include prescriptions, emergency care, office visits, and more. It’s a different cost
        for different plans and services so check it out before committing to a plan.



        Out-of-pocket maximum

        This is a cap on your out-of-pocket healthcare costs for the year. Unless you go out-of-network,
        you won’t pay more than this set amount even if you get really sick or seriously injured.



        Balance billing

        This is when the healthcare provider bills you for the difference between what your insurance covers
        and what the provider charges. This is not protected by the out-of-pocket max.



        Pre-tax

        This is money taken out of your paycheck before taxes are taken out. It’s money used to pay for
        healthcare that you don’t have to pay taxes on. This means your overall take-home pay increases
        because the amount you pay in taxes decreases







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