An Individual Coverage Health Reimbursement Arrangement (ICHRA) is one of the fastest-growing ways Americans get covered. Instead of offering one group plan, your employer gives you a tax-free allowance to buy your own individual health plan. Here's how to make the most of it.
How an ICHRA works
- Your employer sets a monthly allowance (it can vary by age and family size).
- You buy an individual/marketplace plan that fits you.
- You get reimbursed — tax-free — up to the allowance.
The big shift: you choose the network, the carrier, and the plan, not HR.
The upside
- Portability: the plan is yours — change jobs, keep your coverage.
- Choice: pick a network that includes your doctors and a formulary that covers your drugs.
- Predictable cost for employers, which is why more small businesses offer it.
The trade-offs to know
- If you're offered an "affordable" ICHRA, you generally can't also take an ACA premium subsidy — you take one or the other, so run the math.
- Allowances vary; a modest allowance may not fully cover a rich plan.
- You're now the shopper, which is a pro if you have guidance and a con if you don't.
How to choose a plan with an ICHRA
Treat it like any individual purchase: start with your doctors and prescriptions, then compare metal tiers on total expected cost (premium + likely out-of-pocket), not premium alone. Because the allowance is fixed, the difference between a smart pick and a rushed one goes straight into your pocket.
A licensed broker can compare every plan available in your ZIP against your ICHRA allowance at no cost to you — and flag whether a subsidy would beat the ICHRA in your case.
Got an ICHRA allowance to spend? Our free tool compares plans from 50+ carriers and shows what you'd actually pay in about 60 seconds — no obligation, real answers from a licensed broker. Get your free quote →