Short-term health insurance can bridge a coverage gap for a lot less than COBRA — but it isn't ACA coverage, and the fine print matters. Here's a straight read on when it fits and when it doesn't.
What short-term plans are
They're temporary medical plans designed to cover you between other coverage — after a job change, while waiting for a new plan to start, or outside open enrollment. Premiums are often low because the coverage is limited.
The catches you must understand
- Pre-existing conditions are usually excluded. Anything you were treated for before the plan can be denied.
- Essential benefits aren't guaranteed. Maternity, mental health, and prescription coverage may be thin or absent.
- Duration is regulated and has changed with federal rules — check the current limit in your state before you count on renewals.
- No premium subsidies apply.
When it makes sense
- You're healthy, need a short bridge (a month or two), and missed open enrollment with no qualifying event.
- You want catastrophic protection against a bad accident while you sort out real coverage.
Better options to check first
Before defaulting to short-term, see whether you qualify for something stronger: a Special Enrollment Period (job loss, marriage, a move, or a new baby all count), Medicaid, or an ACA plan with a subsidy that may cost less than you'd expect. Losing job coverage is itself a qualifying event — more in our guide on coverage after job loss.
Not sure if you qualify for a full ACA plan right now? 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 →