Data for developers and researchers. Plans are priced by county.Is there a data dump or xls file with all plan premiums by zip code?
As a fan of living coastal - it sounds good to me. And it doesn't look like *that* long of a drive to go to Oregon and buy big ticket things without sales tax.
Can't the exchanges switch it up again next year and every year? Might you be moving every twelve months for the lower premium or better coverage?
Data for developers and researchers. Plans are priced by county.
https://www.healthcare.gov/health-and-dental-plan-datasets-for-researchers-and-issuers/
Yes, you are right, even with MediGap there are differences in premium and policy availability. I think the ACA policy issues are an order of magnitude more difficult to deal with. No matter what your age or where you live, health insurance is a neverending challenge.I have not found this^^ to be the case. When I was recently shopping for age 65 Medigap (supplemental) coverage, there were all sorts of differences depending on your home location. Some plans simply weren't offered at my 'snowbird' address. And I noticed pricing changes as I played with various zip codes.
omni
Which county in Indiana ? Healthcare in that state seems way more expensive vs other areas of the USA. Guess more Medicaid enrolled or just fewer service providers.
...My wife just asked a good question. If you do not have a home without wheels, are you not really just considered homeless? The homeless are allowed to have insurance, vote, etc. How do they do it?
Keep in mind the fact that Long Beach (WA), Ocean Shores and Salashan are sand spits subject to the vagaries of the sea. Properties on the eastern shore of their bays high enough to see the ocean waves may be better long term homesites.
My husband won a design competition for a place at the end of the Salishan spit. What won the day was that it was 3 separate buildings connected by wind screens - flood insurance is a per-building policy at the time.
Just to point out in addition Long Beach Wa and environs are also subject to Tsunami risk if the big Cascadia quake hits. To avoid this you probably want to be at least 70 feet above sea level. (figuring in the land drop that will happen due to the earthquake before the waves arrive). Also consider that if below that elevation you may have 15 mins to make it up the hill.