Florida Insurance Glossary: Life, Health & Medicare Terms Explained

Health Insurance Glossary

Actuarial Value

The percentage of total healthcare costs a plan is designed to cover. For example, a Silver plan in Florida has an actuarial value of approximately 70%.

Advance Premium Tax Credit (APTC)

A federal subsidy that lowers monthly premiums for eligible Florida Marketplace enrollees based on household income.

Affordable Care Act (ACA)

Federal healthcare law that regulates health insurance coverage, essential benefits, and consumer protections.

Annual Enrollment Period (AEP)

The yearly window when Florida residents can enroll in or change ACA Marketplace health plans.

Bronze Plan

A Marketplace plan tier with lower monthly premiums and higher out-of-pocket costs.

Catastrophic Plan

High-deductible health plan available to individuals under age 30 or those who qualify for a hardship exemption.

Copayment (Copay)

A fixed dollar amount paid for a covered medical service.

Cost-Sharing Reductions (CSR)

Additional savings available to eligible Florida residents who enroll in Silver Marketplace plans.

Deductible

The amount you pay out-of-pocket before your health insurance begins covering services.

Embedded Deductible

An individual deductible within a family plan structure. One family member can meet their own deductible before the full family deductible is met.

Essential Health Benefits (EHB)

Ten categories of benefits required under ACA-compliant Florida health insurance plans.

Explanation of Benefits (EOB)

A statement explaining what your health plan paid and what you may owe after receiving care.

Family Deductible

The total deductible that applies to all covered members under a Florida family health plan.

Formulary

The list of prescription medications covered by a health insurance plan.

Gold Plan

A Marketplace plan tier with higher monthly premiums and lower out-of-pocket costs.

Grandfathered Plan

A health plan that existed before ACA implementation and maintains certain exemptions.

Health Maintenance Organization (HMO)

A plan requiring members to use in-network providers and obtain referrals from a primary care physician.

Medical Loss Ratio (MLR)

The percentage of premiums insurance companies must spend on medical claims and quality improvement.

Minimum Essential Coverage (MEC)

Coverage that satisfies ACA requirements and avoids coverage gaps.

Network Adequacy

Standards ensuring Florida health plans provide reasonable access to doctors and hospitals.

Non-Embedded Deductible

A family deductible that must be met collectively before insurance benefits begin.

Open Enrollment

The annual period when Florida residents can enroll in or renew Marketplace coverage.

Out-of-Pocket Maximum

The maximum amount you pay in a plan year before your Florida health insurance covers 100% of covered services.

Platinum Plan

A Marketplace tier with the highest monthly premiums and lowest out-of-pocket costs.

Preferred Provider Organization (PPO)

A plan offering more flexibility to see specialists without referrals.

Preventive Services

Screenings, vaccinations, and wellness visits typically covered at no additional cost when using in-network providers.

Silver Plan

A mid-level Marketplace tier that may qualify eligible Florida families for cost-sharing reductions.

Special Enrollment Period (SEP)

A limited enrollment window triggered by qualifying life events such as moving to Florida, marriage, birth, or loss of coverage.

Short-Term Health Insurance

Temporary health coverage that does not meet ACA standards and may exclude essential benefits.

Medicare Glossary

Annual Election Period (AEP)

October 15 through December 7 each year when Medicare beneficiaries can change plans.

Chronic Condition Special Needs Plan (C-SNP)

A Medicare Advantage plan designed for individuals with qualifying chronic conditions.

Creditable Coverage

Prescription drug coverage considered comparable to Medicare Part D, preventing late enrollment penalties.

Dual Eligible

Individuals who qualify for both Medicare and Florida Medicaid.

Dual Eligible Special Needs Plan (D-SNP)

A Medicare Advantage plan specifically for beneficiaries eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid in Florida.

Extra Help

A federal program assisting eligible beneficiaries with Medicare Part D prescription drug costs.

Initial Enrollment Period (IEP)

The seven-month window when someone first becomes eligible for Medicare.

Institutional Special Needs Plan (I-SNP)

A Medicare Advantage plan for individuals living in long-term care facilities.

Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount (IRMAA)

An additional premium higher-income beneficiaries may pay for Medicare Part B and Part D.

Late Enrollment Penalty

A permanent premium increase that may apply if you delay enrolling in Medicare without creditable coverage.

Maximum Out-of-Pocket (MOOP)

The annual limit on out-of-pocket spending for Medicare Advantage plans.

Medicare Advantage (Part C)

Private insurance plans approved by Medicare that combine Part A and Part B coverage.

Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment Period

January 1 through March 31, allowing Medicare Advantage members to make one plan change.

Medicare Part A

Hospital insurance covering inpatient hospital stays and skilled nursing care.

Medicare Part B

Medical insurance covering outpatient services, doctor visits, and preventive care.

Medicare Part D

Prescription drug coverage available through private insurance companies.

Medicare Supplement (Medigap)

Policies that help cover out-of-pocket costs not paid by Original Medicare.

Original Medicare

The federal Medicare program consisting of Part A and Part B.

Special Enrollment Period (SEP)

A Medicare enrollment window triggered by qualifying events such as moving or losing other coverage.

Star Ratings

Quality ratings issued by CMS for Medicare Advantage and Part D plans.

Trial Right

A one-time right allowing certain beneficiaries to switch back to Original Medicare after enrolling in a Medicare Advantage plan.

Life Insurance Glossary

Accidental Death Benefit

An optional rider that pays an additional benefit if death occurs due to a covered accident.

Accelerated Death Benefit (ADB)

Allows a policyholder to access part of the death benefit early if diagnosed with a qualifying terminal illness.

Beneficiary

The person or entity designated to receive the life insurance payout.

Cash Value

The savings component of permanent life insurance that grows over time.

Contingent Beneficiary

The backup beneficiary if the primary beneficiary is unable to receive benefits.

Convertible Term Insurance

A term policy that can be converted to permanent life insurance without medical underwriting.

Decreasing Term Insurance

Coverage where the death benefit decreases over time, commonly used for mortgage protection in Florida.

Face Amount

The stated death benefit of the policy.

Final Expense Insurance

A small whole life policy designed to cover funeral and burial costs, often popular among Florida seniors.

Guaranteed Issue Life Insurance

Life insurance that requires no medical exam or health questions. Commonly used for final expense coverage in Florida.

Incontestability Clause

Prevents the insurer from denying claims after the policy has been in force (typically two years), except for fraud.

Insurable Interest

A requirement that the policyholder would suffer financially from the insured’s death.

Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT)

A legal trust used to remove life insurance proceeds from an estate for tax planning purposes.

Level Term Insurance

Term life policy with fixed premiums and a fixed death benefit for the policy period.

Modified Whole Life

Whole life insurance with lower introductory premiums that increase later.

Mortgage Protection Insurance (MPI)

Life insurance structured to pay off a mortgage balance if the homeowner passes away.

Paid-Up Policy

A life insurance policy that no longer requires premium payments but remains active.

Permanent Life Insurance

Coverage that lasts a lifetime, including whole life and universal life.

Policy Rider

An add-on that modifies or enhances a life insurance policy.

Return of Premium Rider

Refunds premiums paid if the insured outlives the term period.

Survivorship Life Insurance

Policy covering two individuals (often spouses) that pays out after the second insured passes away.

Underwriting

The process insurers use to evaluate risk and determine eligibility and premium rates.

Universal Life Insurance

Flexible permanent coverage allowing adjustable premiums and death benefits.

Waiver of Premium Rider

Waives premiums if the insured becomes disabled.

Whole Life Insurance

Permanent life insurance with fixed premiums and guaranteed cash value growth.

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