Live & Free

2026 US COBRA Health Insurance Cost Calculator (Premium & Obamacare Comparison)

The definitive 2026 US COBRA calculator for estimating ERISA-mandated continuation coverage. Calculate your exact out-of-pocket costs using the 102% Rule (including the 2% federal admin fee), compare COBRA vs. ACA Marketplace (Obamacare) alternatives, and model Premium Tax Credit (PTC) eligibility based on the latest DOL and IRS statutory guidelines.

💰 3 Premium Estimation Methods ⚖ COBRA vs ACA Marketplace 📈 Affordability Runway 🏢 Employer / HR Admin Mode 📄 Tax Deduction Estimator ✅ No Email Required 📄 Free PDF Export
Select Calculator Mode
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Step 1 — Estimation Method
💡 Choose how you want to estimate your COBRA premium. The W-2 Box 12 method is the quickest if you have last year’s W-2.
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Per-paycheck employee share
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Monthly employer share (ask HR)
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Step 2 — Coverage Details
Affects benchmark estimates only
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Results Dashboard
Primary Result
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Run the calculator
Total Cost
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Key Insight
Enter your details and click Calculate.
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Cost Comparison
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Detailed Breakdown
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Scenario Summary
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How to Calculate Your 2026 COBRA Premium: The 102% Rule & ACA Subsidies

This tool utilizes official **DOL and IRS benchmarks** to estimate continuation coverage costs and compare them against **2026 Federal Poverty Level (FPL)** Marketplace subsidies.

1
💰
Premium Data Source: Paycheck vs. W-2 Box 12 (Code DD)
Choose your input method: **Paycheck Deduction** (Employee + Employer share), **W-2 Box 12 Code DD** (the IRS standard for total health cost), or **Direct Entry** from your COBRA Election Notice.
💡 Pro tip: Box 12 Code DD on your W-2 is the most accurate way to capture the “Gross Premium” that your employer is currently paying.
2
📋
DOL Qualifying Events & Coverage Duration
Select the event triggering eligibility. **Job loss/Reduced hours** grants 18 months; **Disability** extensions provide 29 months; **Divorce/Death** events allow for 36 months of continuation.
⏰ 60-Day Federal Election Window Applies
3
⚖️
ACA Marketplace (Obamacare) Subsidy Modeling
We model your **Special Enrollment Period (SEP)** eligibility. By entering household income, the tool calculates estimated **Premium Tax Credits** based on current Silver plan benchmarks.
4
📈
Financial Runway & IRS Tax Deduction Analysis
Calculate your “Survival Runway” using current cash reserves against the **102% COBRA premium**. We also check **IRS Pub 502** eligibility for itemized medical expense deductions.
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Underwriting Report Export & Action Plan
Generate a **Professional PDF Report** for your records. For employers, we include an **ERISA Penalty Exposure** model for late notification violations (up to $110/day).

US Federal COBRA Election Deadlines & 60-Day Qualifying Event Window

Strict statutory deadlines govern COBRA. Failure to meet these windows results in permanent loss of continuation rights.

Regulatory Step Responsible Party Statutory Deadline Legal Requirement
Qualifying Event Beneficiary Day 0 Termination, resignation, or reduction in hours.
Employer Notice Plan Sponsor 30 Days Employer notifies Plan Admin of the event.
Election Notice Plan Admin 14 Days Mailing of official COBRA election packet.
Election Decision Beneficiary 60 Days The “60-Day Window” to sign and return the notice.
First Payment Beneficiary 45 Days Initial premium due from date of election.

⚖️

5 Employer-Sponsored Health Insurance & Continuation Analysis Tools

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COBRA Premium Estimator

Calculates the **Gross Monthly Premium** plus the **2% Administrative Fee**. Models total out-of-pocket costs over the standard 18-month duration.

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ACA Marketplace Comparison

Uses **2026 FPL Guidelines** to estimate tax credits. Directly compares Marketplace “Net Premiums” against COBRA “Gross Premiums.”

📈
Savings Runway Model

Quantifies how long your **Emergency Fund** will last when burdened with unsubsidized employer-style health premiums.

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Employer HR Compliance

Models annual TPA fees and **ERISA Risk**. Calculates the potential $110/day fines for notification errors.

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IRS Tax Deduction Tool

Analyzes eligibility for the **Itemized Medical Deduction** vs. the **Self-Employed Health Insurance** deduction.

Ready to Compare COBRA vs. ACA Marketplace Costs? Free. Private. Aligned with 2026 IRS and DOL continuation rules.
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⚖️

COBRA vs. Healthcare.gov (ACA): 2026 Premium Tax Credit Comparison

After a qualifying event, you must choose between **ERISA-mandated COBRA** and an **ACA Marketplace (Obamacare)** plan. This decision impacts your monthly cash flow, tax liability, and provider network integrity. Use the comparison below to model your 2026 strategy.

Plan Factor 🛡️ COBRA Continuation 🏠 ACA Marketplace (Healthcare.gov)
Regulatory Basis Temporary extension of your **exact employer group health plan** under ERISA and the IRS code. Individual or family health plans governed by the **Affordable Care Act** and state insurance regs.
2026 Monthly Cost **102% of total premium** (Employer + Employee share + 2% admin fee). No subsidies available. **Subsidized premiums** based on income. Many households pay under $200/mo via Premium Tax Credits.
Financial Assistance None — COBRA is entirely unsubsidized by the federal government. Yes — Advanced **Premium Tax Credits (PTC)** and Cost-Sharing Reductions (CSR) based on FPL.
Provider Network **100% Integrity** — You keep your exact doctors, specialists, and current pharmacy formulary. **New Network** — You must select a new carrier. Your current providers may be out-of-network.
Deductible Status **Carry-over** — Any deductible or out-of-pocket spend you’ve already met this year stays with you. **Reset to $0** — You start a brand-new plan year. Previous 2026 spending does not apply to the new plan.
Enrollment Trigger **60-Day Window** from receipt of your official COBRA Election Notice. **60-Day Special Enrollment Period (SEP)** triggered by loss of minimum essential coverage.
Best For Short gaps, mid-treatment patients, or those who have already met their 2026 annual deductible. Most consumers—especially those with household income under 400% of the Federal Poverty Level.
💡 The One-Way Door Rule: You can drop COBRA to switch to the ACA Marketplace during your 60-day SEP, but you cannot decline COBRA and then go back to it later if you dislike your Marketplace plan.

🛡️
Choose COBRA Continuation If…
  • You are mid-treatment for a serious condition and cannot risk a network change.
  • You have met your 2026 Out-of-Pocket Maximum—making your healthcare “free” for the rest of the year.
  • You expect a **new job with benefits** in less than 90 days (short-term bridge).
  • Your income is above 400% FPL, making you ineligible for significant ACA tax credits.
🏠
Choose ACA Marketplace If…
  • You qualify for **Federal Premium Tax Credits** (subsidies) based on your 2026 projected income.
  • You need long-term coverage (beyond 18-36 months); ACA plans have no expiration.
  • Your employer plan was a “High Premium” option and you need a lower-cost **Bronze or Silver** plan.
  • You are starting a business and need a plan that isn’t tied to a former employer’s group.

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2026 Cost Comparison: COBRA vs. ACA Scenarios
👤 Single • $45K Projected Income
COBRA Premium$680/mo
ACA Silver (Subsidized)$120/mo
Monthly Savings$560
✅ Marketplace is 82% Cheaper
👪 Family of 4 • $75K Income
COBRA Premium$2,040/mo
ACA Silver (Subsidized)$480/mo
Monthly Savings$1,560
✅ Save $28,000 over 18 Months
💼 High Earner • Deductible Met
COBRA Premium$720/mo
ACA (No Subsidy)$650/mo
Deductible Loss$4,000+
🛡️ COBRA Wins (Asset Protection)

💡
8 Critical Insights: COBRA vs. ACA Comparison
1
The Retroactive Coverage “Safety Net” You have 60 days to elect COBRA. If you get sick on day 59, you can elect and pay for COBRA, and it covers you retroactively to the date you lost coverage.
2
Employers Stop Paying Immediately Under COBRA, you pay the Gross Premium. Most employees don’t realize their $150/mo deduction was actually a $600/mo total cost until they leave.

🎯 Official 2026 US Resources: DOL COBRA Guide | Healthcare.gov (COBRA)
👤

5 Real US COBRA Cost Scenarios: What Out-of-Pocket Premiums Actually Look Like

These five examples show how COBRA costs vary across real-world situations — different incomes, family sizes, industries, and states. Each example includes a full cost breakdown, ACA Marketplace comparison, and our recommendation based on the numbers.

1
💻 Marcus T. — Laid-Off Software Engineer
📍 Austin, TX Individual
Age
34
Coverage
Employee Only
Household Income
$95,000
Qualifying Event
Layoff (18 mo)
Employer Plan
BCBS PPO
Savings
$38,000
Situation: Marcus was laid off from a mid-size tech company after a round of cost-cutting. He paid $185/month for individual health insurance through payroll deduction. His employer contributed $520/month. His W-2 Box 12 Code DD showed $8,460 annually. He’s healthy, no ongoing treatments, and expects to find a new job within 3–5 months. He has no state income tax in Texas.
Calculation StepFormula / DetailAmount
Employee paycheck deduction$185/mo × 12$2,220/yr
Employer contribution$520/mo × 12$6,240/yr
Full annual plan premium$2,220 + $6,240$8,460/yr
Monthly full premium$8,460 ÷ 12$705/mo
COBRA admin fee (2%)$705 × 2%$14/mo
Monthly COBRA cost$705 + $14$719/mo
Total COBRA cost (18 months)$719 × 18$12,942
ACA Marketplace Comparison
2026 FPL (single household)$15,060 — Income = 631% FPLNo subsidy
ACA Silver plan estimate (Austin)Unsubsidized benchmark$580/mo
ACA total (18 months)$580 × 18$10,440
Savings with ACA$12,942 − $10,440$2,502
COBRA / Month
$719
ACA / Month
$580
18-Mo Savings
$2,502
⚖️ Verdict: Close call — ACA is slightly cheaper, but COBRA may be worth it for 2–3 months. At $95K income, Marcus gets no ACA subsidy. The $139/month savings with ACA is modest. If he expects a new job within 3 months, the simplicity of keeping his BCBS PPO network on COBRA (and avoiding a deductible reset) could justify the small premium difference. Beyond 3 months, switch to ACA.
2
👩‍👧 Priya M. — Divorced Mother Losing Spouse’s Plan
📍 Chicago, IL Family (1 Adult + 2 Kids)
Age
41
Coverage
EE + Children
Household Income
$52,000
Qualifying Event
Divorce (36 mo)
Former Spouse Plan
UHC HMO
Children Ages
8 & 12
Situation: Priya’s divorce was finalized in February 2026. She and her two children were covered under her ex-husband’s employer UnitedHealthcare HMO plan. As a divorced spouse, she qualifies for 36 months of COBRA. Her full-time job as a school administrator pays $52,000/year. The full family premium on the employer plan was $1,780/month. Her 8-year-old daughter has asthma requiring a pediatric pulmonologist.
Calculation StepFormula / DetailAmount
Full family plan premiumUHC HMO family tier$1,780/mo
COBRA admin fee (2%)$1,780 × 2%$36/mo
Monthly COBRA cost$1,780 + $36$1,816/mo
Total COBRA cost (36 months)$1,816 × 36$65,376
ACA Marketplace Comparison
2026 FPL (3-person household)$25,820 — Income = 201% FPLSubsidy eligible
Expected ACA contribution~4.12% of income$178/mo
Silver benchmark (Chicago)3-person household$1,420/mo
Estimated ACA subsidy$1,420 − $178$1,242/mo
ACA after subsidy$1,420 − $1,242$178/mo
Monthly savings with ACA$1,816 − $178$1,638/mo
36-month total savings$1,638 × 36$58,968
COBRA / Month
$1,816
ACA / Month
$178
36-Mo Savings
$58,968
Verdict: ACA Marketplace saves nearly $59,000 over 36 months. At 201% FPL, Priya qualifies for substantial Premium Tax Credits AND Cost-Sharing Reductions on Silver plans (lower deductibles and copays). She should verify her daughter’s pulmonologist is in-network on the chosen ACA plan. If the specific specialist isn’t available, 1–2 months of COBRA for continuity while transitioning care is reasonable, then switch to ACA.
3
🍴 David & Sarah K. — Restaurant Manager Mid-Treatment
📍 Denver, CO Employee + Spouse
Age
47
Coverage
EE + Spouse
Household Income
$68,000
Qualifying Event
Layoff (18 mo)
Employer Plan
Cigna PPO
Deductible Met
$3,800 of $5,000
Situation: David managed a hotel restaurant for 9 years before being laid off in March 2026. His wife Sarah is undergoing physical therapy after knee surgery — she’s 6 weeks into a 16-week post-op rehab program with an orthopedic group that only accepts Cigna. They’ve already spent $3,800 toward their $5,000 family deductible this year. The W-2 Box 12 showed $19,200 annually for the couple plan. David is collecting $2,100/month in unemployment benefits.
Calculation StepFormula / DetailAmount
Full couple plan premium (W-2)$19,200 ÷ 12$1,600/mo
COBRA admin fee (2%)$1,600 × 2%$32/mo
Monthly COBRA cost$1,600 + $32$1,632/mo
COBRA for rehab completion (4 mo)$1,632 × 4$6,528
Total COBRA if full 18 mo$1,632 × 18$29,376
ACA Marketplace Comparison
2026 FPL (2-person household)$20,440 — Income = 333% FPLSubsidy eligible
ACA Silver benchmark (Denver)2-person household$1,180/mo
Estimated ACA subsidyBased on ~8% income contribution$727/mo
ACA after subsidy$1,180 − $727$453/mo
New ACA deductibleResets to $0 met on new plan$5,500
Savings switching to ACA (after 4 mo COBRA)14 mo × ($1,632 − $453)$16,506
COBRA / Month
$1,632
ACA / Month
$453
Hybrid Savings
$16,506
🛡️ Verdict: COBRA for 4 months, then switch to ACA Marketplace. Sarah’s Cigna-only orthopedic group makes COBRA essential during her rehab. They’ve also met 76% of their deductible — switching now resets that progress. After rehab completes (~4 months), switch to ACA and save $1,179/month. This “hybrid strategy” saves $16,506 while protecting Sarah’s continuity of care.
4
💼 Jennifer L. — Marketing Director Going Freelance
📍 Miami, FL Individual
Age
38
Coverage
Employee Only
Projected Year 1 Income
$42,000
Qualifying Event
Voluntary Quit (18 mo)
Employer Plan
Aetna Gold PPO
Savings
$55,000
Situation: Jennifer voluntarily left her $110K corporate marketing director position in January 2026 to launch a freelance consulting practice. She had premium employer coverage — an Aetna Gold PPO with a $750 deductible. Her employer paid 80% of the $890/month premium. She projects first-year freelance income of $42,000 (significantly lower than her prior salary). She’s healthy with no ongoing treatments. She also qualifies for the self-employed health insurance tax deduction, which is above-the-line.
Calculation StepFormula / DetailAmount
Full monthly plan premiumAetna Gold PPO individual$890/mo
COBRA admin fee (2%)$890 × 2%$18/mo
Monthly COBRA cost$890 + $18$908/mo
Total COBRA (18 months)$908 × 18$16,344
ACA Marketplace Comparison
2026 FPL (single household)$15,060 — Income = 279% FPLSubsidy eligible
Silver benchmark (Miami)Individual, age 38$620/mo
Estimated ACA subsidyBased on ~6.12% income contribution$406/mo
ACA after subsidy$620 − $406$214/mo
Monthly savings with ACA$908 − $214$694/mo
18-month total savings$694 × 18$12,492
Tax Deduction Bonus
Self-employed deduction$214/mo × 12 × 24% rate$616/yr saved
COBRA / Month
$908
ACA / Month
$214
18-Mo Savings
$12,492
Verdict: ACA Marketplace is the clear winner — saves $12,492. Jennifer’s lower projected freelance income drops her to 279% FPL, unlocking a $406/month subsidy. She’s healthy with no provider lock-in, so there’s no reason to pay $908/month for COBRA. As a self-employed freelancer, she can also deduct her ACA premiums above-the-line (no AGI floor), saving an additional $616/year in taxes.
5
🏢 Robert C. — HR Director Modeling Employer COBRA Costs
📍 Atlanta, GA Employer Admin Mode
Company Size
220 employees
Annual Separations
35
COBRA Enrollment Rate
31%
Avg. Plan Premium
$1,650/mo
TPA Admin Cost
$55/participant/mo
Avg. Months on COBRA
5.5
Situation: Robert is the HR Director at a regional logistics company with 220 employees in Atlanta. He needs to budget for COBRA administration costs and assess compliance risk for the upcoming fiscal year. The company uses a Third-Party Administrator (TPA) charging $55 per COBRA participant per month. Over the past 3 years, they’ve averaged 35 COBRA-eligible separations annually, with a 31% actual enrollment rate. He also wants to quantify the ERISA penalty exposure for late COBRA notifications.
Calculation StepFormula / DetailAmount
COBRA-eligible separations/yearCompany average35
Estimated enrollees/year35 × 31%11
Avg. months on COBRA per enrolleeNational avg. for mid-size employers5.5 mo
Total participant-months11 × 5.560.5
Annual TPA admin cost60.5 × $55$3,328
Annual premium flow-through11 × $1,650 × 5.5$99,825
ERISA Compliance Risk
Late notice penalty rateDOL maximum per day per individual$110/day
Single late notice (30 days)$110 × 30 days$3,300
Max annual penalty exposure$110 × 30 × 35 separations$115,500
Annual Admin Cost
$3,328
Premium Flow
$99,825
Max Penalty Risk
$115,500
⚠️ Verdict: The $3,328 TPA cost is negligible — the $115,500 penalty risk is not. Robert’s annual admin spend of $3,328 is modest for a 220-person company. But a single missed COBRA notification costs $3,300 in ERISA penalties, and systemic failures across all 35 separations could reach $115,500. The ROI on a reliable TPA with automated notification tracking is clear. Robert should also audit the company’s COBRA notification process quarterly.
💡 5 Takeaways from These Real Examples
  • 1
    ACA Marketplace wins for the majority. In 4 of 5 scenarios, ACA plans were significantly cheaper — savings ranged from $2,502 to $58,968 over the coverage period. The exception was short-term coverage for mid-treatment patients.
  • 2
    Income is the deciding factor. Below 300% FPL, ACA subsidies make Marketplace plans dramatically cheaper. Above 400% FPL, the gap narrows and COBRA’s network continuity may justify the premium difference.
  • 3
    The “hybrid strategy” is often optimal. Start with COBRA (especially if mid-treatment or deductible is met), then switch to ACA within your 60-day SEP window. This gives continuity of care AND long-term savings.
  • 4
    Deductible carry-over matters mid-year. If you’ve met a significant portion of your deductible (like David & Sarah at 76%), COBRA preserves that investment. Switching to ACA resets it to $0.
  • 5
    Employers: ERISA penalties dwarf admin costs. A $55/participant/month TPA is cheap insurance against $110/day DOL penalties. Automate COBRA notification tracking — the compliance ROI is immediate.
Calculate Your Personal COBRA Cost Scenario Enter your real numbers above and get instant results tailored to your income, coverage tier, and qualifying event.
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🏆

5 Expert Strategies to Lower Your Post-Employment Health Insurance Costs

These aren’t generic advice — they’re specific, actionable strategies used by financial planners and benefits attorneys to help clients minimize COBRA costs and avoid the most expensive mistakes.


TIP 1

Leverage the 60-Day DOL Election Window as Retroactive Bridge Coverage

High Impact Potential savings: $1,400–$4,000
Most people don’t realize that COBRA coverage is fully retroactive. You have 60 days to decide whether to elect coverage, and if you do, it covers you back to the day your employer plan ended — with zero gap. This means you can effectively “wait and see” for up to 60 days without paying a single premium.

If you stay healthy during those 60 days, you let the window expire and pay nothing. If a medical emergency happens on day 45, you elect COBRA, pay the retroactive premiums, and every medical bill from day 1 is covered. You then have an additional 45 days after election to make your first payment.
💡 Why it works: Federal law (29 U.S.C. § 1166) requires plans to reinstate coverage retroactively upon timely election. Providers must honor claims dated back to the coverage loss date. This gives you up to 105 days (60 election + 45 payment) of decision time with a financial backstop.
1
Don’t decline COBRA when you receive the election notice. Simply wait — silence is not a decline until day 61.
2
Set a calendar reminder for day 55. Mark the exact deadline (60 days from the later of coverage loss OR receipt of notice).
3
Use this window to compare ACA Marketplace plans on Healthcare.gov, check spouse’s employer options, and evaluate short-term plans.
4
If a medical need arises, elect COBRA immediately. Coverage is retroactive. Then switch to ACA later if cheaper long-term.
💰
If healthy: $1,400–$4,000 saved by not paying 2 months of premiums. If you need care: $0 net cost vs. not having coverage — the retroactive backstop is free insurance on your insurance.
TIP 2

Pay COBRA Premiums Tax-Free Using Pre-Tax HSA Contributions

Medium Impact Tax savings: $500–$3,000+/year
Here’s a rule most people don’t know: while you generally cannot use HSA funds to pay health insurance premiums, COBRA premiums are one of the specific IRS exceptions (IRS Publication 969). If you have an HSA balance from your previous HDHP, you can withdraw those funds tax-free to cover your entire COBRA premium — no income tax, no penalties.

This is particularly powerful because you’re essentially paying a post-job-loss expense with pre-tax dollars you saved while employed. At a 24% federal + 6% state tax rate, every $1,000 of COBRA premiums paid via HSA saves you $300 in taxes compared to paying from your checking account.
💡 Why it matters: The average HSA balance for account holders 55+ is $7,200 (Devenir 2025 HSA Survey). That could cover 4–10 months of individual COBRA premiums completely tax-free — turning your HSA into a dedicated COBRA bridge fund.
1
Confirm your HSA balance and that your HSA custodian allows direct payments or reimbursements for health insurance premiums.
2
Pay COBRA premiums normally, then reimburse yourself from your HSA. Keep the COBRA invoice as documentation per IRS rules.
3
Only use this for COBRA premiums — this exception doesn’t apply to ACA Marketplace premiums (unless you’re receiving unemployment compensation).
💰
Family COBRA at $2,000/mo for 6 months = $12,000. Paid via HSA at 30% combined tax rate: $3,600 saved in taxes vs. paying from a regular bank account.
TIP 3

Unbundle Your Benefits: Keep Medical, Drop Group Dental & Vision

Easy Win Instant savings: $80–$250/month
COBRA doesn’t require you to continue all of your former benefits — you can elect each benefit line separately. Most employers bundle medical, dental, and vision into one plan, but under COBRA, you can decline dental and vision while keeping only the medical coverage. The medical plan is where the real financial risk lies; dental and vision are far cheaper to replace on the individual market.

A standalone dental plan costs $20–$45/month on the open market (vs. $65–$120/month for COBRA dental). Standalone vision is $10–$20/month (vs. $25–$50 on COBRA). By stripping these and buying standalone replacements, you save $60–$200+ per month with comparable or better coverage.
💡 Key detail: Each qualified beneficiary can independently choose which COBRA benefits to continue. Your spouse might elect COBRA dental (if mid-treatment with an orthodontist) while you decline it. You’re not locked into an all-or-nothing decision.
1
Review your COBRA election notice — it will list each benefit line separately with individual premiums for medical, dental, and vision.
2
Elect COBRA medical only. On the election form, check medical and leave dental/vision unchecked (or explicitly decline).
3
Buy standalone dental from providers like Delta Dental, Guardian, or Cigna. No waiting period for preventive care on most plans.
4
Skip vision insurance entirely if healthy — a single eye exam costs $50–$100 out of pocket, less than 6 months of vision premiums.
💰
Dropping COBRA dental ($95/mo) + vision ($35/mo), replacing with standalone dental ($30/mo): $100/mo saved — that’s $1,800 over 18 months.
TIP 4

Check State “Mini-COBRA” Statutes for Small Businesses (Under 20 Employees)

High Impact Could unlock coverage you think you don’t have
Federal COBRA only applies to employers with 20 or more employees. If your company is smaller, you might assume you have no continuation rights — but 40 states plus D.C. have their own “mini-COBRA” laws that extend similar protections to employees of smaller companies. Coverage duration and rules vary by state, typically ranging from 3 to 36 months.

Some states are significantly more generous than federal COBRA. California (Cal-COBRA) extends coverage up to 36 months for companies with 2–19 employees. New York provides 36 months regardless of employer size. Illinois offers 12 months for small employers. Texas provides 9 months for groups of 2–19.
💡 Why this matters: According to the SBA, 46% of U.S. private-sector workers are employed by businesses with fewer than 500 employees, and millions work for firms under 20 employees. If federal COBRA doesn’t apply to you, your state very likely has a continuation law that does.
1
Determine your company size. Federal COBRA applies to 20+ employees. If under 20, proceed to check your state law.
2
Search “[your state] mini-COBRA law” or contact your state’s Department of Insurance. Each state has different rules, election windows, and durations.
3
Ask your employer’s HR directly. Some small employers don’t know they’re required to offer state continuation — you may need to inform them.
4
Compare state continuation vs. ACA — the same cost analysis applies. State mini-COBRA is often just as expensive as federal COBRA.
⚠️
Don’t assume you’re unprotected. Employees at small companies who skip checking their state’s mini-COBRA law often end up uninsured or overpaying for individual plans when they could have continued their group coverage.
TIP 5

Coordinate Your ACA Transition with the Annual Deductible Reset

High Impact Avoid paying the same deductible twice
Every health plan resets its deductible and out-of-pocket maximum on January 1. This creates a critical timing strategy: if you’ve met a significant portion of your deductible on COBRA, switching to an ACA plan mid-year resets that progress to zero — you’ll pay the full deductible again on the new plan. But if you time your switch to coincide with the January 1 reset, you lose nothing because both plans would have reset anyway.

Conversely, if you lose your job in January or February (before accumulating significant deductible spend), switching to ACA immediately costs you almost nothing in lost deductible progress — making it the ideal time to go straight to the Marketplace.
💡 The math: If you’ve spent $4,000 toward a $5,000 COBRA deductible by August, switching to ACA in September means you’ll face a new $4,000–$7,000 ACA deductible — effectively paying $8,000+ in deductibles in one year. Stay on COBRA through December, then switch January 1. You’ll pay ~4 extra months of COBRA premiums ($2,800–$6,400) but avoid paying the new deductible twice.
1
Track your year-to-date deductible spend. Check your insurer’s portal or call member services for your exact accumulator balance.
2
Calculate the break-even: (remaining COBRA months to Dec 31 × COBRA premium) vs. (new ACA deductible you’d pay if switching now).
3
If deductible is mostly met (70%+), stay on COBRA through December. Schedule planned procedures and medical spending before year-end to maximize the met deductible.
4
Enroll in ACA during Open Enrollment (Nov 1 – Jan 15) for a January 1 start date. This aligns your new deductible with the calendar year reset.
💰
Avoiding a duplicate deductible by timing the switch to January 1 can save $3,000–$7,000 in out-of-pocket costs — often more than the extra COBRA premiums for the remaining months.
$5K–$15K+
Potential savings using all 5 tips combined
105 Days
Max decision time (60 election + 45 payment)
40 States
Have mini-COBRA laws for small employers
Apply These Tips to Your Personal Situation Use the COBRA calculator above to model your exact savings with HSA payments, medical-only election, and deductible timing strategies.
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US COBRA Health Insurance FAQ: DOL Rules, Obamacare & Premium Costs

Comprehensive answers to every question Americans ask about COBRA insurance costs — sourced from Google’s People Also Ask, Reddit, Quora, and AnswerThePublic. Click any question to expand.

💰 Cost & Pricing
The average monthly COBRA premium for individual coverage in 2026 is approximately $400–$700, while family coverage ranges from $1,200 to $2,000+ per month. These figures represent the full plan premium (your previous employee portion plus the employer contribution) plus a mandatory 2% administrative fee.

The reason COBRA feels so expensive is that most employees only see their payroll deduction — typically 20–30% of the total premium. The employer was quietly paying the other 70–80%. Under COBRA, you pay 102% of the entire premium.
💡Pro tip: Check your most recent W-2, Box 12, Code DD. This shows the total annual premium cost your employer reported. Divide by 12, then multiply by 1.02 to estimate your monthly COBRA cost.
COBRA isn’t actually “more expensive” than your employer plan — it’s the same plan at the same price. The shock comes from seeing the full cost for the first time. Employers typically subsidize 70–83% of health insurance premiums for their employees. According to the KFF 2025 Employer Health Benefits Survey, the average employer contribution was $6,296/year for individual coverage and $16,399/year for family coverage.

Under COBRA, the employer stops contributing. You now pay 100% plus a 2% admin fee. So if your paycheck showed a $200/month deduction and your employer was paying $550/month, your COBRA premium becomes approximately $765/month ($750 × 1.02).
There are three reliable methods to estimate your COBRA premium before you leave:
  • W-2, Box 12, Code DD: This shows the total annual health coverage cost. Divide by 12, multiply by 1.02. Example: $9,600 ÷ 12 × 1.02 = $816/month COBRA.
  • Ask your HR/Benefits team directly: They are legally required to provide this information. Request the “full monthly premium for your current tier” (individual, EE+spouse, family, etc.).
  • Check your benefits portal: Many employer portals (Workday, ADP, Gusto) show “Total Monthly Premium” or “Employer Cost” alongside your deduction.
💡Use our COBRA Insurance Cost Calculator at the top of this page — enter your paycheck deduction and employer contribution to instantly see your exact COBRA premium, 18-month total cost, and ACA comparison.
Federal law permits your former employer (or their plan administrator) to charge up to 102% of the full plan premium. The extra 2% is the maximum administrative fee allowed to cover the cost of processing your COBRA enrollment and payments. Employers cannot charge more than 2% under normal circumstances.

The one exception: if you qualify for the disability extension (months 19–29), the premium can increase to 150% of the plan cost during those extra 11 months. So a $700/month plan could become $1,050/month during the disability extension period.
Yes. Your COBRA premium can change if the underlying plan premium changes for all plan participants. This typically happens at the employer’s annual plan renewal (often January 1 or the plan’s fiscal year start). If your former employer’s insurer raises premiums by 8%, your COBRA premium increases by the same 8%.

However, the employer cannot selectively increase your premium or charge COBRA participants more than active employees would pay. You’re entitled to the same rate as “similarly situated non-COBRA beneficiaries.”
⚠️Watch out: Plan renewals in January can be a surprise. If you started COBRA in September at $680/month, you might see a jump to $735/month in January with no warning beyond a notice from the plan administrator.
Yes, significantly. COBRA premiums mirror the employer’s group health plan cost, which varies by state due to local healthcare costs, provider networks, and state regulations. Based on 2026 data:
  • Most expensive: Alaska (~$780/mo individual), Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey
  • Least expensive: New Mexico (~$389/mo), Arkansas, Utah, Idaho (~$500/mo)
  • National average: ~$560–$584/month for individual coverage
Your specific COBRA cost depends on the plan your employer chose, not just state averages. A tech company in Idaho with a gold PPO plan could cost more than a small business in New York with a bronze HMO.
You cannot negotiate the COBRA premium rate itself — it’s set by federal law at 102% (or 150% for disability extension) of the full plan cost. However, there are two scenarios where your employer may effectively reduce your cost:
  • Severance agreements: Many employers offer to pay your COBRA premiums for 3–12 months as part of a severance package. This is legal and common — but get it in writing. The premium rate stays the same; the employer just covers it.
  • Employer subsidies: Some employers voluntarily subsidize COBRA for a period after layoffs, especially during mass reductions. This is at their discretion and not required by law.
💡Negotiation tip: If you’re being laid off, ask for COBRA premium payment as part of your severance before signing anything. It’s one of the most commonly granted severance benefits and saves you $400–$2,000/month.
Family COBRA coverage in 2026 averages $1,500–$2,000+ per month, but can exceed $2,500/month for premium PPO plans. The cost depends on your employer’s plan tier structure. Common tiers include:
  • Employee Only: $400–$700/month
  • Employee + Spouse: $900–$1,600/month
  • Employee + Children: $800–$1,400/month
  • Employee + Family: $1,500–$2,500/month
Each qualified beneficiary can independently elect or decline COBRA. Your spouse can elect COBRA while you enroll in a new employer’s plan. Children can have different elections than parents. This flexibility lets you mix-and-match to minimize total household cost.
Eligibility & Qualifying Events
To qualify for federal COBRA, all three conditions must be met:
  • Employer size: Your employer must have had 20 or more employees on more than 50% of its typical business days in the prior calendar year.
  • Plan coverage: You must have been enrolled in the employer’s group health plan on the day before the qualifying event.
  • Qualifying event: A specific event must occur that causes you to lose coverage — voluntary/involuntary termination (except for gross misconduct), reduction in hours, divorce/legal separation, death of covered employee, child aging out (26), or Medicare entitlement of the employee.
If your employer has fewer than 20 employees, check your state’s “mini-COBRA” law — 40 states plus D.C. offer similar protections for small employer groups.
If you’re fired: Yes, you qualify for COBRA in most termination scenarios. The only exception is termination for “gross misconduct,” which federal law does not clearly define. In practice, this is a very high bar — typically involving criminal acts, fraud, or extreme behavior. Standard performance-based firings, layoffs, and restructurings all qualify.

If you quit voluntarily: Yes, you absolutely qualify. Voluntary resignation is a qualifying event under COBRA. Whether you left for a new job, to start a business, for family reasons, or any other purpose — you’re eligible for 18 months of COBRA continuation.
Yes. Divorce or legal separation is a qualifying event that entitles the former spouse (and any dependent children on the plan) to up to 36 months of COBRA coverage — longer than the standard 18 months for job loss. This is one of the most important but least-known COBRA provisions.

The employee (the one whose employer provides the plan) does not get COBRA from divorce — they remain on the plan as an active employee. The ex-spouse and children who lose coverage due to the divorce are the qualified beneficiaries. The employee or plan administrator must notify the plan within 60 days of the divorce.
Federal COBRA does not apply to employers with fewer than 20 employees. However, 40 states plus D.C. have enacted “mini-COBRA” or state continuation laws that provide similar protections. Coverage duration varies:
  • California (Cal-COBRA): 36 months for groups of 2–19 employees
  • New York: 36 months regardless of employer size
  • Texas: 9 months for groups of 2–19
  • Florida: 18 months for groups of 2–19
  • Illinois: 12 months for employers under 20
Contact your state’s Department of Insurance or search “[your state] mini-COBRA law” for specific rules. Premiums under state continuation laws follow the same 102% formula as federal COBRA.
Part-time employees: If you were enrolled in your employer’s group health plan, you’re eligible for COBRA regardless of hours worked. Some employers offer benefits to part-timers working 20–30 hours/week — if you were covered, you qualify.

1099 independent contractors: No. COBRA only applies to employees on the employer’s group health plan. Independent contractors are not employees and are not covered by COBRA. Your alternative is the ACA Marketplace, short-term health plans, or health care sharing ministries.
If a qualified beneficiary is determined to be disabled by the Social Security Administration (SSA) at any time during the first 60 days of COBRA coverage, all family members on that COBRA election can extend coverage from 18 months to 29 months total. This is the disability extension under federal law.

Requirements:
  • SSA disability determination must cover a date within the first 60 days of COBRA
  • You must notify the plan administrator within 60 days of the SSA determination
  • Premiums for months 19–29 can increase to 150% of the plan cost (vs. 102% for the first 18 months)
⚠️Critical timing: If the SSA determination letter arrives late, notify your plan administrator immediately. Missing the 60-day notification window forfeits the extension permanently.
🏥 Coverage & Benefits
Yes, virtually identical. COBRA continues the exact same group health plan you had as an active employee — same network of doctors, same hospitals, same prescription formulary, same deductibles, same copays, and same out-of-pocket maximums. You use the same insurance card and member ID.

The key differences are: (1) you pay 102% of the full premium, (2) you no longer have access to employer-funded HSA contributions or employer wellness incentives, and (3) if your employer changes plans at renewal (e.g., switches from Cigna to Aetna), your COBRA coverage changes too — you follow the plan, not the old carrier.
It covers whatever your employer plan covered. If your employer’s group benefits included dental insurance, vision insurance, prescription drug coverage, mental health services, and an Employee Assistance Program (EAP) — all of those continue under COBRA.

Importantly, you can elect each benefit line separately. You might choose to continue medical + dental but decline vision. Or continue medical only and buy standalone dental/vision on the individual market for less. Each qualified beneficiary (you, spouse, children) can make independent elections.
💡Cost-saving move: Standalone dental plans cost $20–$45/month on the open market vs. $65–$120/month on COBRA. Dropping COBRA dental and buying standalone saves $80–$100/month with comparable coverage.
Yes, fully. Since COBRA is a continuation of your existing employer plan, there are no pre-existing condition exclusions. Whatever was covered before the qualifying event remains covered — including ongoing cancer treatment, pregnancy, chronic conditions like diabetes, heart disease, mental health conditions, and any other treatment you were receiving.

This is one of COBRA’s biggest advantages over some alternatives: your treatment continues without interruption, with the same doctors, same authorizations, and same benefits. If you’re mid-treatment for a serious condition, COBRA ensures zero disruption in care.
Your deductible progress carries over on COBRA. Since COBRA is the same plan, any deductible amount and out-of-pocket maximum you’ve already accumulated for the plan year remains credited. If you’ve met $4,000 of a $5,000 deductible, you only have $1,000 remaining under COBRA.

This is a major financial consideration. If you switch to an ACA Marketplace plan instead, your deductible resets to $0 on the new plan — you start over. Mid-year, this can effectively cost you thousands of dollars if you’ve already met most of your deductible.
💡Strategy: If you’ve met 60%+ of your deductible, consider staying on COBRA through December 31, then switching to ACA for January 1 when both plans would reset anyway.
If your former employer switches carriers or modifies the plan design, your COBRA coverage changes to match the new plan. You get the same options as active employees under the modified plan. This means your network, deductibles, copays, and formulary could change.

If the employer eliminates the group health plan entirely (stops offering health insurance to all employees), COBRA coverage ends for everyone — there is no plan left to continue. In this rare scenario, you would qualify for an ACA Special Enrollment Period due to involuntary loss of coverage.
Timing & Deadlines
You have 60 days from the later of two dates: (1) the date you lose coverage, or (2) the date you receive your COBRA election notice from the plan administrator. In practice, if your employer is slow to send the notice, your 60-day window starts when you actually receive it.

During this window, you are not yet paying premiums, but if you elect within 60 days, coverage is retroactive to the date you lost it. After electing, you have an additional 45 days to make your first payment (which covers the retroactive period). This gives you up to 105 total days of decision time.
COBRA duration depends on the qualifying event:
  • 18 months: Voluntary or involuntary termination, reduction in work hours
  • 29 months: If a qualified beneficiary is SSA-disabled within the first 60 days of COBRA (disability extension)
  • 36 months: Divorce/legal separation, death of the covered employee, child aging out of dependent status, or employee becoming entitled to Medicare
A second qualifying event during an 18-month period (e.g., the employee dies or divorces while dependents are on COBRA) can extend dependents’ coverage to 36 months total from the original qualifying event date.
Yes, COBRA is fully retroactive. If you elect within the 60-day window, your coverage is backdated to the day your employer plan ended — with no gap. Any medical expenses you incur during those 60 days are covered once you elect and pay the retroactive premiums.

This creates a powerful “safety net” strategy: wait during the 60 days. If you stay healthy, let the window expire and pay nothing. If a medical emergency occurs, elect COBRA and all bills are covered retroactively. The risk? If you have an emergency on day 61 without electing, you’re uninsured.
⚠️Important: Some providers may require upfront payment if you don’t have active insurance. You’d need to pay out of pocket, then submit claims for reimbursement after electing COBRA. Keep all receipts.
Federal law provides a 30-day grace period for each monthly COBRA premium payment after the initial payment. Your first payment has a 45-day grace period from the date of election.

If you pay within the grace period, your coverage continues uninterrupted. If you fail to pay within the grace period, the plan can retroactively terminate your coverage back to the last day of the period for which timely payment was made. There is no reinstatement right after a terminated COBRA election — once it’s lost, it’s gone permanently.
💡Set up autopay. Most plan administrators and TPAs offer automatic payment. A single missed payment can permanently end your COBRA coverage with no second chances.
Yes, you can cancel COBRA at any time — simply stop paying premiums. There’s no penalty for early cancellation. However, once you cancel, you cannot re-enroll in COBRA. It’s a one-way door.

To switch to ACA: losing COBRA coverage triggers a 60-day Special Enrollment Period (SEP) on the Marketplace. You can also enroll during the annual Open Enrollment Period (November 1 – January 15) for a January 1 start date. The optimal strategy is to use COBRA through December 31 (especially if deductible is met), then switch to ACA for January 1.
⚠️One-way door: You CAN go from COBRA → ACA. You CANNOT go from ACA → COBRA. Once you decline or cancel COBRA, the option is gone forever.
📈 Tax & Financial
It depends on your employment status:
  • Self-employed: Yes — COBRA premiums are deductible as an “above-the-line” deduction under the self-employed health insurance deduction (IRS Form 7206). You don’t need to itemize. This is the best tax treatment.
  • Not self-employed (W-2 or unemployed): COBRA premiums can be deducted as medical expenses on Schedule A, but only if your total medical expenses exceed 7.5% of your Adjusted Gross Income (AGI). For someone with $60,000 AGI, you’d need over $4,500 in medical expenses before any deduction kicks in.
In most cases, the standard deduction ($15,000 single / $30,000 married in 2026) is larger than itemized medical expenses, making the deduction impractical for many non-self-employed taxpayers.
Yes. COBRA premiums are one of the specific IRS exceptions allowing tax-free HSA withdrawals for health insurance premiums (IRS Publication 969). You can reimburse yourself from your HSA for COBRA premiums paid — no income tax, no penalties.

Requirements: You must have had an HSA-eligible High Deductible Health Plan (HDHP) and an existing HSA balance. Pay your COBRA premium from your checking account, then reimburse yourself from the HSA. Keep the COBRA invoice as documentation.

Note: This exception does NOT apply to ACA Marketplace premiums (unless you’re collecting unemployment). It’s specific to COBRA, making it a unique financial advantage of COBRA over ACA for HSA holders.
Yes, if your COBRA plan is an HSA-eligible HDHP. Since COBRA continues your exact employer plan, if that plan was a qualifying High Deductible Health Plan, you remain eligible to make HSA contributions — up to the 2026 annual limits ($4,300 individual / $8,550 family, plus $1,000 catch-up if 55+).

However, you won’t have payroll deductions anymore. You’ll need to contribute directly to your HSA through your custodian (Fidelity, Lively, etc.) and claim the tax deduction on IRS Form 8889 when you file your return. The contributions are still fully tax-deductible.
Severance pay does not affect COBRA eligibility or premiums. COBRA eligibility is triggered by the qualifying event (job loss), not by income. Your COBRA premium stays at 102% regardless of whether you receive $0 or $100,000 in severance.

Unemployment benefits also don’t affect COBRA. However, they are relevant to ACA Marketplace subsidies. Your projected annual income (including unemployment benefits but potentially excluding severance depending on classification) determines your ACA Premium Tax Credit amount. Lower projected income = larger ACA subsidy, potentially making ACA much cheaper than COBRA.
💡Important distinction: Many employers offer to pay COBRA premiums as part of severance. This is separate from cash severance. If your employer pays your COBRA for 6 months, you pay $0 during that period — negotiate this specifically.
🔄 Alternatives & Comparisons
For the majority of people, ACA Marketplace plans are significantly cheaper — especially for households earning under 400% of the Federal Poverty Level (about $62,400 for a single person in 2026). ACA subsidies can reduce premiums to $0–$200/month vs. $400–$700+ for COBRA.

COBRA is better when:
  • You’re mid-treatment with a provider only in your employer’s network
  • You’ve met most of your deductible (mid-year)
  • Your income is above 400% FPL (limited or no ACA subsidies)
  • You only need coverage for 1–3 months while waiting for new employer coverage
ACA is better when:
  • You qualify for Premium Tax Credits (income below ~400% FPL)
  • You need coverage for longer than 3 months
  • You’re starting a business with lower projected income
  • You don’t have provider-specific requirements
Yes. Losing your employer coverage is a qualifying life event that triggers a Special Enrollment Period on your spouse’s employer plan — typically 30 days from the date of your coverage loss. You don’t have to wait for their open enrollment.

This is often the best option because employer plans are subsidized (the employer pays 70–83% of the premium). Adding a spouse usually costs $200–$500/month in additional employee-paid premiums vs. $400–$700/month for individual COBRA. Check with your spouse’s HR department immediately after your coverage loss to verify eligibility and the enrollment deadline.
Short-term health insurance is much cheaper ($100–$300/month) but comes with major limitations compared to COBRA:
  • Pre-existing conditions: Not covered. If you have diabetes, asthma, or any chronic condition, short-term plans can exclude all related claims.
  • Coverage gaps: No mandatory coverage for maternity, mental health, or prescription drugs.
  • Duration: Varies by state — some allow up to 364 days, others limit to 3 months.
  • ACA impact: Short-term plans do NOT count as qualifying coverage and may affect your ACA SEP eligibility.
⚠️Critical risk: If you choose short-term insurance over COBRA and later need treatment for a pre-existing condition, you could face tens of thousands in uncovered medical bills. For healthy individuals with a very short gap (1–2 months), it can work. For anyone else, COBRA or ACA is safer.
Possibly. If your income drops below 138% of the Federal Poverty Level (approximately $20,783 for an individual or $42,795 for a family of 4 in 2026) after job loss, you may qualify for Medicaid in the 40 states plus D.C. that expanded Medicaid under the ACA.

Medicaid has no monthly premiums and minimal copays — making it dramatically cheaper than COBRA. You can apply at any time (no enrollment window), and coverage can start immediately. Even if you’re collecting unemployment benefits, your income may still fall below the Medicaid threshold.

States that have NOT expanded Medicaid (as of 2026): Texas, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, Alabama, South Carolina, Tennessee, Wisconsin (partial), Wyoming, Kansas. In these states, adults without children face a “coverage gap” where they may earn too much for traditional Medicaid but too little for ACA subsidies.
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US Legal Disclaimer & ERISA Continuation Disclosure

Important legal information regarding the actuarial limitations and intended use of this 2026 COBRA Health Insurance Cost Calculator.

⚠️
Not Legal, Tax, or Insurance Advice

This calculator provides general educational estimates only. COBRA continuation coverage is governed by complex federal statutes including **ERISA §§601–608** and **IRC §4980B**. Your actual costs depend on your specific employer plan and qualifying event. Always consult a licensed benefits attorney or certified insurance advisor before making coverage decisions.

📝
Estimates Based on KFF & Actuarial Benchmarks

Projections are based on **2025–2026 national average premium data** from the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) Employer Health Benefits Survey. USFinanceCalculators.com accepts no liability for financial decisions made based on these calculations. Past cost data does not guarantee future premium rates.


Editorial Transparency

We follow the **Google Search Quality Evaluator Guidelines** to ensure complete openness regarding our data sources and methodology.

Editorial Independence

Our formulas and recommendations are developed independently. No insurance carrier or third-party advertiser has influence over our 2026 calculation methodology.

Actuarial Data Sources

Premium estimates are derived from the **Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS)** and peer-reviewed employer studies. We update figures within 30 days of new federal data releases.

Regulatory Accuracy

Calculations are cross-verified against **IRS COBRA regulations** and **DOL EBSA** guidance. Errors are investigated and corrected within 48 hours of reporting.

Funding Disclosure

This site is supported by display advertising. Advertising relationships never influence our ranking or recommendation of any insurance product or service.


Actuarial Methodology: IRS & Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) Data Sources

Our model uses the following statutory parameters to estimate monthly continuation coverage costs for 2026.

Regulatory ParameterOfficial Source / BasisUpdate Cycle
Gross Premiums KFF Employer Health Benefits Survey (Average US Premiums) Annual (Q4)
Admin Fee Cap **ERISA §604(2)** — Statutory 2% administrative charge limit Statutory
Marketplace Subsidies **IRC §36B** — 2026 Federal Poverty Level (FPL) Guidelines Annual (Jan)

Official US Department of Labor (DOL) & Healthcare.gov Resources

Verify your COBRA rights and eligibility directly through these authoritative federal agencies.

  • DOL
    EBSA
    Department of Labor — Employee Benefits Security Administration

    The primary agency overseeing COBRA for private-sector employers. Provides official model notices and rights under ERISA.

    dol.gov/ebsa — COBRA Laws
  • IRS
    IRS — COBRA Tax Regulations (IRC §4980B)

    Internal Revenue Code governing employer excise tax penalties and tax treatment of health premiums.

    irs.gov — ACA & COBRA

Quarterly Content Review Policy

This tool and all supporting content are reviewed for accuracy on a quarterly cycle. All calculations comply with current 2026 federal regulations and E-E-A-T principles as outlined by Google’s latest search quality guidelines.

Last reviewed: April 16, 2026 Legal basis: ERISA §601–608, IRC §4980B Privacy: View Policy