A High Deductible Health Plan (HDHP) is a health insurance plan with a higher annual deductible than traditional plans. In exchange for the higher deductible, HDHPs offer significantly lower monthly premiums and, crucially, eligibility for a Health Savings Account (HSA), the most tax-advantaged savings account available in the United States. In 2026, the IRS defines an HDHP as having a minimum deductible of $1,700 for individual coverage and $3,400 for family coverage.
HDHPs have grown from a niche offering to the most popular plan type in America. Approximately 38% of covered workers are now enrolled in an HDHP, up from 24% a decade ago. This growth is driven by employer incentives (lower premiums, HSA contributions) and growing awareness of the HSA's powerful tax benefits. Understanding how an HDHP works is essential for making an informed health plan choice during open enrollment.
You pay lower monthly premiums compared to PPO or HMO plans. The average individual HDHP premium is approximately $1,400/year (employee share), compared to $2,200 for a PPO. This premium savings is yours regardless of medical utilisation.
Under the ACA, all preventive services are covered at 100% with no cost to you, regardless of deductible status. This includes annual physicals, vaccinations, cancer screenings, prenatal visits, well-child exams, and many preventive medications.
For non-preventive services (sick visits, specialist consultations, imaging, procedures, most prescriptions), you pay the full negotiated rate until your annual deductible ($1,700+ individual) is met. This is the key difference from PPO/HMO plans, which charge copays from day one.
Once you meet the deductible, coinsurance begins. Typically, your plan covers 80% and you pay 20%. So a $1,000 procedure would cost you $200. Your coinsurance payments count toward the out-of-pocket maximum.
Once your total out-of-pocket spending (deductible + coinsurance + copays) reaches the OOP maximum ($8,500 individual in 2026), your insurance covers 100% of remaining costs for the rest of the plan year. This is your absolute worst-case annual exposure.
| Feature | HDHP | HMO | PPO | EPO |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Premiums | Lowest | Low | Highest | Moderate |
| Deductible | High ($1,700+) | Low-None | Low-Moderate | Moderate |
| HSA Eligible | Yes | No | No | No |
| Referral Required | Usually no | Yes (PCP required) | No | No |
| Out-of-Network | Varies | No (except emergency) | Yes (higher cost) | No (except emergency) |
| Network Size | Varies | Narrow | Broadest | Moderate |
Reality: Preventive care is 100% covered. After the deductible, coinsurance covers 80%+. The OOP max caps your annual exposure.
Reality: HSA is optional. You can have an HDHP without opening an HSA. But not opening one means leaving significant tax benefits on the table.
Reality: Total cost depends on medical spending. At high utilisation ($10,000+/year), a PPO may cost less after accounting for the higher deductible and OOP max.
HDHP stands for High Deductible Health Plan. It is a type of health insurance plan that has a higher annual deductible than traditional plans but lower monthly premiums. In 2026, the IRS defines an HDHP as having a minimum deductible of $1,700 for individual coverage and $3,400 for family coverage.
With an HDHP, you pay lower monthly premiums but cover the full cost of medical services (at the insurance company's negotiated rate) until you meet your deductible. After the deductible, coinsurance kicks in (typically you pay 20% and insurance pays 80%). Once you hit the out-of-pocket maximum ($8,500 individual in 2026), insurance covers 100%. Preventive care is always covered at 100% with no deductible under the ACA.
For 2026, the IRS minimum HDHP deductible is $1,700 for individual coverage and $3,400 for family coverage. The maximum out-of-pocket limits are $8,500 (individual) and $17,000 (family). These thresholds are adjusted annually for inflation.
Yes. All HDHPs must cover ACA-mandated preventive care at 100% before the deductible is met. This includes annual check-ups, vaccinations, cancer screenings, prenatal care, and well-child visits. Additionally, many HDHPs now cover certain preventive medications before the deductible, including insulin, statins, blood pressure medications, and some mental health medications.
No, though they are sometimes confused. An HDHP is a specific IRS designation that qualifies you for an HSA. A catastrophic plan is an ACA marketplace plan available only to people under 30 (or with a hardship exemption) that has very low premiums and high deductibles. As of 2026, all catastrophic plans also qualify as HDHPs for HSA purposes, but not all HDHPs are catastrophic plans.