
The day it hits you is usually the same for everyone.
You leave a job, start a business, go freelance — and somewhere between the excitement and the paperwork, it lands: nobody is going to handle health insurance for you anymore. No HR department. No open enrollment email. No automatic payroll deduction. Just you, a search engine, and a wall of confusing options that all seem to cost too much.
Here’s the thing most people don’t find out until later: self-employed Floridians actually have more health insurance options than they think — and many qualify for coverage that costs far less than they’d expect, sometimes as little as $0 per month.
This guide breaks down your four main options for health insurance if you’re self-employed in Florida, who qualifies for subsidies, how the tax deduction works, and how to enroll — in plain language, with no pressure. If you’d rather talk it through with someone bilingual who knows Florida’s insurance market, our licensed WeDo agents are available in English and Spanish at no cost to you.
For health insurance purposes, you’re self-employed if you run a business that generates income and has no W-2 employees — meaning workers whose income you report on a W-2 at year-end. That covers a wide range of people:
Florida ranks #1 in the nation for self-employed workers per capita. If you’re navigating this on your own, you’re in good company — and you have real options.
There is no single right answer for everyone — the best plan depends on your income, your health, your family situation, and how much predictability you want in your monthly costs. Here are the four paths available to you in Florida in 2026.
The ACA Marketplace — also called Obamacare or Healthcare.gov — is the starting point for most self-employed Floridians. These are fully regulated plans with comprehensive coverage, and they come with one major advantage that no other option offers: income-based subsidies that can dramatically lower your monthly premium.
Key things to know:
WeDo is a certified ACA enrollment partner. Our bilingual agents compare ACA and private plans at no cost, so you can see all your options before committing to anything.
If your income is above the subsidy threshold — roughly $62,000 per year as a single person or $127,000 for a family of four in 2026 — you may not qualify for meaningful ACA subsidies. In that case, private medically underwritten plans can offer comparable coverage at a significantly lower price.
This option makes sense if you’re generally healthy and earning above the subsidy threshold. WeDo runs quotes on both private and Marketplace options side-by-side so you can make a real comparison.
For self-employed people who are generally healthy and want to reduce monthly costs while building a tax-advantaged savings cushion, pairing a High-Deductible Health Plan (HDHP) with a Health Savings Account is worth a serious look.
Here’s why it works so well for the self-employed:
Combined with the self-employed premium deduction (more on that below), an HDHP + HSA setup can deliver a meaningful double tax benefit for independent workers.
Short-term plans offer lower monthly premiums and are available outside of Open Enrollment — which makes them appealing if you’ve recently become self-employed and are between coverage windows. Florida allows short-term plans of up to 12 months.
The important caveats:
If you’re between coverage right now, a WeDo agent can help you find the fastest path to proper coverage, including whether a qualifying life event gives you immediate access to an ACA plan.
The most common reason self-employed Floridians go without health insurance isn’t that they can’t afford it. It’s that they assume they can’t afford it — and never check.
Premium tax credits are available to households earning between 100% and 400% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL). In 2026, that means:
| Household Size | 100% FPL (~) | 400% FPL (~) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 person | $15,060 | $60,240 |
| 2 people | $20,440 | $81,760 |
| 4 people | $31,200 | $124,800 |
Enhanced subsidies introduced in recent years remain in effect in 2026, meaning many self-employed Floridians in the $30,000–$60,000 income range qualify for $0–$50/month premium plans.
A few things that catch people off-guard:
Your subsidy is based on projected income, not last year’s. When you enroll, the Marketplace asks you to estimate your net self-employment income for the upcoming year. Overestimate and you overpay every month. Underestimate significantly and you may owe money back at tax time. Getting this right matters — and it’s exactly what a WeDo agent helps you calculate.
Income changes mid-year affect your subsidy. If you land a big contract in June, report it. If income drops, report that too. Updating your Marketplace application keeps your subsidy accurate and protects you from surprises.
Compare ACA Marketplace and private plans — free, in English or Spanish, with no commitment.
If you’re self-employed and paying for your own health insurance, the IRS gives you something most people don’t realize they have: a 100% above-the-line deduction on your federal taxes for health insurance premiums.
Here’s what that means in plain terms:
This is where WeDo’s dual expertise becomes a real advantage. Most people handle health insurance and taxes as two completely separate conversations — with different providers, in different seasons. We bring both together.
Our bilingual agents help you find the right health plan, and our tax preparation services team ensures you’re capturing every deduction available — including this one.
If you want to go deeper on how to prepare for tax season and make sure you’re capturing every deduction — including this one — read our complete guide to tax preparation in Miami, which covers everything you need to bring and how to get the maximum refund you’re entitled to.
Missing the enrollment window is the #1 reason people end up uninsured. Here’s what to know:
Open Enrollment Period: November 1 – January 15 each year. Plans purchased by December 15 begin January 1. Plans purchased between December 16 and January 15 begin February 1.
Special Enrollment Period (SEP): A 60-day window triggered by a qualifying life event:
Becoming self-employed and losing your job-based insurance qualifies as a qualifying life event. This means you don’t have to wait for November — you may be able to enroll right now.
Private off-marketplace plans are available year-round with no enrollment window required.
There’s no shortage of websites that will give you a quote. What most of them won’t give you is a licensed agent who speaks your language, knows Florida’s market, and has no financial incentive to push you toward a specific plan.
WeDo is an independent insurance broker — we work for you, not the insurance companies. That means we compare options across carriers and plan types and only recommend what actually fits your situation.
What our self-employed clients tell us they value most:
Yes. The IRS allows self-employed individuals to deduct 100% of health insurance premiums — including medical, dental, and vision — as an above-the-line deduction on federal taxes. This applies to coverage for yourself, your spouse, and your dependents, and it reduces your adjusted gross income regardless of whether you itemize. Our tax preparation team can walk you through exactly how to claim it.
It varies significantly based on income, age, plan type, and family size. Subsidized ACA Marketplace plans can cost as little as $0 per month for eligible individuals. Unsubsidized ACA Silver plans typically run $420–$560 per month. Private medically underwritten plans for healthy individuals start around $266 per month. The only way to know your actual cost is to run your numbers — which a WeDo agent can do for free in about 15 minutes.
Yes — many self-employed Floridians qualify for $0-premium ACA plans through enhanced premium tax credits, particularly those with annual net income in the $20,000–$45,000 range. Eligibility is based on your household size and projected income. A WeDo agent can calculate your exact subsidy eligibility in a 15-minute call at no charge.
Open Enrollment runs November 1 through January 15 annually. If you recently became self-employed or lost employer coverage, you qualify for a Special Enrollment Period — a 60-day window to enroll regardless of the calendar. Private off-marketplace plans are available year-round.


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