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Healthcare sharing plans promise lower monthly costs than traditional insurance, often marketing themselves as “biblical” or “faith-based” alternatives. With premiums sometimes half the cost of ACA plans, they’re tempting for families squeezed by rising insurance costs. But here’s what the marketing materials don’t emphasize: these aren’t insurance policies, and that distinction can leave you financially exposed when you need coverage most.
Understanding the difference between healthcare sharing and actual insurance could save you from a costly mistake that devastates your family’s finances.
What Healthcare Sharing Plans Actually Are
Healthcare sharing plans operate as membership organizations where participants contribute monthly amounts into a pool that pays for other members’ medical expenses. Think of it as a large group of people agreeing to help pay each other’s healthcare bills, typically united by shared religious beliefs or ethical values.
Unlike insurance companies, sharing plans aren’t regulated by state insurance departments and don’t guarantee payment of your medical bills. They can deny claims, change coverage terms mid-year, or even shut down entirely without the consumer protections that govern traditional insurers.
The National Association of Insurance Commissioners warns that these arrangements don’t meet the legal definition of insurance and members may face significant financial risk.
How Payments and Coverage Work
Members pay monthly “shares” ranging from $200 to $600 per family. Most plans include an annual “unshared amount” (similar to a deductible) that you pay before the plan considers sharing your costs. This amount often ranges from $1,000 to $5,000 per incident.
When medical bills arrive, you submit them to the sharing plan. The organization reviews claims and decides whether they qualify for sharing based on their guidelines. Approved expenses are then paid from the collective pool, but payment isn’t guaranteed and can take months to process.

The Real Financial Risks
Healthcare sharing plans can legally exclude coverage for pre-existing conditions indefinitely. Unlike ACA insurance that only allows brief waiting periods, sharing plans might never cover your diabetes, heart condition, or previous cancer treatment.
Many plans exclude mental health services, preventive care, prescription medications, and routine checkups entirely. Some won’t share costs for emergency room visits unless you’re admitted overnight. Pregnancy coverage often requires 12 months of membership before conception.
The Commonwealth Fund documented extensive complaints about sharing plans refusing to pay claims that members expected to be covered, leaving families with tens of thousands in unpaid medical bills.
Legal and Tax Implications
Healthcare sharing plans don’t satisfy the ACA’s individual mandate requirements, though the federal penalty was reduced to $0 in 2019. However, some states maintain their own individual mandate penalties that sharing plan membership won’t satisfy.
You can’t use Health Savings Account (HSA) funds to pay sharing plan contributions, and your contributions aren’t tax-deductible like traditional insurance premiums might be through employer plans.
When Sharing Plans Might Make Sense
For young, healthy individuals with minimal healthcare needs and strong emergency savings, sharing plans can provide catastrophic coverage at lower monthly costs. They work best for people who rarely see doctors and want protection only against major medical emergencies.
Some plans excel at covering specific types of care. Certain sharing organizations have good track records for paying large surgical bills or cancer treatments, though this varies significantly between organizations and isn’t guaranteed.
Questions to Ask Before Joining
Review the sharing guidelines document carefully. What specific conditions and treatments are excluded? How long do members typically wait for reimbursement? What happens if the organization can’t collect enough shares to pay all claims?
Contact current members if possible. Ask about their claim experiences, payment timelines, and any unexpected denials. The Healthcare Sharing Directory provides contact information for major sharing organizations and member testimonials.
Smart Alternatives to Consider
Before choosing a sharing plan, explore ACA marketplace subsidies. Many middle-class families qualify for premium tax credits that significantly reduce insurance costs. The HealthCare.gov subsidy calculator shows potential savings based on your income.
Short-term medical insurance plans offer guaranteed benefits and regulatory protections that sharing plans lack. While coverage is temporary, they function as actual insurance policies with defined benefits and state oversight.
High-deductible health plans paired with Health Savings Accounts can provide catastrophic protection with tax advantages that sharing plans can’t match. The HSA creates a triple tax benefit while building funds for future healthcare costs.
Making an Informed Decision
Healthcare sharing plans aren’t inherently bad, but they’re fundamentally different from insurance. They can work for specific situations but shouldn’t be chosen simply because they’re cheaper without understanding the trade-offs.
If you’re considering a sharing plan, treat it as catastrophic coverage only. Maintain emergency savings for routine care and prescription medications. Read the entire sharing guidelines document, not just the marketing materials, and understand exactly what isn’t covered.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau provides detailed guidance on medical debt and billing issues, including protections when healthcare arrangements fail to cover expected costs.
Most importantly, don’t let lower monthly costs blind you to potential financial catastrophe. The savings disappear quickly if you face a major medical event that the sharing plan refuses to cover, leaving you responsible for bills that could easily reach six figures.

