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Al - What is a Co-Pay?
by Al Knight
What is a co-pay? The term co-pay is the percentage of a claim that you pay after your deductible has been met. A typical PPO plan might be a 70/30 plan, this means after the deductible is met the insurance will pay 70% of the claim and the client pays 30%. A good plan will have a co-insurance maximum which is your stop loss.
Here is an example of how it works: Lets say you have a 70/30 plan with a $5000 deductible and a co-insurance maximum of $4500. You are admitted to a hospital for a surgery or illness and the bill is $100,000. A good PPO policy will first negotiate a discount off your bill, lets say they get it reduced to $80,000. If your insurance paid 70% that would be $56,000 which leaves you with a balance at 30% or $24,000. But, remember the co-insurance maximum of $4500, this means you would pay your deductible of $5000 and your co-insurance maximum of $4500 and be done.
Some policies may require you to meet your deductible before it will pay claims. I personally look for a policy that will pay claims first then let me deal with the remaining portion of the bill. You may even be able to further negotiate a discount on your liability with the hospital administrator.
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