Being self-employed means being your own HR department — and health insurance is the most expensive line item you manage. The self-employed health insurance landscape in 2026 is more nuanced than most people realize: ACA subsidies make coverage genuinely affordable at many income levels, the self-employed deduction reduces real cost, and the right plan type can save thousands annually. This is the complete guide.
| Net self-employment income | Strategy | Typical monthly cost |
|---|---|---|
| Under $20,706 | Medicaid (expansion states) | $0 |
| $20,706–$37,050 | ACA Silver + CSR subsidies | $0–$100 |
| $37,050–$55,000 | ACA Silver or Bronze+HSA | $100–$280 |
| $55,000–$62,160 | ACA Silver (diminishing subsidy) | $200–$350 |
| $62,160–$100,000 | HDHP + maxed HSA | $250–$500 |
| $100,000+ | HDHP + HSA + Solo 401(k) MAGI reduction | $300–$600 |
Your ACA subsidy is based on your net Schedule C profit — not your gross 1099 income. Every legitimate business deduction reduces both your tax bill and your MAGI for ACA purposes:
Self-employed individuals with Schedule C net profit can deduct 100% of health, dental, and vision premiums from gross income on Schedule 1 (Form 1040). This is an above-the-line deduction — it reduces AGI and MAGI without requiring you to itemize. The deduction applies to premiums paid for yourself, your spouse, and your dependents.
The circular benefit: lower premium (from subsidy) → lower deduction → slightly higher MAGI → slightly lower subsidy. The IRS provides an iterative worksheet for self-employed individuals to calculate this correctly — or your tax software handles it automatically.
We work with 1099 workers, freelancers, and solo business owners to find the right 2026 plan.
Call (844) 516-1739The ACA Marketplace is the primary option for most self-employed individuals. Below $62,160 MAGI, subsidies make Silver plans highly affordable. Above $62,160, an HDHP + HSA minimizes premiums and maximizes tax deductions. Both pair well with the self-employed health insurance deduction.
Yes — 100%. The self-employed health insurance deduction allows sole proprietors, single-member LLCs, partners, and S-corp shareholders to deduct health, dental, and vision premiums from gross income on Schedule 1. This applies to premiums for the self-employed individual, their spouse, and dependents.
Yes. Self-employed individuals with net income between $14,580 and $62,160 (single) qualify for ACA premium tax credits. The subsidy is based on net Schedule C profit — not gross 1099 income. Business deductions (mileage, equipment, retirement contributions) all reduce MAGI and increase subsidy eligibility.
During Open Enrollment (November 1 – January 15) for the following year, or within 60 days of a qualifying life event (job loss, marriage, birth, move). Newly self-employed individuals who left an employer job have a 60-day SEP from their last day of employer coverage.