Don't overpay for health coverage. Virginia residents have access to subsidized ACA plans that can cost as little as $0/month. Here's how to find the lowest price for real coverage.
The ACA marketplace offers subsidies based on your income — and in 2026, more Virginia residents qualify than ever before.
If your income is between 100% and 400%+ of the Federal Poverty Level, you qualify for premium tax credits that reduce your monthly payment — sometimes to $0. In Virginia, this covers a significant portion of the uninsured population.
If you earn below 250% FPL (about $36,000 single), you qualify for CSRs — extra savings that lower your deductible and out-of-pocket costs when you use care. CSRs are only available on Silver plans.
If you're generally healthy and rarely see a doctor, a Bronze plan with a high deductible but very low premium may be the cheapest overall option. The safety net is there if something major happens — without paying $400+/month for coverage you rarely use.
Insurance premiums in Virginia vary significantly by county. Richmond residents see different rates than Arlington residents. A licensed agent compares every plan in your specific ZIP code — not just a generic statewide average.
Lost a job? Got married? Had a baby? These qualifying life events give you a 60-day window to enroll outside of open enrollment — often at subsidized rates that make coverage more affordable than COBRA.
A licensed TrustedQuotes agent compares every plan available to you at no charge. Agents are paid by the insurance companies — not by you — so there's no cost to get expert help finding the cheapest plan.
2026 estimated monthly premiums for a benchmark Silver plan, before and after subsidies.
*Estimates vary by ZIP code, age, and plan. Speak with a licensed agent for your exact amount.
Your subsidy amount is based on your Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI). For self-employed residents of Richmond or Virginia Beach, this means your net business income after deductions — not your gross revenue. Getting this number right is critical: underestimating income can cause you to owe subsidies back at tax time; overestimating means you leave money on the table.
Bronze plans have the lowest premiums but highest out-of-pocket costs. Silver plans are the sweet spot for most Virginia residents — especially those with incomes below $43,740 who qualify for Cost-Sharing Reductions. Gold and Platinum plans make sense for people with high ongoing medical expenses who want to minimize out-of-pocket spending per visit.
The cheapest plan in Richmond is often a different carrier than the cheapest plan in Arlington or Charlottesville. Virginia has multiple carriers competing on the marketplace — including Optima Health, Anthem HealthKeepers, Molina Healthcare — and pricing varies significantly by county. A licensed TrustedQuotes agent runs this comparison instantly and shows you the lowest available price for your specific address.
If your income is above the subsidy threshold (roughly $58,320 for a single person), you may find that private (off-exchange) health insurance offers competitive pricing with more carrier choices and broader networks. Private plans skip the ACA marketplace entirely but still provide comprehensive major medical coverage. A TrustedQuotes agent compares both ACA and private options side by side.
Compare every plan in your Virginia ZIP code. Free quote in 60 seconds — a licensed agent handles the comparison for you.