Most Georgia residents looking for health insurance end up choosing between two systems: Georgia Medicaid (the state's Medicaid program) and the HealthCare.gov marketplace. They look similar from the outside — both have free or low-cost coverage, doctor networks, and prescription benefits — but the eligibility rules, networks, and out-of-pocket costs are dramatically different.
This guide is grounded in current CMS and KFF data for Georgia. We update it whenever federal poverty guidelines change (typically January) or when Georgia's Department of Insurance issues new bulletins.
| Georgia Health Insurance — Quick Facts | |
|---|---|
| State Capital | Atlanta |
| Largest City | Atlanta |
| Marketplace / Exchange | HealthCare.gov |
| Avg. benchmark Silver premium (40-yr-old, 2025) | $439/mo |
| Major in-state carriers | Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, Ambetter, Cigna, Kaiser Permanente, Oscar |
| Medicaid program | Georgia Medicaid |
| Medicaid expansion | ❌ Not expanded (coverage gap exists) |
| Uninsured rate (2024) | 11.4% |
The Short Answer
Georgia Medicaid: How It Works in Georgia
Georgia Medicaid is jointly funded by the federal government and the State of Georgia, administered by the state. It's the same federal program you've heard of as "Medicaid," just rebranded with a state-specific name (Georgia's version is called Georgia Medicaid).
Who qualifies in Georgia:
- Pregnant women up to 200%+ FPL
- Children under 19 up to ~250% FPL (often rebranded under CHIP)
- Adults with disabilities receiving SSI
- Parents of dependent children at very low income limits (varies)
- Seniors with limited income who qualify for nursing-home care or HCBS waivers
- Note: Georgia did not expand Medicaid to non-disabled adults under 138% FPL. Working adults without children typically don't qualify regardless of income.
What it costs: $0 monthly premium for most enrollees. Small copays (often $0–$8) for doctor visits and prescriptions. No deductible. No annual out-of-pocket maximum that you'll realistically hit.
Network: Georgia Medicaid contracts with managed care organizations (MCOs) like Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield that handle the day-to-day administration. Provider networks are typically robust in major metros (Atlanta) and thinner in rural counties.
HealthCare.gov Marketplace Plans: How They Work
HealthCare.gov is Georgia's federally-run health insurance marketplace under the Affordable Care Act. You pick a plan from one of 5 private carriers (Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, Ambetter, Cigna, etc.) and the federal government pays a Premium Tax Credit directly to the insurer to lower your monthly bill.
Who qualifies: Anyone who isn't eligible for Medicare, employer coverage, or Georgia Medicaid can buy a marketplace plan. Subsidies are available based on income — most Georgia families earning between roughly $15,000 and $120,000 will qualify for some level of Premium Tax Credit.
What it costs: After subsidies, monthly premiums in Georgia range from $0 (for very-low-income enrollees) to a few hundred dollars per month. Deductibles range from $0–$1,000 (Platinum/Gold) to $7,500+ (Bronze). The 2026 benchmark Silver plan in Atlanta runs about $439/month before subsidies.
Network: Each carrier has its own network. Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield typically offers the broadest network in Georgia; smaller carriers offer narrower networks at lower premiums.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Georgia Medicaid | HealthCare.gov Marketplace | |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly premium | $0 for most | $0–$400+ after subsidy |
| Annual deductible | $0 | $500–$8,500 |
| Doctor copay | $0–$8 | $15–$60 |
| Prescription copay | $0–$4 | $10–$250+ depending on tier |
| Out-of-pocket max | $0–$2,500 | $3,000–$9,200 |
| Income limit | Varies (no full-population eligibility) | None — but subsidies phase out |
| Open enrollment | Year-round | Nov 1 – Jan 15 |
| Where to apply | State Medicaid agency | HealthCare.gov |
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See My Plans →The Tricky Cases
What if my income is right at the edge?
Because Georgia didn't expand Medicaid, this "edge" is actually the coverage gap — too well-off for Georgia Medicaid, too poor for marketplace PTC. Three options work: (1) increase projected annual income to over $15,060 (single) to qualify for marketplace PTC; even a part-time gig can do it; (2) look for non-income Medicaid pathways (pregnancy, disability, dependent child); (3) enroll in a short-term medical plan as a stopgap.
What if my income changes mid-year?
Income changes don't open Georgia Medicaid eligibility for non-expansion-eligible adults. They do, however, change your marketplace subsidy size — log in to HealthCare.gov and report the change so your PTC adjusts before tax time.
Can I have both?
No. You're either Medicaid-eligible (and Georgia Medicaid is your primary coverage) or you're not (and you use the marketplace). The exception: if a family member qualifies for Georgia Medicaid (often kids, via CHIP) while parents enroll in marketplace plans, that's allowed and common.
How to Apply
For Georgia Medicaid: Apply through the Georgia Medicaid agency or via HealthCare.gov (which forwards your application to the state if you appear Medicaid-eligible). Application takes about 30 minutes online.
For HealthCare.gov: Apply at HealthCare.gov. Have last year's tax return, current pay stubs, and Social Security numbers for everyone in your household.
Or skip the back-and-forth — request a free quote below and a licensed Georgia broker will tell you within 60 seconds whether you qualify for Georgia Medicaid, marketplace, or both.
📚 Trusted Sources & References
All data in this article comes from authoritative public-information sources. Click any link to verify.