Self-employed health insurance, made specific.
An independent broker who works the same Nebraska marketplace you do — for free, on your timeline.

Photo by Tony Webster from Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States on Wikimedia Commons · CC BY 2.0
118k Nebraska households were enrolled in ACA marketplace coverage at the latest CMS Open Enrollment Period.
Average APTC subsidy for Nebraska consumers: $580/month, applied directly to lower premiums.
Nebraska runs through the federal marketplace (healthcare.gov) — 3 active carriers offering qualified health plans.
Self-employed and 1099 households qualify for a 60-day Special Enrollment Period after losing W-2 coverage.
Nebraska at a glance.
Marketplace participation, population, and subsidy figures drawn from primary government records.
High agricultural self-employment (sole-prop farmers, ranchers) drives one of the higher state-level self-employment rates. Omaha and Lincoln dominate the urban marketplace; rural counties have narrower carrier choice and longer drives to in-network specialists.
93 Nebraska counties.
Click through to the local county page with hospital and city data.
- Douglas County
- Lancaster County
- Sarpy County
- Hall County
- Buffalo County
- Dodge County
- Scotts Bluff County
- Madison County
- Platte County
- Lincoln County
- Adams County
- Cass County
- Dawson County
- Saunders County
- Gage County
- Dakota County
- Washington County
- Seward County
- Otoe County
- Saline County
- York County
- Colfax County
- Box Butte County
- Custer County
- Red Willow County
- Holt County
- Wayne County
- Cheyenne County
- Hamilton County
- Phelps County
- Cuming County
- Butler County
- Knox County
- Cedar County
- Keith County
- Dawes County
- Merrick County
- Richardson County
- Pierce County
- Jefferson County
- Nemaha County
- Kearney County
- Burt County
- Thurston County
- Howard County
- Antelope County
- Clay County
- Stanton County
- Cherry County
- Dixon County
- Fillmore County
- Boone County
- Polk County
- Johnson County
- Sheridan County
- Thayer County
- Morrill County
- Furnas County
- Nuckolls County
- Valley County
- Chase County
- Webster County
- Kimball County
- Nance County
- Harlan County
- Sherman County
- Brown County
- Franklin County
- Perkins County
- Frontier County
- Pawnee County
- Hitchcock County
- Greeley County
- Deuel County
- Gosper County
- Garden County
- Garfield County
- Boyd County
- Dundy County
- Rock County
- Sioux County
- Hayes County
- Keya Paha County
- Wheeler County
- Hooker County
- Logan County
- Banner County
- Thomas County
- Loup County
- Grant County
- Blaine County
- Arthur County
- McPherson County
01Is health insurance available year-round in Nebraska?
Marketplace plans (HealthCare.gov for Nebraska) follow the standard ACA Open Enrollment Period — November 1 through January 15 in most years — plus Special Enrollment Periods triggered by qualifying life events like losing employer coverage, getting married, or moving to a new state. Off-exchange private plans sometimes offer additional enrollment windows. I confirm your eligibility before recommending a plan.02Which carriers offer ACA marketplace plans in Nebraska?
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Nebraska, Medica, Oscar Health are among the active QHP issuers in Nebraska based on the most recent CMS Marketplace Open Enrollment Period public-use file. Carrier participation can change year-to-year; before recommending a plan I always confirm the current carrier set against the live HealthCare.gov listings for your zip code.03How much does the average Nebraska resident pay for health insurance after subsidy?
It varies significantly by age, income, county, and tobacco status. Per the most recent CMS Open Enrollment Period public-use file, Nebraska consumers receiving an Advance Premium Tax Credit averaged $580/month in APTC. The actual premium-after-subsidy you'd pay depends on your specific household. I run real numbers for your zip and projected income before recommending anything.04Do I need to be a Nebraska resident to buy a plan there?
Yes for marketplace coverage — ACA marketplace plans are tied to your state of residence as of the date you enroll. If you're moving to Nebraska, the move itself is a qualifying life event that triggers a 60-day Special Enrollment Period; that's the cleanest way to switch into a Nebraska plan from out-of-state coverage. I'm licensed in Nebraska and 40+ other states, so transition coverage is a single-broker handoff if you're crossing state lines.05What if my income is too low for a marketplace subsidy?
Eligibility depends on whether Nebraska expanded Medicaid. This state has not expanded Medicaid, which leaves a coverage gap for adults below 100% FPL who don't qualify for marketplace subsidies and don't qualify for Medicaid under traditional rules. The marketplace application checks Medicaid eligibility automatically and routes you to the right program.06What does it cost to work with you?
Nothing. Insurance brokers are compensated by the insurance carriers via commissions built into every plan's pricing. You pay the same premium whether you enroll on your own or through me, but going through me means you get full-marketplace comparison, plan-specific provider verification, and ongoing support — at no added cost.
Twenty minutes.
One free call.
Independent licensed broker. Full Nebraska marketplace access. Carter answers his own line.