Coinsurance: $8,000 Bill, $2,000 Deductible, 10% Coinsurance
On an $8,000 medical bill with a $2,000 remaining deductible and 10% coinsurance, you owe approximately $2,600.
How to use this tool
- Enter the insurer-allowed amount for the medical care.
- Enter the deductible you still have left to meet this year.
- Enter your coinsurance percentage and your remaining out-of-pocket maximum.
- Read what you pay versus what the insurer pays.
Find your cost on an $8,000 medical bill when your plan has a $2,000 deductible and only 10% coinsurance.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the difference between coinsurance and a copay?
- A copay is a flat dollar amount for a service (e.g. $30 for a visit). Coinsurance is a percentage of the bill that you pay after meeting your deductible.
- Does coinsurance count toward my out-of-pocket maximum?
- Yes. Deductible payments and coinsurance both count toward the out-of-pocket maximum. Once you hit that cap, the insurer pays 100% of further allowed costs.
- Do I still pay coinsurance before meeting my deductible?
- No. You pay the full allowed cost until the deductible is met; coinsurance only applies to the amount of the bill above your remaining deductible.