How short-term health insurance works in Florida
An STLDI plan in Florida is fundamentally different from ACA marketplace coverage. It's medically underwritten — meaning the carrier asks 8-15 health questions and can decline you or exclude conditions. It excludes pre-existing conditions (typically anything treated, diagnosed, or symptomatic in the prior 12-60 months). It doesn't have to cover the ten ACA essential health benefits — maternity, mental health, prescription drugs, and preventive care are commonly excluded or heavily limited.
In exchange, premiums in Florida run $85–$175/mo for a 30-year-old non-smoker — roughly 30-60% under unsubsidized ACA bronze. Same-day issue is normal for healthy applicants under 50. Deductibles run $1,000-$10,000 and most plans cap total benefits at $1-2 million.
Florida has not expanded Medicaid, so non-elderly adults earning under 138% FPL who don't qualify for HealthCare.gov subsidies often default to STLDI. Most FL STLDI plans use the Aetna Signature Administrators or Cigna PPO network — both have broad Florida coverage. Pre-existing condition exclusions are aggressive.
Florida term limits and renewal rules
Florida follows the federal STLDI framework. Initial term up to 364 days, renewable for up to 36 months of total coverage (subject to insurer approval at each renewal). This makes STLDI in Florida a legitimate year-plus alternative for healthy applicants who don't qualify for ACA Premium Tax Credits and don't have employer coverage.
The renewal clock matters. Each renewal in Florida requires fresh underwriting at the carrier's discretion — health changes between terms can trigger denial or condition exclusions on the new policy.
Critical timing rule: a gap of even one day between STLDI policies can let pre-existing conditions developed during the prior policy be excluded by the next carrier. If you're stacking plans, the new policy starts the day the old one ends, with no overlap and no gap.
Who actually writes STLDI in Florida
Florida's active short-term carrier list: UnitedHealthcare (Golden Rule), Pivot Health, Everest, National General. UnitedHealthcare (Golden Rule) and Pivot Health are usually the primary quote-and-bind sources for healthy applicants under 50; quote sites that show "30+ carrier options" are typically rebranding the same 4-5 underlying carriers across multiple network branding.
Network matters more than premium in Florida. Most short-term plans here use either the Cigna PPO, Aetna Signature Administrators, or Multiplan PHCS network. Confirm your specific hospital and primary care provider are in-network before binding — going out of network on a STLDI plan typically means 50-100% co-insurance with high additional out-of-pocket exposure.
Common exclusions to read carefully in Florida
Every STLDI policy in Florida has a pre-existing condition exclusion. Read its length carefully — the most aggressive plans exclude any condition for which symptoms existed in the 60 months prior, even if undiagnosed. This means chest pain, joint pain, or a "twinge" you ignored two years ago can trigger denial of a related claim later.
Maternity is almost universally excluded under Florida short-term plans. Mental health and substance use treatment are commonly excluded or capped at $500-$2,000 lifetime. Prescription drug coverage is typically capped at $500-$5,000 annually with high copays. Preventive care (annual physicals, screenings) is rarely covered.
- Pre-existing condition exclusion: typically 12-60 months prior look-back
- Maternity and newborn care: excluded under almost all STLDI plans
- Mental health / substance use: excluded or capped at small limits
- Prescription drug coverage: typically capped, often excluded entirely
- Preventive care (physicals, screenings): rarely covered
- Out-of-network ER: often capped at $1,000-$5,000 with high co-insurance
STLDI vs. ACA vs. COBRA in Florida — when each wins
For a healthy 30-year-old single applicant in Florida earning above 400% FPL (no Premium Tax Credit) and between jobs: STLDI at $85–$175/mo is usually 40-60% cheaper than unsubsidized ACA bronze and materially cheaper than COBRA. The tradeoff is pre-existing exclusions and no maternity / mental health / preventive care.
For anyone with any chronic condition, planned procedure, ongoing prescription, pregnancy, or current cancer / cardiac / autoimmune diagnosis: ACA wins by a wide margin. The premium difference is dwarfed by what STLDI excludes from coverage.
For anyone earning under 400% FPL: subsidized ACA is almost always cheaper than STLDI net of Premium Tax Credit. Don't skip running the marketplace calculator before defaulting to short-term.
For anyone with significant medical events in the current plan year (high deductible already met): COBRA preserves that progress — STLDI and ACA both reset deductibles at the new policy start.