These limits apply to in-network out-of-pocket costs for most health plans.
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) requires limits for consumer spending on in-network essential health benefits (EHBs) covered under most health plans. These are known as out-of-pocket (OOP) maximum limits.
OOP maximums include deductibles, copays and coinsurance costs paid by consumers. They do not include health plan premiums or out-of-network costs.
OOP limits apply to most health plans. Specifically, they apply to all non-grandfathered individual and group plans, regardless of size or whether the plan is insured or self-funded.
Annual OOP maximum limits
The in-network OOP maximums are adjusted annually. Current amounts are:
2023 OOP Maximums 2024 OOP MaximumsEffective Jan. 1, 2016, most health plans cannot allow any individual, including those with family coverage, to spend more than the individual OOP maximum established under the ACA. This is commonly referred to as an "embedded" individual OOP maximum.
In addition to the ACA cost sharing limits, HSA-compatible high-deductible health plans (HDHPs) must follow additional Internal Revenue Service (IRS) rules. These rules require plans to have minimum deductible amounts and maximum OOP limits that differ from the ACA OOP limits.
This chart combines the 2024 ACA and IRS rules for HSA-compatible HDHPs.
* There is not a stated IRS minimum deductible for individuals with family coverage. However, if a family plan has a separate individual deductible amount for individual family members, that amount must be at least as high as the ACA minimum family deductible.
Even if benefits are administered by different vendors, the in-network OOP expenses for EHBs covered under the same health plan must accumulate to a single OOP maximum. However, if dental and vision are considered excepted benefits, their related expenses do not accumulate with medical expenses toward the OOP limits.
Excepted benefits are not subject to ACA requirements including cost sharing limits. Most dental and vision plans are excepted benefits.
Insured plans
Self-funded plans
Embedded OOP rules for family coverage
Since Jan. 1, 2016, plans with a family OOP limit higher than the ACA individual OOP maximum are required to apply an embedded individual OOP limit for each person enrolled in family coverage. This means:
This rule can impact a family's total health care expenses, especially if only one family member has high medical expenses.
HDHP OOP Maximum Rules
HDHP plans designed to be used with HSAs have lower individual and family OOP maximum amounts than the limits required by the ACA.
The ACA rules require the individual OOP maximum to apply to each individual within family coverage. Any person with family coverage cannot pay more for covered expenses than the ACA individual OOP maximum amount – even if the family OOP limit has not been met.
Rules for benefits administered by multiple vendors
All in-network OOP expenses for EHBs covered under the same health plan must accumulate to a single OOP maximum, even if some benefits, such as prescription drugs or mental health/substance use disorder (MH/SUD), are administered by different vendors.
From the consumer's perspective, there is only one health plan, even if multiple vendors administer different benefits that are included in the plan.
Prescription drugs – Expenses administered by different vendors can have separate annual OOP limits as long as they do not exceed the ACA OOP maximum when added all together.
Behavioral health – MH/SUD expenses cannot have separate annual deductibles and OOP limits from medical benefits. MH/SUD expenses must accumulate with medical expenses.
Dental and vision– If employees can choose to enroll in dental and vision separately from medical, dental and vision are considered excepted benefits. That means dental and vision expenses do not accumulate with medical expenses toward the OOP limits. (See the excepted benefits section for more details.)
MH/SUD parity and OOP maximums
Plans must comply with MH/SUD parity regulations even if they carve out behavioral health benefits.
Plans subject to MH/SUD parity
Plans not subject to parity
Determining whether dental and vision are excepted benefits
Here's how to determine whether dental or vision benefits are excepted benefits for:
Insured plans
Self-funded plans