What Is Coinsurance?

Coinsurance is the percentage of a medical bill that you’re responsible for after you’ve met your deductible.
How Does Coinsurance Work?
How Do I Calculate My Coinsurance Cost?
Your coinsurance amount will depend on your health plan. If you have an 80/20 coinsurance split with your insurance company, a $100 doctor’s bill will look like this:
- You’ll pay $20 (20 percent).
- Your insurance company will pay $80 (80 percent).
What’s the Difference Between Coinsurance and Copay?
What’s the Difference Between Coinsurance and a Deductible?
A deductible is the amount you have to pay before your insurance company starts its coverage. Once you reach that amount, your coinsurance kicks in, and you start sharing the bill with your insurance company.
For example, if you have a $2,000 deductible, you will be required to pay all of that first. Then, your insurance will split the rest of the costs with you according to your coinsurance rate.
How Does Coinsurance Differ for In-Network vs. Out-of-Network?
Is There a Maximum Out-of-Pocket for Coinsurance?
The Takeaway
- Coinsurance is the percentage of medical costs you pay after you reach your deductible.
- Most health insurance companies offer an 80/20 split, which means they will cover 80 percent of the bill, while you will pay for 20 percent.
- Coinsurance payments go toward your out-of-pocket maximum. When you reach this amount, your insurance will cover all costs for you.
Resources We Trust
- Healthcare.gov: In-Network Coinsurance
- Healthinsurance.org: What Is Coinsurance?
- Kaiser Permanente: Glossary of Eligibility and Benefits Terms
- Texas Department of Insurance: Do You Know the Difference Between a Copay and Coinsurance?
- U.S. Department of Health and Human Services: What Are the Medicare Premiums and Coinsurance Rates?
- In-Network Coinsurance. Healthcare.gov.
- Do You Know the Difference Between a Copay and Coinsurance? Texas Department of Insurance. April 17, 2025.
- What Is Coinsurance? Healthinsurance.org.
- What Is Coinsurance: Definition & How It Works. MetLife. March 19, 2025.

Sarah Goodell, MA
Reviewer
Sarah Goodell is a health policy consultant with over 25 years of experience. She is currently working as an independent consultant focusing on the Affordable Care Act, Medicare, health financing, and health delivery systems.
She previously served as director of the Synthesis Project, funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. At the Synthesis Project she managed projects on a variety of topics, including risk adjustment, Medicaid managed care, hospital consolidation, the primary care workforce, care management, and medical malpractice.
Prior to her work as a consultant, Ms. Goodell spent five years as a policy analyst in the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Her work at ASPE focused on private insurance and patient protections, including external appeals processes and privacy.

Julie Lynn Marks
Author
Julie Marks is a freelance writer with more than 20 years of experience covering health, lifestyle, and science topics. In addition to writing for Everyday Health, her work has been featured in WebMD, SELF, Healthline, A&E, Psych Central, Verywell Health, and more. Her goal is to compose helpful articles that readers can easily understand and use to improve their well-being. She is passionate about healthy living and delivering important medical information through her writing.
Prior to her freelance career, Marks was a supervising producer of medical programming for Ivanhoe Broadcast News. She is a Telly award winner and Freddie award finalist. When she’s not writing, she enjoys spending time with her husband and four children, traveling, and cheering on the UCF Knights.