How the Connecticut exchange works
Reviewed July 2026 using official marketplace, HHS, and Medicaid resources. Current official program rules control.
Connecticut uses a state marketplace, Access Health CT, for ACA individual and family plan enrollment. The marketplace is where eligible residents can compare qualified health plans and check whether premium tax credits or cost-sharing reductions may lower costs.
Connecticut context: Commuters and households using care across state lines should check network boundaries carefully.
Marketplace plans are grouped into metal levels. Bronze plans usually have lower monthly premiums and higher costs when care is used. Silver plans are important to review because cost-sharing reductions, when available, are usually tied to Silver plans.
Enrollment timing
Connecticut deadline guidance
Connecticut typically runs annual Open Enrollment from November 1 through January 15. Current dates and qualifying-event rules are posted by Access Health CT.
Marketplace help: 855-805-4325
Household income estimator
Estimate your Connecticut marketplace income range
Use your expected household modified adjusted gross income for the coverage year. This includes common taxable income plus items such as tax-exempt interest and non-taxable Social Security.
What should I include?
Include expected wages, net self-employment income, unemployment, Social Security, retirement distributions, investment income, tax-exempt interest, and other income used in marketplace MAGI. Household members and tax filing rules matter. This tool is educational and does not determine eligibility or a premium.
Medicaid reference
Connecticut Medicaid
Connecticut has adopted ACA adult Medicaid expansion. Income, household, immigration, age, pregnancy, disability, and other program rules still affect final eligibility.
Supplemental benefits
Other coverage to ask about in Connecticut
Critical illness, hospital, dental, and vision benefits can layer cash protection around the core plan.
Often separate from major medical coverage, especially for adults.
Can help with unexpected costs after covered injuries.
Designed to pay a set benefit when a covered hospital stay occurs.
May provide a lump-sum benefit for covered diagnoses.
Coverage plus financial planning
How medical, voluntary benefits, and retirement fit together
Major medical coverage handles the core insurance risk. Voluntary benefits can add cash protection around specific events. Retirement planning addresses the longer horizon: reserves, contribution consistency, taxes, and future healthcare costs.
Connecticut planning note: Healthcare premiums and retirement contributions should be modeled together, particularly for early retirees.
My State Exchange is operated with support from CYTO Financial Group. The goal is to help households organize these decisions together before product recommendations enter the conversation.
What to check before choosing a plan
- Your household income estimate for the coverage year.
- Whether your doctors, clinics, and hospitals are in-network.
- How prescriptions are covered and which pharmacy tier applies.
- The deductible, copays, coinsurance, and out-of-pocket maximum.
- Whether you qualify for open enrollment or a special enrollment period.
Common Connecticut questions
Where do Connecticut residents enroll in marketplace coverage?
Connecticut residents typically use Access Health CT. Use the official link on this page to confirm the current application path.
What is the Connecticut marketplace phone number?
The published marketplace assistance number used on this guide is 855-805-4325. Confirm current hours on the official marketplace site.
When is Open Enrollment in Connecticut?
Connecticut typically runs annual Open Enrollment from November 1 through January 15. Current dates and qualifying-event rules are posted by Access Health CT.
Where can I check Connecticut Medicaid eligibility?
Use Connecticut Medicaid at its official state website or call 855-805-4325. Connecticut has adopted ACA adult Medicaid expansion. Income, household, immigration, age, pregnancy, disability, and other program rules still affect final eligibility.
How do supplemental benefits fit with an ACA plan?
Dental, vision, accident, hospital indemnity, and critical illness products can address specific gaps, but they do not replace comprehensive major medical coverage.
What happens after you contact us
We review the basics
Your state, timing, current coverage, and the question you want answered.
We route the conversation
Marketplace navigation, voluntary benefits, retirement planning, or a combination.
We confirm the representative
Before a product discussion, we confirm the representative and applicable state credentials.