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Example Data Table
These sample rows help you understand how inputs affect the maximum.
| Scenario | Deductible | Coinsurance | Copays total | Allowed services | Maximum | Estimated out-of-pocket |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Light use | $1,000 | 20% | $180 | $2,500 | $6,000 | $1,480 |
| Moderate use | $1,500 | 20% | $360 | $6,000 | $9,000 | $2,760 |
| High use | $3,000 | 30% | $700 | $25,000 | $8,500 | $8,500 |
Values are illustrative and rounded for readability.
Formula Used
This calculator uses a simplified cost-sharing model to estimate how much you might pay before reaching the annual plan maximum.
- Copays total = (Office visits × Visit copay) + (Prescriptions × Prescription copay)
- Deductible applied = min(Allowed services cost, Annual deductible)
- Coinsurance paid = (Allowed services cost − Deductible applied) × Coinsurance rate
- Out-of-pocket before cap = Deductible applied + Coinsurance paid + Copays total
- Estimated out-of-pocket = min(Out-of-pocket before cap, Out-of-pocket maximum)
- Remaining to maximum = max(0, Out-of-pocket maximum − Estimated out-of-pocket)
The “extra allowed services needed” is an approximation that assumes future costs are paid at the coinsurance rate after the deductible.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter your plan’s annual deductible and out-of-pocket maximum.
- Set your coinsurance rate as a decimal, such as 0.20.
- Estimate yearly copays using expected visits and prescriptions.
- Add an estimated allowed cost for tests and procedures.
- Click Calculate to view totals and how close you are.
- Use the download buttons to save your last result.
Practical Guidance
What the maximum represents
The out-of-pocket maximum is the annual ceiling on your covered cost sharing. Once your deductible, coinsurance, and eligible copays reach that limit, the plan typically pays 100% of covered in-network costs for the rest of the year. Premiums and non-covered services usually do not count; confirm plan rules.
Inputs that drive your estimate
This calculator uses deductible, coinsurance rate, copays, and expected allowed charges. A $1,500 deductible with 20% coinsurance means you pay the first $1,500 of allowed services, then $0.20 per $1.00 after that, plus copays. Office visits and prescriptions are entered as counts, so a $30 copay across 6 visits adds $180, and a $15 prescription copay across 12 fills adds $180.
Reading the breakdown
Results separate deductible applied, coinsurance paid, and copays total. If allowed services are $6,000, deductible applied is $1,500 and remaining allowed is $4,500. At 20% coinsurance, coinsurance paid is $900. Add $360 in copays and the estimate becomes $2,760 before any maximum cap. If your maximum is $2,500, the calculator caps your out-of-pocket at $2,500 and reports $0 remaining.
Stress-testing scenarios
Adjust allowed services to model a diagnostic scan, outpatient procedure, or hospital stay. If your maximum is $9,000 and you are currently at $2,760, the remaining headroom is $6,240. With 20% coinsurance, reaching the ceiling would require about $31,200 in additional allowed charges after the deductible. If coinsurance is 10%, the same remaining headroom implies roughly $62,400 of additional allowed charges, showing how sensitive outcomes are to your rate.
Using the outputs for budgeting
Use percent used and remaining-to-maximum to build a monthly buffer, especially early in the year. Enter premiums to see a simple annual budget: premiums plus estimated out-of-pocket. Compare “Individual” and “Family” settings by matching the deductible and maximum shown on your benefit summary. Download CSV to track assumptions over time, or save the PDF for renewals and provider discussions.
FAQs
Q: What counts toward an out-of-pocket maximum?
A: Typically your deductible, coinsurance, and many copays for covered in-network care. Premiums, out-of-network charges, and non-covered services often do not count. Check your plan’s summary of benefits for exact rules.
Q: Does the deductible count toward the maximum?
A: Yes in most plans. The deductible you pay for covered in-network services is usually included in the out-of-pocket maximum. Some services may be exempt or covered pre-deductible, depending on plan design.
Q: Why do copays matter if coinsurance exists?
A: Copays add fixed costs per visit or prescription, even before you reach the deductible on some plans. Over many visits, small copays can materially increase annual spending and push you closer to the maximum.
Q: What is “allowed amount” in this calculator?
A: It is the negotiated price your plan recognizes for covered services. Your cost sharing is applied to this allowed amount, not the provider’s original charge. Using allowed costs makes your estimate more realistic.
Q: Can I use this for family plans?
A: Yes. Select Family and enter the family deductible and family out-of-pocket maximum from your benefits document. Some plans also have individual limits within the family maximum, which this simplified tool does not model.
Q: Is the PDF/CSV result stored permanently?
A: No. Downloads use your most recent calculation saved in your browser session. If you close the session or clear cookies, run the calculation again before downloading.