BlueCare EPO Standardized Gold
Starting at
$796
/month before subsidy
BlueCare EPO Standardized Gold is a 2026 Gold EPO health insurance plan from Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas, Inc., sold on the ACA Marketplace in Kansas under plan ID 18558KS0420004. The monthly premium starts at $796 before subsidies, based on a 40-year-old in the plan's lowest-cost rating area. The individual medical deductible is $2,000 ($4,000 for a family), and the individual out-of-pocket maximum is $8,200 ($16,400 for a family). After the deductible, coinsurance is 25% for covered in-network care. The plan is not HSA-eligible.
- Plan ID
- 18558KS0420004
- Plan year
- 2026
- State
- Kansas
- Metal level
- Gold
- Plan type
- EPO
- HSA-eligible
- No
Individual Deductible
$2,000
Family: $4,000
Out-of-Pocket Max
$8,200
Family: $16,400
Coinsurance
25%
You pay after deductible
Network Type
EPO
KSN001
Medical Services
Prescription Drugs
- Medical care
- Member experience
- Plan administration
How well doctors manage and coordinate care
Member-survey satisfaction with the plan
Customer service, billing, and access to information
Having a baby
Normal delivery
$4,670
your estimated cost
- Deductible
- $2,000
- Copays
- $10
- Coinsurance
- $2,600
Managing type 2 diabetes
A year of routine care
$1,820
your estimated cost
- Deductible
- $900
- Copays
- $900
- Coinsurance
- $0
A simple fracture
ER visit + follow-up
$2,320
your estimated cost
- Deductible
- $2,000
- Copays
- $300
- Coinsurance
- $20
Enter your ZIP code first to search nearby doctors.
This Gold EPO plan is designed for people who use healthcare frequently and want predictable costs when they visit the doctor.
Consider this plan if you:
- Have ongoing health conditions requiring regular care
- Take multiple prescription medications
- Prefer lower costs at the time of service
- Want peace of mind with comprehensive coverage
This summary is generated based on plan attributes for educational purposes only.
If you max out this year
$1,479/month
Annual Premium
$9,552
OOP Maximum
$8,200
💡 What this means:
With a $2,000 deductible, you pay 100% of costs until you've spent that much. After that, you pay 25% (coinsurance) until you hit $8,200 total. Then insurance covers everything else for the year.
More plans from Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas, Inc. in Kansas
- BlueCare EPO Bronzefrom $664/mo
- BlueCare EPO Simple Bronze HDHPfrom $684/mo
- BlueCare EPO Standardized Expanded Bronzefrom $669/mo
- BlueCare EPO Silver Plusfrom $825/mo
- BlueCare EPO Simple Silver HDHPfrom $811/mo
- BlueCare EPO Standardized Silverfrom $842/mo
- BlueCare EPO Goldfrom $794/mo
- BlueCare EPO Gold Plusfrom $770/mo
Frequently asked questions about BlueCare EPO Standardized Gold
How much does BlueCare EPO Standardized Gold cost per month?
BlueCare EPO Standardized Gold from Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas, Inc. starts at $796 per month before any subsidy in Kansas. Most Marketplace enrollees qualify for a premium tax credit that lowers what they actually pay — estimate your subsidy to see your net premium.
What is the deductible for BlueCare EPO Standardized Gold?
The individual medical deductible is $2,000, and the family deductible is $4,000. You pay for covered care out of pocket until you meet the deductible, after which the plan shares costs with you.
What is the out-of-pocket maximum for BlueCare EPO Standardized Gold?
The most you would pay in a year for covered in-network care is $8,200 for an individual and $16,400 for a family. Once you reach it, the plan pays 100% of covered services for the rest of the year.
Is BlueCare EPO Standardized Gold HSA-eligible?
No. BlueCare EPO Standardized Gold is not classified as an HSA-eligible high-deductible health plan, so it cannot be paired with a Health Savings Account.
What type of network does BlueCare EPO Standardized Gold use?
BlueCare EPO Standardized Gold is a EPO plan. EPO plans cover in-network care only (except emergencies) and usually do not require referrals to see specialists.
Understand what you'd actually pay
- 2026 Federal Poverty Level (FPL) chart
The income table behind subsidy and Medicaid eligibility
- How ACA subsidies work
Premium tax credits and who qualifies
- The 2026 subsidy cliff
Why income near 400% FPL matters again this year
Important Notice
Plan details and costs shown are estimates for educational purposes only. Actual costs, coverage, and availability may vary. Always verify plan details and enroll through official channels at HealthCare.gov or your state marketplace.