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Exceptional circumstances for special enrollment

When 'life happens' ... and unusual situations make it impossible for you to enroll on time ... you can expect enrollment flexibility

In addition to the qualifying events already discussed in the previous sections, there are a range of other circumstances that will allow you to enroll in a health insurance plan through the exchange after open enrollment has ended for the year.

These are all case-by-case situations that will vary by location and year, and they all apply on-exchange — although off-exchange carriers can allow for enrollment flexibility for these situations too.

Special enrollment period related to COVID pandemic

special enrollment period for birth of a child

The COVID SEP ended in most states. The American Rescue Plan is still making premiums more affordable.

Soon after taking office, the Biden administration created a special enrollment period in the 36 states that used HealthCare.gov for 2021 coverage, giving uninsured Americans another opportunity to enroll in coverage, and providing $50 million in funding to publicize the enrollment period and make sure people know about it. The new COVID-related special enrollment period began February 15 and ended August 15, 2021.

This window gave uninsured Americans a chance to get coverage, and it was also an excellent opportunity to take advantage of the new premium subsidies made available by the American Rescue Plan.

The COVID special enrollment period applied in all of the states that use HealthCare.gov, but all of the fully state-run exchanges either followed suit, or had already announced COVID-related special enrollment periods before HealthCare.gov’s was announced.

The COVID-related enrollment window has ended in most of the state-run exchanges, but it continues in DC through the end of the District’s pandemic emergency period, for uninsured residents. And New York’s exchange has extended open enrollment for 2022 coverage through the end of the federal COVID public health emergency period (the federal public health emergency period will continue until at least mid-January 2023).

Although the COVID-specific special enrollment period for HealthCare.gov ended in August 2021, it’s important to note that because COVID is an ongoing federally-declared public health emergency, a person who was unable to enroll in coverage during open enrollment or another special enrollment period because they were affected COVID is eligible for a special enrollment period to complete their application (note that this is not a blanket special enrollment period; people do have to attest that they were directly affected by COVID — which can include being a caretaker for someone with COVID — in order to qualify for a special enrollment period). This is applicable in states that use HealthCare.gov, although state-run exchanges can set their own rules for how this works.

Note that the ongoing public health emergency for COVID was last extended in October 2022. Each extension lasts for 90 days, so the public health emergency period will continue through at least mid-January 2023. Whether it’s renewed again will depend on the status of the pandemic at that point. The COVID-related SEP guidance for HealthCare.gov remains in place as long as the public health emergency declaration is in effect.

SEP for people misled by Benefytt Technologies

In August 2022, the FTC announced they were taking action against Benefytt Technologies over sham health coverage plans that the company had sold to consumers. The company had misled customers into believing the plans were ACA-compliant, enrolled people in additional add-on coverage without their consent, and made it difficult for people to cancel their coverage.

To address this issue, HealthCare.gov is offering a special enrollment period to people who were misled by Benefytt Technologies into believing that they had ACA-compliant coverage. As part of the settlement, Benefytt Technologies must send a notice to enrollees, clarifying the details of the settlement and notifying them that they have access to the special enrollment period (see sample notice in Appendix A). The special enrollment period on HealthCare.gov runs from 65 days from the date the notice is mailed to the person.

Several state-run exchanges have also announced similar special enrollment periods for people who had been misled by Benefytt Technologies, including Colorado (through November 10), Washington (through November 10), Pennsylvania (for 60 days from when the person is notified of the settlement), and Minnesota (through November 14, and coverage can be backdated to as early as the start of 2022).

Other exceptional circumstances, including natural disasters

“Exceptional circumstances” can be personal – for example, a house fire or a serious medical condition that made it impossible for you to enroll – but they also include natural disasters that impact a large number of people. They can also be triggered by political or regulatory changes.

If exceptional circumstances occur during open enrollment and you can demonstrate to the exchange that the circumstances prevented you from enrolling by the end of open enrollment, the exchange can grant you a special enrollment period. This also applies if the exceptional circumstance happened before or during another special enrollment period for which you were eligible, and it essentially extends your special enrollment period.

HHS guidance on SEPs when FEMA declares a disaster

HHS issued guidance in 2018 explaining how special enrollment periods work via HealthCare.gov in areas where FEMA declares a disaster that allows a county to apply for “individual assistance” or “public assistance” as a result of the disaster.

The special enrollment period continues for 60 days after the FEMA disaster incident period ends, and applicants can select an effective date in the future or the effective date they would have had if they’d enrolled during the open enrollment period (ie, a January 1 effective date).

In order to be eligible for this special enrollment period, you have to contact HealthCare.gov (800-318-2596 or TTY at 855-889-4325) and attest to the fact that COVID-19 or a FEMA-declared disaster prevented you from enrolling in a health plan during the open enrollment period (or a special enrollment period that you were eligible for due to a qualifying event). These special enrollment period requests are evaluated on a case-by-case basis, and you may be asked to provide various documentation to clarify how the pandemic impacted your ability to sign up during open enrollment.

Several FEMA-declared disasters occurred during the open enrollment period for 2022 health coverage, providing an extended enrollment opportunity for affected residents. But all of those extended enrollment windows had ended by late February, 2022.

(Note that these specific rules only apply in states that use HealthCare.gov. States that run their own exchanges can set their own rules.)

Incident period outside of OEP or other SEP does not result in a new SEP (Hurricane Ian example)

FEMA-declared disasters that happen during open enrollment (or a person’s special enrollment period triggered by a separate qualifying event) will result in an extended enrollment opportunity. But a disaster that happens outside of a normal enrollment window will not trigger any sort of widespread special enrollment period.

To give an example of how this works, consider Hurricane Ian, which caused extensive damage in Florida in 2022. Ian was a devastating storm, but it struck in September, well before the annual open enrollment period that runs from November 1 to January 15 in most states). This means it did not create a widespread special enrollment period for health coverage.

Residents in affected areas only became eligible for a storm-related special enrollment period if they had already qualified for a special enrollment period — due to some other qualifying event — that was ongoing during the hurricane, and were unable, because of the hurricane, to complete their enrollment by the end of that SEP. People in that situation would have the aforementioned 60-day window after the end of a FEMA-declared disaster incident.

So for example, let’s say you live in Fort Myers, Florida and you got married on August 25, 2022, creating a 60-day window to add your new spouse to your health plan. You were just about to do that when Hurricane Ian struck, but the hurricane knocked out your power and flooded your house, making it impossible for you to complete the enrollment. The disaster declaration gives you an extra 60 days after the disaster incident period ended, during which you can add your new spouse to your health plan.

But again, a special enrollment period for marketplace coverage due to Hurricane Ian would only be available as an extension to an existing special enrollment period triggered by an individual’s qualifying life event. If you didn’t have an ongoing special enrollment period during the Hurricane Ian incident period, you wouldn’t be eligible for a special enrollment period due to the storm.

However, if you had experienced a qualifying event and were thus eligible for a special enrollment period during a FEMA-declared disaster or emergency, you’re potentially eligible for an extension of your special enrollment period if you were unable to enroll due to the disaster.

Where the disaster/emergency-related SEP applies

The disaster/emergency-related special enrollment period on HealthCare.gov applies to people living in areas deemed eligible for public assistance or individual assistance. And the applicant has to attest that they were affected by the emergency or disaster and it prevented them from enrolling during the regular open enrollment period or the other special enrollment period for which the person was eligible (for example, if you lose your employer-sponsored health insurance and qualify for a SEP but then a tornado hits your town and you’re unable to enroll during your SEP, you’ll have another SEP that continues for 60 days after the tornado, assuming your area qualifies for FEMA assistance).

The applicant can choose to use regular effective date rules (with an effective date of the first of the following month or the first of the second following month), but they also have the option to get a retroactive effective date that would have applied if they had enrolled during the regular open enrollment period or their initial special enrollment period, as long as that application date would have been after the FEMA-declared incident began. Table 1 in the federal guidance shows some example scenarios of possible effective dates when people experience a FEMA-declared disaster during another special enrollment period or during the annual open enrollment period.

States that run their own exchanges can create their own disaster/emergency-related special enrollment periods.

(If you’re uncertain about your eligibility for a special enrollment period, call (619) 367-6947 to discuss your situation with a licensed insurance professional.)

Does pregnancy trigger a special enrollment period?

In most states, no, pregnancy does not trigger a special enrollment period. HHS considered that possibility in the early days of ACA implementation, but clarified in 2015 that they had opted not to include pregnancy as a qualifying event (the birth of the baby is a qualifying event in every state, but that special enrollment period doesn’t begin until the baby is born, meaning that the new health plan will not cover costs related to the pregnancy).

However, state-run exchanges (there are 18 of them as of 2023) can set their own rules for qualifying events and special enrollment periods. And some state-run exchanges have chosen to allow a special enrollment period triggered by pregnancy, allowing the pregnant person to enroll in health coverage and have better access to prenatal care as well as coverage for labor and delivery costs.

Pregnancy is a qualifying event in the following state-run exchanges:

And as of 2024, Colorado will consider pregnancy to be a qualifying event for people who don’t already have coverage.

Domestic violence or spousal abandonment

Victims of domestic violence or spousal abandonment are eligible to enroll in a plan on their own (or with their children), separate from the partner who abused and/or abandoned them. This is true regardless of whether the abuse or abandonment happens outside of open enrollment

Under normal circumstances, married enrollees are only eligible for subsidies in the exchange if they file a joint tax return, and their exchange enrollment must include total household income. But there’s an exception for victims of domestic violence or spousal abandonment. In those circumstances, the victim can state that he or she is unmarried on the exchange application, and eligibility for premium subsidies and cost-sharing subsidies will be calculated based on the enrollee’s income alone.

Enrollment errors and delays

There are a variety of errors and delays that could occur during the regular open enrollment period. To provide flexibility for the exchanges to deal with these issues, HHS included them in the category of qualifying events:

  • Your enrollment – or lack thereof – was the result of an error, misrepresentation, misconduct, or inaction on the part of the exchange, one of its representatives, or an enrollment assister. It’s a good idea to keep notes with details about the steps you take to enroll during open enrollment, so that you have documentation in the event that you need to show that errors occurred. This sort of scenario doesn’t happen too often now that the exchanges have had a few years to work out most of their bugs, but mistakes can still happen, and a special enrollment period to sort out the problems is an important safeguard.
  • Your eligibility determination (for Medicaid/CHIP, premium subsidies, and/or cost-sharing subsidies) or coverage effective date was incorrect, and you filed a successful appeal with the exchange. If the appeal process finds that the initial eligibility determination and/or effective date were incorrect, you’ll have an opportunity to enroll again with the correct information, even if open enrollment has ended by that point.
  • A technical error occurred during your enrollment, or the plan information was incorrectly displayed on the exchange website.
  • You’re a recent immigrant (not eligible for Medicaid) with a household income under 100% of the poverty level, and you didn’t enroll in coverage while waiting for the exchange to determine your eligibility for subsidies in the exchange. Once the determination is made, you have access to a special enrollment period (this was clarified in the 2018 Benefit and Payment Parameters, page 247)
  • You applied for Medicaid or CHIP during open enrollment, and although you were deemed ineligible, the determination wasn’t made until after open enrollment ended. Medicaid and CHIP enrollment continue year-round, but exchange enrollees who are applying for subsidized qualified health plans (QHPs) must first be screened to ensure that they aren’t eligible for Medicaid or CHIP.
    Once the state Medicaid/CHIP agency has determined that an applicant is ineligible, the exchange can enroll the applicant in a subsidized QHP. But if the ineligibility determination for Medicaid/CHIP isn’t made until after open enrollment ends (despite the fact that the applicant initiated the process during open enrollment), the exchange can grant a special enrollment period during which the applicant can select a QHP and finish the enrollment process.
    This SEP applies regardless of whether the initial application for Medicaid/CHIP was initiated through the exchange or directly through the state’s Medicaid office, as long as it was submitted during the annual open enrollment period. But if you’re applying during a special enrollment period, you must apply through the marketplace during your special enrollment period (as opposed to directly through your state’s Medicaid office), in order to continue to have extra time to enroll if your application is subsequently routed to Medicaid and you’re found ineligible for Medicaid after the SEP window has closed (see question 16 in this FAQ series).

Contract violations

The QHP in which you’re enrolled “substantially violated a material provision of its contract” with you. “Substantial violations” have to be investigated, and there’s an official process for this.

It’s important to note that things like formulary changes and network changes can happen mid-year and do not constitute substantial violations. But if you think that your health plan has substantially violated its contract, you can contact the exchange and/or the state department of insurance for instructions on how to proceed.


Louise Norris is an individual health insurance broker who has been writing about health insurance and health reform since 2006. She has written dozens of opinions and educational pieces about the Affordable Care Act for healthinsurance.org.

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Table of Contents

Open Enrollment 2024 Guide Copy
1 Insider’s Guide to Obamacare’s Special Enrollment Periods
2 Qualifying events and why we need them
3 Who doesn’t need a special enrollment period?
4 Involuntary loss of coverage is a qualifying event
5 How your ‘big move’ can trigger an SEP
6 Divorce, death, or legal separation: SEP is optional
7 A change in subsidy eligibility changes your options
8 Citizenship or lawful immigrant status can deliver coverage
9 An SEP if your employer plan doesn’t measure up
10 Non-calendar-year renewal as a qualifying event
11 Leaving the coverage gap? This SEP’s for you.
12 Proving you deserve a special enrollment period
13 An SEP for your growing family
14 Exceptional circumstances for special enrollment
15 An SEP if you have a QSEHRA or ICHRA
16 An SEP if your income doesn’t exceed 150% of the federal poverty level

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