Family Health Insurance Plans in Texas
Covering a spouse and kids works differently than shopping for yourself — different deductible rules, different subsidy math, and programs like CHIP that may cover your children even if you don't qualify for help yourself. Start with a topic below, or jump straight to your city's typical family costs further down the page.
Why family coverage decisions are different
Shopping for yourself and shopping for a family involve different math. Deductibles can be structured per-person or per-family, subsidies are calculated against household size rather than individual income, and life events like a new baby or a marriage open enrollment windows that don't apply to someone shopping alone. On top of that, Texas's CHIP and Medicaid programs mean your children may qualify for coverage on a completely different track than you do, which is easy to miss if you're only looking at Marketplace plans built around a single applicant.
Choosing the right plan size & tier
Metal tiers, embedded vs. aggregate deductibles, how many dependents you can add, and whether an HMO or PPO fits a family that sees the pediatrician often.
Newborns, marriage & adoption
How having a baby, getting married, or adopting a child opens a 60-day Special Enrollment Period to add a dependent or start a new family plan outside normal Open Enrollment.
Cost & subsidies for families
What families are actually paying in 2026, how household size changes your premium tax credit, and how cost-sharing reductions and the family out-of-pocket maximum work.
CHIP & Medicaid vs. Marketplace
Why your kids may qualify for low-cost CHIP or Medicaid coverage even when you don't, what CHIP costs, and how split-eligibility households work in Texas.
Common family situations
- Expecting a baby: you have a 60-day window after the birth to enroll or add the newborn, with coverage often retroactive to the birth date.
- Recently married: combining households changes your subsidy calculation, so it's worth getting a fresh household quote rather than keeping two individual plans.
- Kids might qualify for CHIP: it's common and normal for children to qualify for CHIP or Medicaid even when their parents only qualify for Marketplace coverage.
- Self-employed with a family: a QSEHRA or ICHRA can let you contribute toward each family member's own coverage rather than managing one group plan.
Getting a family quote
A licensed Texas agent can run your household's exact numbers — ages, income, ZIP code, and how many dependents you're adding — and come back with real plan options rather than statewide averages. Since agents are paid by the carrier rather than by charging you, there's no cost to getting a specific quote before deciding anything.
Family plan costs by city
See typical family premium ranges and local network notes for your metro.
Not sure where to start?
If your family's situation touches more than one of these topics — say, you're expecting a baby and also wondering whether your other children qualify for CHIP — you don't need to figure it out from separate articles alone. A licensed agent can walk through your whole household at once and sort out which programs apply to which family members.
Don't see your situation covered?
These guides cover the questions we hear most from Texas families, but every household's situation is a little different. Reach out through our About page and a licensed agent can walk through your specific household at no cost.
See what you'd actually pay
Get a free, no-obligation Texas health insurance quote in under a minute.