Health Insurance Basics: How It Works in the US, UK, and Canada

June 16, 2026
🏷️ insurance 🏷️ health-insurance 🏷️ personal-finance

Health insurance is a contract: you pay a premium (monthly or yearly), and the insurer agrees to cover some or all of your medical costs — doctor visits, hospital stays, prescriptions, surgery.

Without insurance, a single emergency room visit can cost thousands. With insurance, you pay a fraction of that. But the systems that deliver this protection look very different depending on where you live.

What Is Health Insurance?

At its core, health insurance is risk pooling. Millions of people pay premiums into a fund, and that fund pays the medical bills of the people who get sick or injured. The healthy subsidise the sick, and everyone gets access to care they couldn’t afford on their own.

The key terms you’ll encounter — deductibles, copays, coinsurance, out-of-pocket maximums — all describe how the costs are split between you and the insurer. These apply mostly in the US and in private insurance markets. Countries with public systems use a different model entirely.

How It Works in the United States

The US has the most complex system of the three. There is no single-payer system. Instead, coverage comes from several sources:

Employer-sponsored insurance — About half of Americans get health insurance through their job. The employer pays a portion of the premium (typically 70–80%), and the employee pays the rest through payroll deductions. Major carriers include Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna, and UnitedHealthcare.

ACA Marketplace plans — The Affordable Care Act (ACA, also called “Obamacare”) created state and federal marketplaces where individuals can buy private insurance, often with income-based subsidies. Open enrollment runs from November to January.

Medicare — Federal health insurance for people 65+ and certain younger people with disabilities. It covers hospital care (Part A), medical services (Part B), and prescription drugs (Part D).

Medicaid — Joint federal and state program for low-income individuals and families. Eligibility and coverage vary by state.

Cost structure: Most US plans have:

How It Works in the United Kingdom

The UK’s National Health Service (NHS) is a publicly funded healthcare system that provides care free at the point of use. You do not pay premiums, deductibles, or copays for NHS services.

How it’s funded: The NHS is paid for through general taxation and National Insurance contributions. Everyone who pays taxes contributes, and everyone can use NHS services regardless of income.

What’s covered: GP visits, hospital care (including A&E), maternity services, mental health care, most prescriptions (£9.90 flat fee in England, free in Scotland/Wales/NI), and emergency treatment.

Private health insurance: About 10% of UK residents also carry private medical insurance (PMI) for faster access, private hospital rooms, and coverage for treatments with long NHS wait times. Major providers include:

Typical private premiums range from £50 to £150 per month depending on age, coverage level, and excess (deductible).

How It Works in Canada

Canada operates a single-payer system — but “single” means each province runs its own plan. The federal government sets standards, and the provinces administer coverage.

Provincial health plans:

Each province covers medically necessary hospital and doctor services. There are no deductibles or copays for core provincial coverage. Premiums exist in some provinces (BC charges ~$75/month, Quebec charges through income tax).

What provincial plans don’t cover: Prescription drugs (for non-hospitalised patients), dental care, vision care, physiotherapy, and private hospital rooms. This is where private insurance fills the gap.

About two-thirds of Canadians have private health insurance, almost always through their employer. Major providers:

Typical private premiums range from $50 to $150 per month and cover prescription drugs (80–100% after a small deductible), dental, vision, and paramedical services.

Key Insurance Terms Glossary

TermDefinition
PremiumThe amount you pay each month (or year) to maintain coverage. Paid whether you use medical services or not.
DeductibleThe amount you must pay out-of-pocket each year before insurance starts covering costs. Higher deductible = lower premium.
CopayA fixed fee you pay at the time of service (e.g., $30 for a GP visit). Most common in US plans.
CoinsuranceYour share of costs after the deductible is met, expressed as a percentage (e.g., you pay 20%, insurance pays 80%).
Out-of-pocket maximumThe most you will pay in a year. Once reached, insurance covers 100% of covered services.
NetworkThe group of doctors, hospitals, and pharmacies that have agreed to accept your insurance plan’s rates. Going out-of-network costs more.

Which System Is Best?

There’s no single “best” system — each has trade-offs.

FactorUSUKCanada
Access for allNo — 25M+ uninsuredYes — universalYes — universal
Cost to individualHigh premiums, deductibles, copaysFree at point of use (NHS)Free core, private add-ons
Wait timesShort for insured (weeks)Long for non-urgent NHS (months)Moderate for specialists
Choice of doctorBroad (in-network)Limited by GP referralLimited by province
Quality of careExcellent (for those covered)Good to excellentVery good
Employer rolePrimary source of coverageMinimalEmployer covers private add-ons
Tax burdenLower health tax, high premiumsHigher health tax, no premiumsModerate tax, partial premiums
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