FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Summary of Benefits and Coverage (SBC) and Uniform Glossary
The new forms include:
- A short, plain language Summary of Benefits and Coverage, or SBC
- A uniform glossary of terms commonly used in health insurance coverage, such as "deductible" and "copayment"
What This Means for You
It’s not easy for consumers to know what they are buying when shopping for insurance. The new rules are a joint effort among the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Labor, and the Department of the Treasury. The SBC is designed after the Nutrition Facts label required for packaged foods which helps you make healthy and informed decisions about your diet. The SBC’s standardized and easy to understand information about health plan benefits and coverage allows you to more easily make “apples to apples” comparisions among your insurance options. The measure brings more openness to the insurance marketplace for the more than 180 million Americans with private health coverage.Some Important Details
- This provision applies to all health plans, whether you get coverage through your employer or purchase it yourself, beginning September 23, 2012.
- All health plans must provide an SBC to shoppers and enrollees at important points in the enrollment process, such as upon application and at renewal.
- The coverage examples give a general sense of how a plan would cover the normal delivery of a baby, and services to help a person control type 2 diabetes.
- If you don’t speak English, you may be entitled to receive the SBC and uniform glossary in your native language upon request.
For More Information
- View a sample SBC (PDF – 530 KB).
- See the SBC template (PDF – 476 KB).
- Read the uniform glossary (PDF – 140 KB).
- Fact Sheet: Increasing Transparency, Protecting Consumers.
- Read the regulation or find detailed technical information.