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Out-of-pocket expenses for health insurance: what basic insurance covers

Those with basic insurance in Switzerland must pay a share of their healthcare costs. Comparis shows how out-of-pocket expenses work.

Alina Meister

Alina Meister

12.08.2024

A stethoscope and some bank notes.

iStock/Scharvik

1.What are the out-of-pocket expenses for basic insurance?
2.What do out-of-pocket expenses consist of?
3.How high can out-of-pocket expenses go?
4.What are the out-of-pocket expenses for accidents?
5.Example calculation of out-of-pocket expenses

1. What are the out-of-pocket expenses for basic insurance?

If you use a medical service and claim it on basic insurance, you have to pay part of the costs yourself. These costs are calculated on an annual basis. The date of treatment is important for working out the out-of-pocket expenses.

Out-of-pocket expenses during pregnancy

From the 13th week of pregnancy up to eight weeks after birth, women do not have to pay any out-of-pocket expenses towards the cost of general medical treatment and care if they fall ill. Read more about maternity benefits here.

2. What do out-of-pocket expenses consist of?

They consist of the deductible and the coinsurance payment. Inpatient hospital treatment attracts an additional hospital cost contribution.

Deductible

You only have to pay in the deductible once per calendar year. It is between 300 and 2,500 francs for adults. With a low deductible, you don't need to contribute as much to your treatment costs. In return, you pay a more expensive insurance premium. If you have a high deductible, your insurance premium is lower. In return, the out-of-pocket expenses will be higher. Once the deductible has been fully paid, the health insurance company covers the remaining costs, minus the coinsurance.

Good to know: health insurance premiums vary depending on where you live, your insurance model, deductible and health insurance company. It’s therefore worth comparing different health insurance companies.

Calculate health insurance premiums now

Coinsurance

Once the health care costs exceed the deductible, you have to pay coinsurance of 10% up to a maximum of 700 francs. In other words: you only start paying the coinsurance once the deductible has been fully paid.

The maximum coinsurance for children is 350 francs. If three or more children from the same family are insured with the same health insurance company, the coinsurance for all children together is limited to 1,000 francs.

Good to know: you generally pay a coinsurance of 10% for prescribed medicines. Do you use proprietary medicines even though generic drugs are available? In this case, the coinsurance is 40%.

Contribution to hospital costs

If you stay overnight in a hospital, basic insurance covers costs for treatment as well as food and accommodation. Patients usually have to contribute to these costs. The hospital cost contribution is 15 francs per night. The hospital contribution fee is waived in some cases. For example, for maternity benefits.

3. How high can out-of-pocket expenses go?

The maximum amount of out-of-pocket expenses depends on your chosen deductible. For adults with the highest deductible, the maximum out-of-pocket expenses is 3,200 francs per year. With the lowest deductible, the maximum is 1,000 francs per year. If you require inpatient hospital treatment, you also have to pay the hospital cost contribution on top of this.

4. What are the out-of-pocket expenses for accidents?

If you are insured against accidents with your employer (AIA-insured), you do not need to share costs. On the other hand, if you’re insured against accidents via your health insurance company, you must pay a share of the costs.

5. Example calculation of out-of-pocket expenses

Cost of medical bills

A policyholder has a deductible of 300 francs and medical costs of 2,400 francs over a year:

Treatment with Dr Müller CHF 1,300
Treatment with Dr Meier CHF 700
Medicines (generics) CHF 400
Total CHF 2,400

Annual health insurance statement

Your medical costs: CHF 2,400
–Deductible –CHF 300
–Coinsurance of 10% (after paying the deductible) –CHF 210
Your health insurer pays CHF 1,890

This article was first published on 16.08.2022

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