Old Line Health Maryland —
Maryland Health Insurance
Coverage You Can Count On.
From Baltimore row houses to Bethesda federal offices to Eastern Shore watermen — every Marylander deserves a real human advisor who speaks Maryland Health Connection, CareFirst, Kaiser, and Medical Assistance fluently. Zero pressure. Zero confusion. Local expertise.
The Maryland Coverage Picture
Most Marylanders Never See.
We start every Maryland conversation with the data — not a sales pitch.
The Maryland Plans We Compare —
Whatever Your Household Looks Like.
Maryland Individual Coverage
Whether you're a Hopkins grad student, a Bethesda contractor, or a self-employed Annapolis sailmaker, we compare every Maryland Health Connection individual plan against your doctors, your medications, and your subsidy eligibility.
Talk to a Maryland Advisor →- Maryland Health Connection plan selection
- CareFirst PPO and HMO comparison
- Subsidy eligibility checked against your real income
- Medical Assistance screening if you qualify
Maryland Does Well on Coverage —
Until You Look Closer.
Maryland's overall uninsured rate sits at about 6.4%, well below the national average. But that headline number hides three Maryland populations where the gap is much wider — and where the right advisor changes the outcome.
Rural Maryland counties run uninsured rates closer to 10–12%, often driven by self-employed watermen, farm operators, and seasonal hospitality workers whose income is too variable to navigate Maryland Health Connection alone.
Pockets of Baltimore — particularly Sandtown, Brooklyn-Curtis Bay, and parts of East Baltimore — see uninsured rates above 12%, even though most residents would qualify for Medical Assistance or heavily subsidized CareFirst plans.
Term federal employees and federal contractors across Montgomery and Prince George's counties frequently fall into FEHB ineligibility gaps, leaving thousands without coverage despite high household incomes.
Every Region of Maryland —
Different Coverage, Same Standard.
Baltimore City & Metro
Who we hear from: Row-house owners, hospital employees, gig workers, and small business operators from Hampden to Fells Point to Brooklyn.
What they need: Often a CareFirst plan tuned to Hopkins, UMMS, or MedStar networks — plus Medical Assistance for kids.
Montgomery & Prince George's
Who we hear from: Federal workers, NIH researchers, tech employees, contractors, and Spanish-speaking households across the DC suburbs.
What they need: FEHB vs. marketplace comparison, Kaiser integrated care, and bilingual Maryland Health Connection enrollment.
Annapolis & Anne Arundel
Who we hear from: State employees, Naval Academy contractors, marine industry workers, and small business owners along the Severn River.
What they need: Hybrid plans that work across Anne Arundel Medical Center networks and the DC commuter corridor.
Eastern Shore & Western MD
Who we hear from: Watermen, farmers, Cumberland-corridor manufacturers, and Frederick families navigating narrower rural networks.
What they need: Carrier-by-carrier rural network analysis and Medical Assistance coordination when income swings season to season.
Four Steps to the Right
Maryland Coverage.
Tell Us Your Maryland ZIP
Your ZIP tells us your carrier mix — Baltimore City, Montgomery County, and Worcester County all have different plan availability. 30 seconds, no SSN.
Maryland Plan Match
We pull the live Maryland Health Connection plan list for your county, screen for Medical Assistance, and verify your doctors against each carrier's MD network.
Talk to a Maryland Advisor
A real Maryland Health Connection–certified advisor walks you through the 2-3 best options for your household — Hopkins, UMMS, MedStar coverage all confirmed.
Enroll & Stay Covered
We file your Maryland enrollment directly, handle the MHBE portal, and stay with you year-round for SEPs, renewals, and Medicaid coordination.
Four Maryland Carriers —
Each Best for Something Different.
We don't push one Maryland carrier. We tell you which one fits your county, your doctors, and your household — even if that means saying "stay on FEHB."
CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield
Best for: Maryland's broadest network — strongest for Johns Hopkins, UMMS, MedStar, and statewide coverage including the Eastern Shore.
Kaiser Permanente Mid-Atlantic
Best for: Integrated care across the DC suburbs (Montgomery, PG, parts of Howard and Anne Arundel) — best when you value one-roof care.
UnitedHealthcare Maryland
Best for: Strong national network for Marylanders who travel often or have out-of-state specialists — narrower MD provider list.
Cigna Maryland
Best for: Competitive premiums in select MD counties — good fit for healthy adults willing to work within a leaner Maryland network.
Marylanders Who Got Coverage
They Could Actually Count On.
Real conversations from federal workers, Baltimore business owners, and Eastern Shore families.
I'm a federal employee in Bethesda and assumed FEHB was the only option I'd ever need. Old Line Health Maryland did a side-by-side with a CareFirst Maryland marketplace plan and showed me how my Johns Hopkins endocrinologist would actually be better covered on the MD plan — and we saved enough to fund my HSA. No pressure. Just honest math.
Priya R.Federal Analyst · Bethesda, Montgomery County
We're a 12-person creative shop in Hampden, and group health was a nightmare every renewal. Mike at Old Line walked us through CareFirst vs. Kaiser line by line for our specific team — half live in the city, half in Towson and Catonsville — and built us a hybrid setup that nobody else offered. Two of our hires said the benefits package is why they signed.
Devon M.Co-Owner · Hampden Creative Studio, Baltimore
Crab season is unpredictable and our income jumps around. The advisor knew immediately we'd qualify for Maryland Medical Assistance for the kids and a subsidized CareFirst plan for me and my husband. She filed everything with MD Health Connection so we wouldn't lose the Medicaid piece. We've been with the same waterman families on Tilghman for four generations — she gets it.
Carleen H.Waterman Family · Tilghman Island, Talbot County
Get Your Personalized
Coverage Quote
A few quick questions. A licensed Old Line Health Maryland advisor or one of our marketing partners will reach out with plan options that match your needs.
- Licensed insurance agency in all 50 states
- Compare plans from 50+ carriers in one place
- No SSN required to get a quote
- Free service — no obligation to enroll
- Talk to a real licensed agent, not a robot
Who are you searching for?
We'll tailor your options based on who needs coverage.
What Marylanders Always Ask —
Answered Plainly.
The seven questions we hear in nearly every Maryland Health Connection consultation — answered without the carrier marketing spin.
Maryland operates its own state-based marketplace called Maryland Health Connection — it does not use HealthCare.gov. That means Marylanders shop, compare, and enroll through the Maryland portal, and eligibility for Medical Assistance (Maryland Medicaid) is determined through the same system. Plans, prices, and subsidies are Maryland-specific. Our advisors are Maryland Health Connection–certified and walk you through the entire MD Connection application end-to-end.
It depends almost entirely on where you live and which providers you want to keep. CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield has the broadest network across all 24 Maryland counties and the strongest hospital relationships with Johns Hopkins, the University of Maryland Medical System, MedStar, and LifeBridge. Kaiser Permanente runs an integrated-care model concentrated in the DC suburbs (Montgomery County, Prince George's County, and parts of Howard and Anne Arundel) — if you live near a Kaiser facility and like having your doctor, lab, and pharmacy under one roof, Kaiser is hard to beat. We map your ZIP, your doctors, and your medications against both networks before recommending one.
Maryland expanded Medicaid under the ACA, and eligibility is generous compared to many states. As a rough guide, single adults earning under approximately $20,000 and families of four earning under approximately $41,000 typically qualify — but the rules vary by household composition, pregnancy status, disability, and age. Maryland Health Connection screens you for Medical Assistance automatically when you apply for marketplace coverage. If you qualify, enrollment is year-round (no Open Enrollment window required), and your coverage is essentially free.
For most federal employees, FEHB is the better deal because the federal government pays a large share of the premium. But there are real cases where Maryland Health Connection wins: if you have a non-working spouse who qualifies for ACA subsidies, if you're a contractor or term employee with limited FEHB access, if you're nearing retirement and want to bridge to Medicare, or if your preferred Johns Hopkins or University of Maryland specialists are not well-covered by your FEHB plan. We compare your FEHB option against the best Maryland marketplace match side by side and tell you the honest answer.
Most CareFirst PPO and HMO plans in Maryland include Johns Hopkins and UMMS as in-network providers, but coverage tiers and out-of-pocket costs differ significantly across CareFirst products. Kaiser uses its own integrated provider network and only covers Hopkins or UMMS in emergencies or via referral. United and Cigna marketplace plans in Maryland have narrower hospital networks — always confirm before enrolling. We pull the live network directory for any plan we recommend and confirm your specific Hopkins or UMMS doctor is in-network for that specific plan, not just the carrier.
Yes, the Eastern Shore (Talbot, Dorchester, Wicomico, Worcester, Somerset, Caroline, Queen Anne's, Kent, and Cecil counties) has a narrower carrier mix than the I-95 corridor. CareFirst is the dominant marketplace carrier east of the Bay Bridge, and Kaiser has no Eastern Shore presence. Many Eastern Shore residents qualify for enhanced subsidies due to lower median incomes, and rural networks can require longer travel for specialists. We know which Eastern Shore hospital systems (Peninsula Regional, Atlantic General, Easton Memorial) are in which networks and help you pick a plan that works for waterfront life.
Maryland Health Connection's Open Enrollment for 2026 coverage runs from November 1, 2025 to January 15, 2026. Outside that window, you need a Qualifying Life Event (job loss, marriage, baby, move, loss of FEHB) to trigger a Special Enrollment Period. Maryland also recognizes loss of Medical Assistance eligibility as a qualifying event. Medical Assistance enrollment itself is year-round. If you missed Open Enrollment and don't have a qualifying event, we'll tell you straight — and walk you through short-term and supplemental options that may bridge the gap until November.
Maryland-Specific Reading,
Written by Maryland Advisors.
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