Health Insurance

HMO vs PPO vs EPO vs POS: The Complete 2026 Connecticut Guide to Health Insurance Network Types

⚡ Key Takeaways
  • HMO — cheapest premium, requires PCP and referrals, no out-of-network coverage (best for cost-conscious CT residents)
  • PPO — most expensive premium, no PCP/referrals, covers out-of-network at higher cost (best for travelers and multi-state households)
  • EPO — middle premium, no PCP/referrals, no out-of-network coverage (best for in-CT flexibility seekers)
  • POS — hybrid premium, requires PCP and referrals for in-network, covers out-of-network like PPO (niche but valuable for snowbirds)
  • Access Health CT 2026 offers HMO and EPO only — PPO and POS require off-exchange enrollment (no APTC subsidy)
  • Anthem, ConnectiCare, and CTCare Benefits are the three on-exchange carriers; Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, Aetna are off-exchange/employer
  • Federal No Surprises Act protects emergency care across all network types at in-network cost
  • CT-specific mandate: direct self-referral to behavioral health on all CT plans
  • Out-of-state academic medical centers (NYC, Boston) are out-of-network on all CT individual HMOs and EPOs
  • Verify EVERY provider in the network before enrolling — directory accuracy is imperfect
Key Takeaways

Why the Network Type Decides Everything Else

Quick Comparison Table — Every Difference at a Glance

HMO vs PPO vs EPO vs POS — Side-by-Side

Feature HMO PPO EPO POS
Primary Care Physician (PCP) required Yes No No Yes
Specialist referral required Yes No No Yes (for in-network coverage)
Out-of-network coverage Emergency only Yes (higher cost) Emergency only Yes (higher cost)
Network size Smallest Largest Medium Medium
Monthly premium (relative) $ — Cheapest $$$$ — Most expensive $$ — Moderate $$$ — Higher
Deductible (typical) Low–Moderate High Moderate Moderate
Out-of-pocket maximum Lower Higher (separate OON cap) Lower (no OON cap) Two caps
Best for Cost-conscious; stays local Frequent travel; specialists Moderate flexibility, low cost Want PCP coordination + occasional flex
Claims paperwork Insurer handles You may file OON Insurer handles You may file OON
Available on Access Health CT 2026 Yes (all 3 carriers) No Yes (Anthem, CTCare) Rarely

HMO — Health Maintenance Organization

HMO Defining Rules

  • PCP designation required at enrollment — you must name a doctor
  • Referral required to see any specialist (in-network or otherwise)
  • Zero coverage for out-of-network providers except true emergencies
  • Lowest premiums in the market — 15–30% below comparable PPO
  • Lowest deductibles and out-of-pocket maximums
  • Insurer handles all paperwork — you rarely file claims
  • Network typically narrower (5,000–15,000 CT providers vs 25,000+ for PPO)
  • Strict prior authorization for specialty procedures and high-cost imaging

Sources: Access Health CT Carrier Networks

HMO PCP Switching

PPO — Preferred Provider Organization

PPO Defining Rules

  • No PCP designation required
  • Self-refer to any specialist (in or out of network)
  • Out-of-network covered at lower percentage (typically 50–60% vs 80–90% in-network)
  • Two separate deductibles: in-network and out-of-network
  • Two separate out-of-pocket maximums: in-network and out-of-network
  • Largest provider networks (often 25,000+ CT providers)
  • Often includes national or multi-state networks for travel coverage
  • You may file out-of-network claims yourself
  • Balance billing possible if OON provider charges above the insurer
  • Premiums highest of all four types

Sources: CT Insurance Department Carrier Filings

EPO — Exclusive Provider Organization

EPO Defining Rules

  • No PCP designation required
  • Self-refer to any in-network specialist without prior referral
  • Zero coverage for out-of-network providers (same as HMO)
  • Single deductible and single out-of-pocket maximum (no OON tier)
  • Network size similar to HMO (regional/state-based)
  • Premiums 10–20% above comparable HMO; 15–25% below comparable PPO
  • Less prior authorization friction than HMO (no PCP gatekeeping)
  • Insurer handles paperwork — no claim filing
  • Emergency care covered at any facility per federal No Surprises Act

POS — Point of Service

POS Defining Rules

  • PCP designation required
  • Referrals required for IN-NETWORK specialist coverage at the lowest cost-sharing
  • Self-referral to OUT-OF-NETWORK specialists allowed but at higher cost-sharing
  • Two-tier deductible and out-of-pocket maximum (in-network and out-of-network)
  • Medium network size
  • Premiums between EPO and PPO (often 15–25% above HMO)
  • Less common on Connecticut individual exchange — sometimes available off-exchange or via employer
  • More common in Northeast employer plans than other regions

What

2026 Connecticut Carrier Network Offerings

Carrier HMO PPO EPO POS Market
Anthem BCBS CT Yes (CT HMO) Employer-only Yes (CT EPO) Rarely On + Off Exchange
ConnectiCare Yes (PassageCT) No (individual) Limited No On + Off Exchange
CTCare Benefits Yes No Yes No On-Exchange Only
Cigna Limited Yes (off-exchange) Yes Limited Off-Exchange Only
UnitedHealthcare Medicare-only Employer-only Employer-only Employer-only Employer + Medicare
Aetna (CVS Health) Medicare-only Employer-only Limited Limited Employer + Medicare

Sources: Help paying for health insurance (CT 2026)

Cost Comparison — Real 2026 Connecticut Premiums

2026 CT Silver-Tier Equivalent Premium by Network Type

Network Type Carrier (Example) Monthly Premium Annual Deductible Individual MOOP
HMO ConnectiCare PassageCT Silver $598 $5,200 $7,200
HMO Anthem CT HMO Silver $612 $5,500 $7,300
EPO Anthem CT EPO Silver $668 $5,800 $7,500
EPO CTCare Benefits EPO Silver $655 $5,500 $7,300
PPO (off-exchange) Cigna OAP Silver-equivalent $895 $6,000 $8,250 in / $16,500 out
POS (off-exchange, rare) Anthem POS-Silver $745 $5,500 $7,300 in / $14,600 out

Doctor and Hospital Access by Network Type

Major CT Health Systems and Typical Network Inclusion

  • Hartford HealthCare (Hartford Hospital, Backus, Charlotte Hungerford, MidState, Windham) — in network on Anthem HMO/EPO, ConnectiCare PassageCT, CTCare Benefits
  • Yale New Haven Health (YNHH, Bridgeport Hospital, Greenwich Hospital, Lawrence + Memorial) — in network on Anthem HMO/EPO, ConnectiCare PassageCT, CTCare Benefits
  • Trinity Health Of New England (Saint Francis, Saint Mary
  • Nuvance Health (Danbury Hospital, Norwalk Hospital, New Milford, Sharon, Vassar Brothers, Northern Dutchess, Putnam) — in network on most major carriers
  • Stamford Health (Stamford Hospital + Tully Health) — in network on Anthem, ConnectiCare; verify on others
  • Bristol Health — in network on Anthem, ConnectiCare; check CTCare
  • Day Kimball Hospital (Putnam) — in network on Anthem CT HMO/EPO
  • Griffin Hospital (Derby) — in network on most CT carriers

Specialist Access and Referral Rules

Specialist Access by Network Type

Specialist Type HMO PPO EPO POS
Cardiologist PCP referral required Self-refer Self-refer PCP referral for in-network
Dermatologist PCP referral required Self-refer Self-refer PCP referral for in-network
OB-GYN No referral (federal law) No referral No referral No referral
Behavioral health / therapy No referral (most carriers) No referral No referral No referral
Orthopedic surgeon PCP referral required Self-refer Self-refer PCP referral for in-network
Oncologist PCP referral required Self-refer Self-refer PCP referral for in-network
Out-of-state specialist Not covered (OON) Self-refer (OON tier) Not covered (OON) Self-refer at OON tier

Out-of-Network Rules and Balance Billing

  • HMO — zero out-of-network coverage except true emergencies. You pay 100% of the bill for non-emergency OON care.
  • PPO — out-of-network covered at lower benefit tier (often 50–60% coinsurance after a higher OON deductible). Balance billing possible above the insurer
  • EPO — zero out-of-network coverage except true emergencies, same as HMO.
  • POS — out-of-network covered at lower benefit tier when self-referred; some POS variants require you to file the claim yourself.

Sources: CMS No Surprises Act Resources

The Lab and Imaging Trap

Travel and Out-of-State Coverage

Travel Coverage by Network Type

Scenario HMO/EPO PPO POS
Emergency in Florida vacation Covered (No Surprises Act) Covered Covered
Urgent care visit in NYC weekend trip Mostly not covered — emergency-only Covered at OON tier Covered at OON tier
College student dependent in Boston seeing local PCP Not covered (OON) Covered at OON tier Covered at OON tier
Snowbird 4 months in Florida — routine care Not covered Covered at OON tier Covered at OON tier
Business traveler in Chicago needing prescription refill Most carriers cover at out-of-area pharmacy Covered Covered
Multi-state worker (CT/NY/NJ) Limited to CT network National network often included Limited to CT network

Emergency and Urgent Care Across Network Types

  • Emergency care: covered at in-network cost on every plan type
  • Urgent care (non-emergency, same-day): network-dependent — HMO/EPO often have in-network urgent care chains only
  • Telehealth urgent care: most CT plans include 24/7 telehealth at $0 or $20 copay
  • Stabilization-then-transfer: ER stabilization at OON facility is covered at in-network rate; ambulance transfer to in-network for ongoing care is covered
  • Post-stabilization care: once stabilized, OON costs may apply if you choose not to transfer to an in-network facility

Six Real Connecticut Network-Choice Scenarios

The Decision Framework — Which Network Fits You

  • 1. Do you travel out of Connecticut more than 4 weeks per year for non-vacation reasons? YES → PPO or POS off-exchange; NO → continue.
  • 2. Do you have a specialist outside Connecticut (NYC, Boston, Mayo, MD Anderson) you want to keep using? YES → PPO or POS off-exchange; NO → continue.
  • 3. Do you want a PCP coordinating your care (referrals, central medical record)? YES → HMO; NO → continue.
  • 4. Are you comfortable staying entirely in network for routine and specialist care? YES → EPO; NO → POS or PPO.
  • 5. Do you qualify for APTC subsidies on Access Health CT? YES → HMO or EPO are realistically your only choices; NO → all four are available off-exchange.

Network Mistakes Connecticut Shoppers Make

  • Picking PPO
  • you might travel — paying $3,000+/year for flexibility you never use
  • Picking HMO when your PCP isn
  • s network — having to switch doctors mid-year
  • Assuming all Anthem plans share the same network — Anthem HMO, EPO, and National PPO are separate networks with different provider lists
  • Not verifying your specialist is in network before enrolling — finding out at the next visit
  • Self-referring out-of-network on an HMO and being shocked by 100% bills
  • Picking EPO without realizing your child
  • Assuming Medicare Advantage HMO works like an employer HMO — Medicare Advantage referral rules vary plan-by-plan
  • Not understanding that PPO off-exchange forfeits APTC — the unsubsidized cost may exceed the subsidy you
  • Choosing POS for hybrid flexibility without realizing both deductibles can apply in a mixed in/out year
  • Letting your employer auto-enroll you in PPO when an EPO would serve your needs at $200/month less premium

How We Find Your Insurance Helps Connecticut Families Pick the Right Network

Sources: We Find Your Insurance

Schedule a Free Network Review

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

What
HMO. ConnectiCare PassageCT and Anthem CT HMO premiums run 15–30% below comparable PPO premiums on Access Health CT.
Are PPO plans available on Access Health CT for 2026?
No. The 2026 Access Health CT individual marketplace offers HMO and EPO only. PPO is available off-exchange (no subsidy) or through employer benefits.
What
Both have no out-of-network coverage. HMO requires a PCP and specialist referrals; EPO has no PCP and allows self-referral. EPO premiums are 10–20% higher than comparable HMO.
What
EPO has no out-of-network coverage (in-network only). PPO covers out-of-network at a higher cost-sharing tier. Both allow self-referral to specialists.
Can I see a specialist without a referral on an HMO?
Generally no — except for OB-GYN, behavioral health, and emergencies. Federal law and Connecticut Insurance Department mandates protect those direct-access categories.
Does a PPO cover out-of-state doctors?
Yes. PPO plans cover out-of-network and out-of-state providers at a lower benefit tier with higher cost-sharing. Balance billing above the allowed amount is possible.
What happens if I need emergency care out of state on an HMO?
The federal No Surprises Act and Connecticut state law require all plan types to cover true emergencies at any facility at the in-network cost-sharing level — no balance billing.
Should snowbirds pick PPO?
Generally yes. If you spend more than a month per year outside Connecticut and need routine care during that time, PPO’s out-of-network benefit is worth the higher premium.
Is POS still offered on Access Health CT?
Rarely. Most CT individual market POS plans have been discontinued. POS persists in some employer plans and Medicare Advantage HMO-POS variants.
How do I find a CT broker to compare network types?
Call We Find Your Insurance at (860) 856-5894. Antonucci, Joseph (CT #21658409) maps your providers against every CT carrier network at no cost to the consumer.

Frequently Asked Questions

What
HMO. ConnectiCare PassageCT and Anthem CT HMO premiums run 15–30% below comparable PPO premiums on Access Health CT.
Are PPO plans available on Access Health CT for 2026?
No. The 2026 Access Health CT individual marketplace offers HMO and EPO only. PPO is available off-exchange (no subsidy) or through employer benefits.
What
Both have no out-of-network coverage. HMO requires a PCP and specialist referrals; EPO has no PCP and allows self-referral. EPO premiums are 10–20% higher than comparable HMO.
What
EPO has no out-of-network coverage (in-network only). PPO covers out-of-network at a higher cost-sharing tier. Both allow self-referral to specialists.
Can I see a specialist without a referral on an HMO?
Generally no — except for OB-GYN, behavioral health, and emergencies. Federal law and Connecticut Insurance Department mandates protect those direct-access categories.
Does a PPO cover out-of-state doctors?
Yes. PPO plans cover out-of-network and out-of-state providers at a lower benefit tier with higher cost-sharing. Balance billing above the allowed amount is possible.
What happens if I need emergency care out of state on an HMO?
The federal No Surprises Act and Connecticut state law require all plan types to cover true emergencies at any facility at the in-network cost-sharing level — no balance billing.
Should snowbirds pick PPO?
Generally yes. If you spend more than a month per year outside Connecticut and need routine care during that time, PPO's out-of-network benefit is worth the higher premium.
Is POS still offered on Access Health CT?
Rarely. Most CT individual market POS plans have been discontinued. POS persists in some employer plans and Medicare Advantage HMO-POS variants.
How do I find a CT broker to compare network types?
Call We Find Your Insurance at (860) 856-5894. Antonucci, Joseph (CT #21658409) maps your providers against every CT carrier network at no cost to the consumer.
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