US Health Insurance Onboarding & Benefits FAQ
1. Enrollment Delays & ID Card Status
Why haven't I received my Aetna Member ID yet? The US health insurance system is heavily regulated, meaning the enrollment pipeline involves strict compliance, data security, and multiple system handoffs. When you submit your onboarding paperwork (or update information like your SSN), that data must first be processed by our benefits administrator. It is then securely transmitted via electronic data interchange to the insurance carrier (Aetna). Because Aetna is a massive national carrier, it takes them 2 to 3 business days to ingest this data, build your member profile in their internal systems, and generate your member ID. Physical cards require an additional 7 to 10 business days for printing and mailing.
Am I uninsured while I wait for my ID card? No, this administrative latency does not mean you are uninsured. Your medical coverage is contractually bound and active retroactive to your first day of employment. This distinguishes your coverage from general statutory protections (like federal laws that require emergency rooms to treat anyone). Your contractual protection means Aetna is legally obligated to cover your eligible medical claims from your start date onward; the current delay is simply the time it takes for their front-end administrative systems to catch up to your active contractual status.
2. Seeking Medical Care Before Your ID Arrives
How do I go to the doctor if I don't have my ID card? Depending on where you seek care, you may encounter administrative friction at the provider's front desk. If you visit a hospital Emergency Room, federal law (EMTALA) requires them to evaluate and stabilize you regardless of your ability to present an insurance card; they will simply bill you later. However, private practices and Urgent Care clinics typically require proof of active insurance or an upfront "self-pay" or "cash" payment.
If a clinic demands an ID card you do not yet have, we advise taking the following steps in this exact order:
Ask them to bill you: Explain that you are a new hire, your Aetna coverage is active contractually, but your physical ID is delayed in administrative processing. Ask them to evaluate you and send the invoice to your home address. Many clinics will agree to this, bypassing the need for you to pay anything today.
Ask them to run your Social Security Number (SSN): Even if your ID card hasn't been generated, Aetna's backend systems may have already processed enough of your enrollment file to allow the provider to verify your active coverage using your SSN and Date of Birth.
Ask for the cash-pay discount and collect a "Superbill": If they refuse to bill you later and cannot find your active coverage via your SSN, ask for their discounted self-pay rate. You must ask for an itemized receipt, commonly known as a "superbill," that includes the diagnostic and billing codes for your visit. How do I get reimbursed if I am forced to pay out-of-pocket? As soon as your member ID is generated, you will submit your superbill directly to Aetna. Aetna will process the claim exactly as they would if the doctor had billed them directly on the day of your visit.
Why does paying out-of-pocket feel like I am paying more? When you pay the clinic's "cash rate" upfront, you are usually paying their full retail price (the "chargemaster" rate), which is higher than the discounted rate Aetna has negotiated with that provider.
However, you will not ultimately lose money. Once Aetna processes your superbill, they will apply their lower, negotiated rate to your claim. If the provider is in-network, they are contractually bound to honor that negotiated rate. Once the claim processes, the medical provider is required to refund you the difference between the high cash price you paid on the day of your visit and the lower Aetna negotiated rate.
3. Understanding Deductibles & Out-of-Pocket Economics
What is a deductible and how does it impact me right now? A deductible is the annual amount you must pay out of your own pocket for covered medical services before your insurance plan begins to pay its share. Because you are a new hire, your deductible is currently unmet at $0.
It is important to understand this dynamic prior to receiving your membership ID: even if you had your Aetna ID card in hand today, you would still incur out-of-pocket expenses for your visit. If the doctor billed Aetna today, Aetna would process the claim, note that your deductible is unmet, and the doctor would subsequently send you a bill for the negotiated cost of the visit. If you pay the clinic upfront today without your card, you are simply fronting that cost. Once you submit the superbill to Aetna, the money you spent will be applied directly toward your annual deductible. The overall economic impact on your wallet is exactly the same; the only difference is the order of operations and the temporary necessity of awaiting a refund for the difference between the retail and negotiated rates.
4. The Medical Plan Options
Borderless AI offers two primary Aetna PPO medical plans. Both plans provide flexibility, allowing you to seek care from both in-network and out-of-network providers, though out-of-network care carries a higher deductible.
Access 750 Plan (Traditional PPO): This option has a low in-network deductible of $750 per individual or $2,250 for a family. To protect your family from catastrophic medical debt, the plan limits your in-network family out-of-pocket payments to $7,000 per calendar year. Once this limit is reached, the plan pays 100% of covered in-network services for the remainder of the year.
Access 2000 HDHP Plan (High Deductible): This plan features an in-network deductible of $2,000 per individual or $4,000 for a family. The plan limits your in-network family out-of-pocket payments to $8,700 per calendar year.
Why do many employees choose the HDHP? While the higher deductible can seem intimidating at first glance, many employees select the Access 2000 HDHP because it offers two major financial advantages:
Lower Premiums: Because you are taking on more of the initial out-of-pocket risk via the higher deductible, the cost of your insurance premium (the amount deducted from your paycheck each cycle) is significantly lower. This increases your immediate take-home pay.
The Health Savings Account (HSA): By law, enrolling in an HDHP is the only way you become eligible to open a Health Savings Account (HSA). An HSA is a powerful, highly regulated financial vehicle that offers a "triple tax advantage":
Pre-tax Contributions: Money you deposit into the HSA is completely tax-deductible, lowering your overall taxable income for the year.
Tax-free Growth: You can invest the funds in your HSA, and any interest or investment gains grow entirely tax-free.
Tax-free Withdrawals: When you use the money to pay for qualified medical expenses (like meeting your deductible, buying prescriptions, or covering dental and vision care), you do not pay any taxes on those withdrawals.
Unlike a Flexible Spending Account (FSA), HSA funds do not expire at the end of the year. They roll over indefinitely, and the account stays with you even if you change jobs. Many employees take the money they save on their monthly premiums and deposit it directly into their HSA. If you don't spend it, the HSA effectively acts as an additional, highly tax-advantaged retirement vehicle.
Preventive Care (Both Plans): Routine physical exams for both children and adults are completely covered with no consumer co-insurance or cost when using an in-network provider. You do not need to meet your deductible first to receive these standard, preventive checkups.