Fort Worth, TX · Short-Term
Short-Term health insurance in Fort Worth, Texas.
Fort Worth shares Rating Area 7 with Dallas, giving it the same competitive marketplace plan count and carrier mix. Texas Health Harris Methodist, Baylor Scott & White All Saints, and Cook Children's anchor the network landscape — making Fort Worth particularly strong for family coverage with pediatric specialty access.
Who this fits
- Texans waiting for a new job's coverage to start
- Early retirees bridging to Medicare at 65
- Recent graduates between parent's plan and new employer
- Anyone needing 30-day to 12-month coverage at a lower premium
i. What you get
How short-term works with us.
Real benefits, not generic talking points. Here’s what you actually get when you work with Harrison Health.
Faster, cheaper enrollment
Coverage can start as soon as the next day. Premiums typically run 50–70% less than comparable ACA plans for healthy applicants.
Flexible terms
Choose 30 days, 60 days, 90 days, 6 months, or up to 12 months — and renew once if needed (state limits apply).
Honest trade-off review
We walk you through what's covered and what isn't — pre-existing conditions, maternity, mental health limits — before you sign anything.
Same-day comparison
Short-term carriers are simpler to compare. We can quote and enroll you the same day you call.
ii. Fort Worth, Texas
Fort Worthcarrier networks & hospitals.
We screen plans for in-network access to the Fort Worth health systems before recommending — keeping your doctor matters.
Texas Health Harris Methodist
Baylor Scott & White All Saints
Cook Children's Health Care System
JPS Health Network
Medical City Fort Worth
iii. FAQ
Frequently asked.
- How is short-term different from ACA insurance?
- Short-term plans are not ACA-compliant: they can deny coverage based on pre-existing conditions, exclude maternity and mental health, and impose lifetime caps. They're cheaper because of those gaps, not despite them. They're the right tool for short, healthy bridges — not for ongoing coverage.
- How long can I be on short-term coverage in Texas?
- Texas allows initial terms up to 364 days, with renewals up to 36 total months at the carrier's discretion. Federal rules can change this — we keep clients updated.
- What's not covered by short-term plans?
- Typically: pre-existing conditions (often defined as anything diagnosed in the prior 5 years), maternity and newborn care, mental health beyond limited days, prescription drugs may have caps, and preventive care isn't always free. Plan-specific.
- Can I get short-term coverage if I have a pre-existing condition?
- Sometimes — depends on the carrier and the condition. We screen for this before quoting. If short-term won't cover what you need, we'll tell you and pivot to an ACA plan or another path.
Next step
Get your free quote in three minutes.
A licensed Texas advisor reviews your situation and brings back two or three plans that fit. No pressure, no spam, no cost.
