Harrison Health Consulting

Frisco, TX · Individual

Individual health insurance in Frisco, Texas.

Frisco sits in Rating Area 7 with the broader DFW metro, offering identical marketplace plan competition. Baylor Scott & White Frisco and Texas Health Presbyterian Frisco anchor the local network. The city's rapid growth has brought significant medical infrastructure investment — making Frisco one of the easier Texas markets to find concierge-level network access.

Who this fits

  • Self-employed Texans, freelancers, contractors, gig workers
  • Adults between jobs or recently laid off
  • Early retirees not yet eligible for Medicare
  • Anyone whose employer doesn't offer health insurance
Step 1 / 6Coverage

Step I

What kind of coverage are you looking for?

Texas residents only · NPN 22192070

i. What you get

How individual works with us.

Real benefits, not generic talking points. Here’s what you actually get when you work with Harrison Health.

01

Real-time market comparison

We pull live quotes from every carrier writing in your ZIP — UnitedHealthcare, BCBS Texas, Aetna, Cigna, Humana, Ambetter, and more.

02

Prescription & provider matching

We check your medications and your preferred doctors against each plan's formulary and network before recommending anything.

03

Premium-subsidy review

If your household income qualifies, we run the numbers on premium tax credits and cost-sharing reductions — most Texans qualify for some help.

04

No-cost guidance

Carriers pay our commission. You never pay us a dollar — that's how independent brokerages work, by law.

ii. Frisco, Texas

Friscocarrier networks & hospitals.

We screen plans for in-network access to the Frisco health systems before recommending — keeping your doctor matters.

Baylor Scott & White Medical Center – Frisco

Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Frisco

Children's Health Specialty Center Frisco

The Star (Cowboys-affiliated medical)

iii. FAQ

Frequently asked.

How much does individual health insurance cost in Texas?
Premiums vary by age, ZIP code, plan tier, and tobacco use. In Texas, a healthy 35-year-old non-smoker typically sees Silver-tier premiums between $350–$550/month before subsidies. Many qualifying households pay much less after premium tax credits — sometimes under $100/month. We'll run your specific numbers free.
What's the difference between HMO, PPO, and EPO plans?
HMO plans require a primary care doctor and referrals for specialists, with the lowest premiums and tightest networks. PPO plans let you see any in-network provider without referrals (and out-of-network at higher cost). EPO is a hybrid — no referrals needed but no out-of-network coverage. The right choice depends on your providers and how you use care.
When can I enroll in individual health insurance?
Open Enrollment runs annually November 1–January 15 in Texas. Outside of that window, you need a Qualifying Life Event (QLE) — losing job-based coverage, marriage, divorce, having a baby, moving, etc. — to enroll in a marketplace plan. Short-term and private plans can be purchased year-round.
Are pre-existing conditions covered?
On any ACA-compliant plan: yes, completely, with no exclusions or higher pricing. Short-term plans and certain limited-benefit products do exclude pre-existing conditions, which is why we walk you through the trade-offs before recommending.

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.