According to race baiting Democrats healthcare is racist and the worst thing since the civil war. Complete idiots and hypocrites.
What You Need To Sign Up For ObamaCare
Make sure you have the following information ready to go before starting your process for enrollment.
• Last year’s tax information for you and your family
• Projected incomes for this year
• Medical history – ObamaCare does away with pre-existing conditions and gender discrimination, so these factors will no longer affect the cost of your insurance. Smoking, weight, and age still affect cost.
• Social Security Numbers (or document numbers for legal immigrants)
• Employer and income information for every member of your household who needs coverage (for example, from pay stubs or W-2 forms—Wage and Tax Statements)
• Policy numbers for any current health insurance plans covering members of your household.
• Any other important information that could affect your health insurance premium or coverage options.
The official ObamaCare website, that is the official health insurance marketplace website under the Affordable Care Act, is HealthCare.gov. We explain the history of HealthCare.Gov and how it works.
obamacarefacts.com
Through healthcare.gov
Documents to confirm your U.S. citizenship
U.S. passport
Certificate of Naturalization (N-550/N-570)
Certificate of Citizenship (N-560/N-561)
State-issued enhanced driver's license (available in Michigan, New York, Vermont, and Washington)
Document from federally recognized Indian tribe that includes your name and the name of the federally recognized Indian tribe that issued the document, and shows your membership, enrollment, or affiliation with the tribe. Documents you can provide include:
A tribal enrollment card
A Certificate of Degree of Indian Blood
A tribal census document
Documents on tribal letterhead signed by a tribal official
If you don’t have any of the documents above, you can submit 2 documents — one from each list below.
You can submit one of these documents:
U.S. public birth certificate
Consular Report of Birth Abroad (FS-240, CRBA)
Certification of Report of Birth (DS-1350)
Certification of Birth Abroad (FS-545)
U.S. Citizen Identification Card (I-197 or the prior version I-179)
Northern Mariana Card (I-873)
Final adoption decree showing the person’s name and U.S. place of birth
U.S. Civil Service Employment Record showing employment before June 1, 1976
Military record showing a U.S. place of birth
U.S. medical record from a clinic, hospital, physician, midwife, or institution showing a U.S. place of birth
U.S. life, health, or other insurance record showing U.S. place of birth
Religious record showing U.S. place of birth recorded in the U.S.
School record showing the child’s name and U.S. place of birth
Federal or state census record showing U.S. citizenship or U.S. place of birth
Documentation of a foreign-born adopted child who received automatic U.S. citizenship (IR3 or IH3)
AND one of these documents (that has a photograph or other information, like your name, age, race, height, weight, eye color, or address):
Driver's license issued by a state or territory or ID card issued by the federal, state, or local government
School identification card
U.S. military card or draft record or military dependent’s identification card
U.S. Coast Guard Merchant Mariner card
Voter Registration Card
A clinic, doctor, hospital, or school record, including preschool or day care records (for children under 19 years old)
2 documents containing consistent information that proves your identity, like employer IDs, high school and college diplomas, marriage certificates, divorce decrees, property deeds, or titles
If you provide information on your Marketplace application that doesn’t match our records, this is called a data matching issue or "inconsistency." You’ll need to submit documents to confirm your information.
www.healthcare.gov