Free. No sign-up required. 20 years inside Social Security
  Dr. Ed does a Q&A almost every day on YouTube — Watch Now
CHIP for kids · explained plainly

What is CHIP and how is it different from Medicaid?

CHIP — the Children's Health Insurance Program — is the program that picks up where Medicaid leaves off for kids. If your family earns just a little too much for Medicaid, your kids may still qualify for free or low-cost health coverage through CHIP. Same kid, same doctors, just a different door.

Dr. Ed Weir
Dr. Ed Weir 20 years inside Social Security. Plain-English help, no sign-up required.
20 years inside Social Security
Daily Q&A on YouTube
136+ programs checked for free

The CHIP numbers parents ask me about most

~200% FPL (state varies) CHIP federal income floor
~400% FPL (state varies) Typical state CHIP ceiling
1997 (Title XXI, Balanced Budget Act) CHIP year created
5% of household income Federal cost-sharing cap

Here's what to do, in 4 steps.

Here's the order of operations I'd use. Start with your state's eligibility lookup so you know which program your kids fall into, then apply through the same door — Healthcare.gov screens for Medicaid and CHIP together. If anything feels off, get a free human on the phone before you give up.

  1. Check eligibility on InsureKidsNow.gov

    Use the state lookup tool to see your state's exact CHIP income limit and program name. Every state runs CHIP a little differently — some call it KidCare, some PeachCare, some Child Health Plus. The federal floor is 200% FPL, but many states go higher.

    Time: 10 minutes Cost: Free InsureKidsNow.gov state lookup

  2. Apply through Healthcare.gov or your state

    Healthcare.gov screens you for Medicaid and CHIP together — one application, both programs evaluated. If your state runs its own marketplace, the state Medicaid agency portal does the same thing. You won't have to guess which program; the application figures it out.

    Time: 30-45 minutes Cost: Free Healthcare.gov apply

  3. Find your state's specific CHIP name

    States rename CHIP whatever they want. Florida calls it KidCare. Georgia calls it PeachCare. Virginia calls it FAMIS. New York calls it Child Health Plus. Knowing your state's name makes it much easier to search for forms, find a doctor, or call for help.

    Time: 5 minutes Cost: Free Medicaid.gov CHIP state info

  4. Get free help if any of this is confusing

    Dial 2-1-1 from any phone to reach a local United Way navigator who knows your state's rules. Or call 1-877-KIDS-NOW (1-877-543-7669) to be routed to your state's CHIP program directly. Your kid's pediatrician's office and school nurse usually know the local enrollment helpers too.

    Time: 15 minutes Cost: Free Call 1-877-KIDS-NOW

Dr. Ed explains CHIP versus Medicaid

Video coming soon

I'm recording a short walkthrough on the CHIP versus Medicaid line — what the income cutoffs look like, why your state names it something different, and how to apply. Check back shortly.

Which of these sounds more like you?

Most parents I talk to are in one of these spots. Pick the one that sounds closest to your situation — the answer points you to the right next step.

My kids don't qualify for MedicaidIncome just over the line

This is exactly what CHIP exists for. The federal floor for CHIP is 200 percent of the poverty level, and most states stretch the ceiling higher — some up to 400 percent. The same application that says no to Medicaid will usually say yes to CHIP automatically.

Apply through Healthcare.gov or your state Medicaid portal. One form covers both programs.

Visual placeholder only. No data is submitted in this staging build.
I'm worried CHIP premiums will be too muchCost-sharing limits are stricter than people think

Federal rules cap total CHIP cost-sharing — premiums, copays, all of it combined — at five percent of your family's income for the whole eligibility period. That's a hard ceiling written into 42 CFR § 457.560, not a state choice.

At lower CHIP income levels, most families pay nothing. At the higher end, you might see a small monthly premium, often in the 10 to 50 dollar range per family. Always smaller than commercial coverage.

I don't know what CHIP is called in my stateSame federal program, different label

Don't get hung up on the name. If you Google your state plus the word CHIP, the right program comes up. If you'd rather hear a human say it, call 1-877-KIDS-NOW and they'll route you to whatever your state calls it.

The state name only matters once you're inside; the federal floor and cost-sharing rules apply the same way no matter what's printed on the card.

I'm undocumented but my kids are U.S. citizensApply for the kids based on their status

Your kids' eligibility is decided on your kids' status, not yours. If they're U.S. citizens or qualified immigrants, they may qualify for Medicaid or CHIP regardless of what your status looks like.

The application asks about the applicant — your child — not the whole household's immigration paperwork. State agencies are not allowed to share your information with immigration enforcement when you apply on behalf of an eligible child. If you want to double-check that with someone you trust, dial 2-1-1 or call your state's CHIP line.

My child has a chronic conditionCHIP coverage is comprehensive

Federal CHIP rules require coverage of routine check-ups, immunizations, doctor visits, prescriptions, dental, vision, emergency care, and hospitalization. Most states cover specialists, mental health, and therapies on top of that.

If your child is currently seeing specialists, ask the state CHIP program for the provider directory before you switch. Most pediatric specialists who take Medicaid take CHIP too — in many states the network is identical.

My income went up — are we losing CHIP?Report changes, but don't panic

Most states give CHIP kids 12 months of continuous eligibility once they're approved — meaning a mid-year income bump doesn't kick them off until the next renewal. But the rules around reporting changes are still strict.

Report the change. Then if you do age out at renewal, your kids may shift up to a Marketplace plan with subsidies. Don't try to hide it; the IRS and the state agency talk to each other through ACA data matching.

I'm helping a relative get CHIP for their kidsWhat you can and can't do for them

The application has to be signed by the parent or legal guardian — a grandparent, aunt, or family friend can't be the signer unless you have legal custody. But everything else, you can do alongside them.

Gather the documents (proof of income, kids' birth certificates or Social Security numbers, residency proof). Sit with them on InsureKidsNow.gov and run the state lookup. Call 2-1-1 or 1-877-KIDS-NOW together if anything's unclear. Most parents I talk to didn't apply earlier because the form felt overwhelming — a steady second person changes that.

If you have legal custody yourself, you can apply as the guardian. → Get help for someone else

My situation is more complicated than thisWhen the rules don't fit cleanly

Some situations don't fit on a self-service application: kids in foster care or kinship care, families crossing state lines, denied applications, kids with disabilities that might qualify them for separate Medicaid pathways, or adoption-assistance Medicaid.

For any of those, free legal help is real. Search your state plus "legal aid Medicaid" or call 2-1-1 and ask for the legal aid intake line. Most cases are routine for them — they've seen yours before.

Foster care, adoption Medicaid, and disabled-kid Medicaid follow different rules. → See all Medicaid options

Everything parents ask me about CHIP

What is CHIP?

CHIP — the Children's Health Insurance Program — is a federal-state partnership that provides health and dental coverage to kids under 19 in families with income above Medicaid limits but below the state's CHIP ceiling. Congress created it in 1997 under Title XXI of the Social Security Act. Federal rules and a state-run program work together; states can name it whatever they want.

How is CHIP different from Medicaid?

Medicaid covers the lowest-income kids. CHIP picks up the next bracket — families above the Medicaid line but still struggling to afford private coverage. Same federal partnership, same state agency in most cases, slightly different rules. CHIP allows small premiums and copays; Medicaid generally doesn't. CHIP funding is a capped federal allotment to states; Medicaid is open-ended.

What's the income limit for CHIP?

The federal floor is 200 percent of the Federal Poverty Level for the size of your household. States choose where to set the ceiling above that. Most states land between 200 and 300 percent FPL; some, like New York, go up to 400 percent FPL. Use InsureKidsNow.gov to look up your specific state.

Are there premiums or copays?

It depends on income. Lower-income CHIP families typically pay nothing. Higher-income CHIP families may have small monthly premiums (often $10–$50 per family) and small copays. Federal rule (42 CFR § 457.560) caps total cost-sharing at 5% of family income for the eligibility period — a hard ceiling.

What does CHIP cover?

Federal CHIP rules require: routine check-ups, immunizations, doctor visits, prescriptions, dental, vision, emergency room, hospitalization, and lab and X-ray services. Most states cover specialists, mental health, behavioral health therapy, and developmental services on top of that.

Where do I apply for CHIP?

Three doors lead to the same place: (1) Healthcare.gov — screens for both Medicaid and CHIP from one application; (2) your state's Medicaid agency portal — also screens for both; (3) call 1-877-KIDS-NOW (1-877-543-7669) and they'll route you to your state. You don't have to know in advance whether you fit Medicaid or CHIP — the application figures it out.

What if my state runs out of CHIP funds?

CHIP is a capped federal allotment, unlike Medicaid's open-ended match. In theory a state could run short. In practice, Congress has stepped in repeatedly with extensions — most recently MACRA in 2015, the Bipartisan Budget Act and Continuing Appropriations Act in 2018, and continuing appropriations since. If funding ever lapsed, your state would notify you in writing.

My kids age out of CHIP at 19 — what then?

CHIP coverage ends at age 19. Most kids who age out qualify for the ACA Marketplace with subsidies that scale with income. If your young adult is still a tax dependent and the household income is low enough, they may also qualify for adult Medicaid in expansion states. Healthcare.gov screens for all of that on the same form.

What is CHIP perinatal?

Some states use a CHIP option to cover prenatal care for the unborn child of a pregnant person who wouldn't otherwise qualify for Medicaid (often used for undocumented pregnant immigrants whose babies will be U.S. citizens at birth). The coverage is for the unborn child, not the parent. Not every state offers it; check with your state Medicaid agency.

What's the income limit in my state specifically?

State-by-state CHIP income limits change. The cleanest way to look yours up is the state lookup tool on InsureKidsNow.gov — pick your state and the page shows the current FPL ceiling, what the program is named locally, and the application link. You can also call 1-877-KIDS-NOW (1-877-543-7669) for a human voice answer.

What else your family may qualify for

CHIP isn't the only safety-net program your family may be eligible for. If money is tight enough that your kids qualify for CHIP, there's a good chance you may qualify for one or more of the programs below too. Apply for what you may qualify for; let the agencies sort the rest.

MAGI Medicaid for working-age adults

If your kids qualify for CHIP, you and your spouse may qualify for MAGI Medicaid — the income-based pathway for working-age adults. In expansion states the line is 138 percent of poverty for adults; non-expansion states are stricter.

Family Medicaid eligibility

If multiple family members might qualify (parents and kids together), the family Medicaid pathways pull a single application apart and route each person to the right program. Useful when household sizes or relationships are non-standard.

Pregnancy Medicaid

If you or someone in your family is pregnant, pregnancy Medicaid has higher income limits than regular adult Medicaid in most states — often 200 percent of poverty or higher — and runs through 12 months postpartum in adopting states.

WIC

WIC — the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children — covers food, formula, and nutrition counseling for pregnant women, new moms, and kids under 5. CHIP families almost always may qualify for WIC too.

SNAP

SNAP — food stamps — follows household income rules close to Medicaid. If your kids may qualify for CHIP and money is tight, your family may qualify for SNAP too. Apply through your state's social services portal.

Marketplace coverage with subsidies

If your kids age out of CHIP or your income rises above the CHIP ceiling, the ACA Marketplace has subsidies that scale with income. Most CHIP-graduating families pay much less than published premiums after the tax credit applies.

Help me keep coverage current.

CHIP rules and state income limits change. Drop your email and I'll send a short note when something material shifts — no marketing, no plan pitches.

Visual placeholder only. This staging build does not submit data. I'll never sell your email. Unsubscribe anytime.