Can i add my girlfriend to my health insurance if we live together

Can I add my girlfriend or boyfriend to my car insurance?

Most insurers allow you to add a significant other, such as a boyfriend, girlfriend, fiancé, or domestic partner, to your car insurance policy if you live together. Depending on the insurer, a significant other can also add their vehicle to a joint policy if both cars are kept at the same permanent residence.

With most insurers, unmarried couples can share a joint car insurance policy or add each other as listed drivers to separate policies. There can be pros and cons to sharing a policy, so check with your insurer to see if shared or separate coverage is best for you.

How can I add my significant other to my policy?

There are a couple of ways to add a significant other to your policy:

  • Sharing a policy: If you share a vehicle or have separate vehicles at the same residence, you may be able to purchase a policy together. This would cover all your vehicles and allow you to drive the other person's car and be covered. In addition, you may qualify for a multi-car discount. Some insurers may not allow unmarried couples to share a joint car insurance policy, so check with your insurer.
  • Adding each other as listed drivers: If you want to keep separate policies but drive each other's cars regularly, you can add each other as listed drivers on the policy. Your insurance provider may also require you to add your significant other if they drive your car regularly.
  • Excluded: If your significant other has a poor driving record or multiple claims, adding them as a driver on your policy may push your rate up. If this is the case, you can exclude them as a driver on your policy in certain states. Some states or insurers may not allow a driver in the same household to be excluded from the policy, so check with your insurer. However, this means there will be no coverage at all if they drive your vehicle, and you could be liable to cover any damage they cause out of pocket.

Am I required to add my significant other to my policy?

Whether you are required to add a boyfriend, girlfriend, fiancé, or domestic partner to your car insurance policy will depend on your insurance company. Most insurance companies want to be aware of any licensed drivers living in the household with access to a vehicle. Suppose your boyfriend or girlfriend is living with you and they use your vehicle regularly. Since they're using your vehicle more often, your insurer may require you to add them to your policy as a driver.

What happens if we get married or break up?

Once you tie the knot and are living together, most insurers expect you to share a policy with your spouse, so carrying separate policies may no longer be an option.

If you're sharing car insurance with your girlfriend, boyfriend, fiancé, or domestic partner and you break up, your significant other will have to get their own insurance policy as you're no longer living together or driving each other's vehicles. In this situation, you will both need to get a separate policy as soon as possible so you don't risk being uninsured.

Add a significant other to your policy at Progressive

Current Progressive customers

Log in to your policy or call 1-866-749-7436 to add your significant other. You'll need their date of birth, driving history, and license information, as well as their vehicle identification number (VIN) if you plan to add their vehicle to a joint policy.

New Progressive customers

Quote car insurance quote online or call 1-866-749-7436 and we can help you find the right policy for you and your significant other.

As marriage rates in the United States have fallen, cohabitation rates have increased. In 2016, more than 18 million adults lived with an unmarried partner, a 29 percent increase from 2007. While some couples are simply not ready to get married yet, others have chosen to not get married for a variety of reasons. Being in a domestic partnership allows you to escape certain responsibilities of marriage, but it also prevents you from benefiting from certain rights that come with tying the knot. One grey area is health insurance benefits for domestic partners. If you’re living with a domestic partner, read on to learn how you may be able to get domestic partner health insurance benefits and when it may not make sense.

What defines a domestic partnership

Domestic partnership doesn’t just pertain to same-sex couples. Rather, a domestic partnership is where two unmarried and unrelated people cohabitate and share a domestic life. And they are not married or joined by a civil union. The two people can be of the same or opposite sex.

There is no federal definition or recognition of domestic partnerships, nor guidelines for legal rights and benefits. So whether you’re eligible to be categorized as being in a domestic partnership depends on where you live. In the world of healthcare, this categorization and the rights it extends could dictate whether you get health insurance benefits and legal rights such as hospital visitation.

Which states recognize domestic partnerships?

Not only is there not a federal definition of domestic partnership, there isn’t always consistent recognition within a state. Some states recognize domestic partnerships and maintain registries. While in other states, domestic partnerships are only recognized in certain cities and counties. What defines a domestic partnership under local laws can also differ. For example, in California, a legally registered domestic partnership is available to:

  1. All same-sex couples who are at least 18 years old.
  2. As well as opposite-sex couples in which at least one partner is 62 years of age or older.

This directory from the Human Rights Campaign is a helpful place to start, though the only way to confirm whether your locality recognizes domestic partnerships is to contact the local government department that issues marriage licenses. Make sure to also ask about what that recognition means in terms of your legal rights.

What is domestic partner health insurance?

Domestic partner health insurance is when health insurance benefits are extended to a domestic partner, much like they often are to married spouses. Generally, this benefit will also extend to the domestic partner’s children.

Note that private employers do not have to offer health insurance to any employees. But if they do, they must follow federal, state, and local laws pertaining to whether domestic partners are eligible for health insurance benefits. In most cases, you’ll need to prove your domestic partnership to gain eligibility. This could be via registration in the local domestic partnership registry, an affidavit certifying your relationship, or other documentation. Insurance companies typically want you and your domestic partner to meet this criteria:

  • You have cohabited for 6-12 months (depending on the company’s requirements) and intend to continue doing so.
  • That neither of you is married or in a domestic partnership with anyone else.
  • That you are unrelated by blood.
  • And that you are financially interdependent.

Is my employer required to offer domestic partner health insurance?

No, your employer does not have to offer domestic partner health insurance. Even if it offers health insurance benefits to married spouses. The exception to this is in places where it is against the law not to.

In the past, employers who did offer domestic partner insurance benefits often did it for the sake of employees in same-sex relationships. After the U.S. Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage across the country, some insurance companies and employers who previously offered it decided to cut domestic partner health insurance benefits. Large employers with more than 10,000 employees were the most likely to continue domestic partner benefits.

You can always ask your employer to add domestic partners to their group health insurance plan, however. Studies have shown that the costs of offering domestic partner health insurance are negligible for most employers.

What is the domestic partner health insurance tax?

Whereas health insurance benefits provided to a married spouse are just benefits, the same benefits provided to a domestic partner are considered taxable income for the employee.

If your employer pays for any part of your domestic partner’s health insurance premium, then that coverage is taxable and must be reported on your W-2 as imputed income. This amount is the fair market value of what they contributed minus any after-tax contributions made by you, the employee. Because of this, it is valuable to calculate the potential tax burden and compare it with the cost of buying separate coverage via an Affordable Care Act health insurance Marketplace. The cost could be significantly lower, especially if your partner qualifies for a subsidy.

It is possible for this employer-paid coverage to be tax-free. On the federal level, an exception is made if your domestic partner:

  • Receives at least 50% of their financial support from you.
  • Lives in the same home as you.
  • And is a citizen, national, or legal resident of the United States, Canada, or Mexico.

They also cannot be a qualifying child of any U.S. taxpayer. This exception also applies in most states. There are some states that do not tax domestic partner health insurance benefits at all, however.

What are other options to get health insurance benefits for domestic partners?

While same-sex marriage is now legal in the United States, more and more people are also in unmarried, cohabiting relationships. If you are in domestic partnership and lacking the associated health insurance benefits, you can explore family health insurance plans available in the Marketplace, where some plans will offer domestic partnership health insurance benefits. The official recommendation from the government, however, is to include an unmarried domestic partner in a family plan only if you have a child together or if you’ll be claiming your domestic partner as a tax dependent. In some cases, it may be cheaper for both of you to enroll in individual Marketplace plans. Especially if one or both of you qualify for subsidies.

You can also explore off-Marketplace private insurance options, but be aware that these plans do not have to offer all the benefits afforded you by the Affordable Care Act.

Can my live in boyfriend add me to his health insurance?

To expand Californians' options to enter into legally protected relationships. Domestic partnerships are not the only for same sex couples, it has been expanded to include opposite sex couples. Can my domestic partner be added to my benefits? Yes.

Can my boyfriend go on my health insurance?

Most insurance companies allow unmarried couples to combine coverage—and thereby get discounts and other valuable benefits. But again, not all insurance agents or companies will offer these benefits to an unmarried couple.

Can two unmarried people be on the same health insurance?

Generally, insurers will offer family policies to married couples, but some may offer family policies to domestic partners who are not married. If you buy one policy for the entire family, all the tax credits you are eligible for can be used to reduce the premium for that policy.