Ok, so I have the APTC for a single person who has reduced income to right near $20,000 a year for 2018.
In Florida it is now $760/month, or $9,120 a year.
This is wildly up from $446 for last year; in fact it's up 70%.
This means I can now have a Silver plan for about $15/month, as opposed to a very low-level Bronze plan for under a buck. I can also choose virtually all the Bronze plans for zero (since the cost is lower than the APTC), but that would be insane since I'd be leaving a huge amount of your money on the table.
The actuarial value of a "Silver" plan is wildly better than any of the Bronze plans.
There is one "gotcha", which is hospitalization co-insurance that does exist on the Silver plan but not on the Bronze. But the Silver plan in question has a zero deductible, so even with 20% "coinsurance" you'd have to run a hell of a bill to lose that bet especially considering that you get the insurance-company racketeering-deduction price.
Folks, you have to be flat-out nuts to work harder and run into the subsidy phase-out, especially if you have a spouse, even if you do need routine medical services since you can now buy zero-deductible Silver plans for less than the cost of a burger-and-beer in your local pub!
QUIT FUCKING WORKING AT $20,000 A YEAR OF INCOME, FIGURE OUT HOW TO MAKE YOUR LIFE FIT IN THAT EARNINGS LEVEL AND YOU WILL NOT ONLY PAY BASICALLY ZERO FEDERAL TAX (OTHER THAN EMPLOYMENT TAXES, OF COURSE) AND YOU WILL GET CLOSE TO $10,000 OF "HEALTH INSURANCE" WITH A ZERO-DEDUCTIBLE PLAN FOR UNDER $200 A YEAR.
No, you probably can't do this in high-cost-of-living areas without living in a slum. Yes, you can make it work perfectly-well in lower-cost-of-living areas and be perfectly fine. I'm doing it and you can too. Yes, it means you have to change your lifestyle but I'll be double-goddamned if I'm going to go out and earn a six-figure income and then have government thieves not only tax more than half of it away (which they will) but then double-monkey-fuck me by extracting approximately $10,000 in after tax money in addition from me for "insurance" that, unless I have some sort of medical catastrophe in the next 12 months in fact provides zero value to me.