Clearwater anchors western Pinellas County alongside St. Petersburg and is home to Morton Plant Hospital, one of the region's largest healthcare systems. About 21% of Pinellas County residents are 65 or older, supporting strong demand for home health services. Commercial cleaning and janitorial services companies face a distinctive health insurance challenge: their workforce is frequently split between full-time supervisory staff and part-time cleaners who work irregular or variable hours across multiple client sites. This mixed structure makes the standard question — group plan or ACA marketplace — more complicated than it is for businesses with uniform full-time workforces.
This guide explains how each option works, when each is the right fit for a commercial cleaning company in Clearwater, and what Pinellas County carrier options look like in 2026.
The ACA marketplace at HealthCare.gov allows individuals to purchase their own health insurance independently. Plans are priced based on age, tobacco use, and the county where the enrollee lives. Employees who earn between 100% and 400% of the federal poverty level (approximately $15,000–$60,000 for a single person in 2026) qualify for premium tax credits that reduce their monthly cost — sometimes to zero for lower-income workers.
For a commercial cleaning company, the marketplace is most relevant for part-time workers (fewer than 30 hours/week) who are not eligible for the company's group plan. These workers can shop for individual plans on their own, and depending on their household income, they may receive significant subsidies that make individual coverage affordable without employer involvement.
A small group health plan is sponsored by the employer, who enrolls eligible full-time employees and contributes to their premiums. The employer selects a plan (or a small menu of plans) from a carrier, sets the contribution level, and manages annual enrollment. All ACA-compliant small group plans in Pinellas County cover the 10 essential health benefits and cannot discriminate based on health status.
The advantage of a group plan is simplicity for enrolled employees — they do not have to shop for coverage themselves — and employer tax deductions on contributions. The limitation is that it requires at least 70% of eligible full-time employees to enroll, and managing enrollment has administrative overhead.
Separate your employees into full-time (30+ hours/week) and part-time (under 30 hours/week) workers. Full-time workers are eligible for a group plan. Part-time workers are not required to be covered under your group plan and may do better on the ACA marketplace if their income qualifies them for subsidies.
If you have at least two full-time W-2 employees (one of whom is a non-owner), you can offer a small group plan in Pinellas County. Most carriers require at least 70% of eligible employees to enroll for the plan to be active — meaning if you have 5 eligible full-time employees, at least 4 must join.
An Individual Coverage HRA (ICHRA) lets you reimburse employees for their own marketplace plans without sponsoring a group plan. You set a monthly reimbursement amount, employees pick their own ACA plans, and you reimburse premiums up to your cap — tax-free to both parties. This works well when your cleaning staff is geographically scattered or has diverse coverage needs that a single group plan cannot address well.
For the group plan path, get quotes from Florida Blue, Humana, Ambetter for your specific employee ages and count. For the ICHRA path, estimate your reimbursement cap and model the tax savings. The right answer depends on your specific numbers.
| Carrier | Strengths | Availability |
|---|---|---|
| Florida Blue | Strongest network depth in FL; broad hospital relationships | Available in Pinellas County |
| Humana | Medicare-experienced; solid senior-heavy market coverage | Available in Pinellas County |
| Ambetter | Lowest premiums; HMO-focused; Medicaid-adjacent network | Available in Pinellas County |
| Aetna | Competitive HMO and PPO; strong telehealth integration | Available in Pinellas County |
| Plan Type | Est. Monthly Premium (EE only) | Deductible (Individual) | Network |
|---|---|---|---|
| HMO Silver | $385–$455 | $1,500–$2,500 | Pinellas County providers |
| PPO Silver | $465–$545 | $2,000–$3,500 | Statewide + national |
| Bronze HMO | $345–$415 | $3,500–$5,500 | Pinellas County providers |
Estimates for Pinellas County small groups, 2026. Actual rates depend on employee ages and group composition.
Florida has no state income tax, which means the tax benefit of employer health insurance contributions flows entirely through federal deductions — cleaning companies organized as S-corps, C-corps, or partnerships can deduct 100% of employer premium contributions as a business expense. Sole proprietors who pay for their own health insurance can deduct premiums from federal taxable income under IRC Section 162(l).
Florida's minimum wage is $13.00/hour in 2026. For cleaning companies employing workers at or near minimum wage, health insurance reimbursements meaningfully increase total compensation — often the difference between a worker choosing your company over a competitor.
Florida workers' compensation is required for employers with 4 or more employees in most non-construction industries. Health insurance and workers' compensation address different risks — workers' comp covers on-the-job injuries; health insurance covers illness and off-the-job medical needs — and both matter for a cleaning company workforce.
Get health insurance quotes for your Clearwater commercial cleaning company. Compare group plans and ICHRA options from Pinellas County carriers.
Get a QuoteRelated: Florida Small Business Health Insurance Florida ACA Plans Gulf Coast Small Business Plans