Coral Springs is one of Broward County's largest planned communities and hosts a growing professional services sector including architectural practices serving the suburban residential and commercial development market in the Coral Springs-Margate corridor. Coral Springs architecture firms typically serve residential and community-scale commercial projects. HMO plans are often a reasonable fit for firms where staff prefers cost savings and has established primary care relationships within Broward County networks. The HMO vs. PPO decision is central to this: it affects not just monthly cost but the entire model by which architecture staff access healthcare — specialist referrals, out-of-county care, and hospital choice when a serious medical event occurs.
Florida's small group health insurance market grew 12–18% in premium costs for 2026 — a significant increase from 2025. For a small Coral Springs architecture firm, even a $150/employee/month difference between HMO and PPO compounds to $1,800/year per employee, or $9,000/year for a 5-person staff. Understanding what that premium premium buys — and whether the firm's specific staff would actually use the additional benefits — is the core of the HMO vs. PPO analysis.
| Factor | HMO | PPO |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly premium (Silver, 2026) | $510–$720/employee | $590–$850/employee |
| PCP referral required | Yes — for most specialists | No — direct specialist access |
| Out-of-network coverage | Not covered (emergencies excepted) | Covered at reduced reimbursement |
| Annual deductible (Silver) | $1,500–$2,500 individual | $1,500–$3,000 individual |
| Best for firms where... | Staff prefers cost savings; consistent PCP | Staff has varied specialist relationships |
| Carrier examples (FL) | Florida Blue myBlue HMO, Molina | Florida Blue BlueOptions PPO, Cigna, Aetna |
Architecture is a licensed, white-collar profession with relatively higher compensation than many other small business sectors. This matters for plan selection in two ways:
Before selecting a plan type, survey your Coral Springs team: Do they have established primary care physicians? Do they have ongoing specialist relationships they want to preserve? Do they rely on facilities at HCA Florida Woodmont Hospital? The answers determine which plan type serves the team's actual healthcare patterns.
In Broward County, confirm that HCA Florida Woodmont Hospital and Broward Health Coral Springs are included in-network for both the HMO and PPO options you are comparing. Florida Blue's BlueOptions PPO and myBlue HMO have different network configurations even though they are from the same carrier. Never assume that because a hospital is in-network for one Florida Blue product it is in-network for all of them.
Compare the full-year cost difference per employee. If the HMO saves $150/employee/month and you have 5 employees, that is $9,000/year in employer savings. Ask whether any of your staff has a known specialist relationship that would be disrupted by an HMO's referral requirement. If one employee would pay $3,000 in out-of-pocket costs to see a specialist out-of-network on an HMO, while a PPO would cover 70% of that cost, the PPO may be the financially prudent choice despite the higher premium.
A Coral Springs architecture firm that cannot get consensus on HMO vs. PPO can use an ICHRA to let each employee choose their own Broward County marketplace plan. Employees who prefer HMO's lower premium choose an HMO marketplace plan; those who prefer PPO choose a PPO. The firm sets a monthly reimbursement cap that applies equally across the team. This eliminates the forced consensus problem entirely.
Florida's small group premium increases of 12–18% in 2026 suggest that plan selection requires annual review. The relative cost difference between HMO and PPO may change at renewal as carriers reconfigure their networks and reprice products. A plan that was the right choice in 2026 may be reconsidered in 2027 if a key hospital is removed from one carrier's network.
Florida follows federal ACA small group standards — guaranteed issue, no pre-existing condition exclusions, essential health benefits required, and no health-based rating. Broward County's small group market for 2026 is served primarily by Florida Blue (BlueOptions PPO and myBlue HMO), Cigna (where available), and UnitedHealthcare. HMO plans in Broward County generally require a PCP assignment at enrollment and a referral for most specialist visits. PPO plans allow direct specialist access but reimburse out-of-network providers at reduced rates (typically 60–80% of allowed amount after the out-of-network deductible).
The cheapest HMO in Broward County may have a network that excludes one or more of the major hospital systems your staff relies on. An employee who faces a surgery and discovers their surgeon is out-of-network will incur full out-of-pocket costs on an HMO. This is a catastrophic downside risk that $100/month in premium savings does not justify. Always check the specific network configuration for the specific HMO product before enrolling.
Architecture is a deadline-driven, project-intensive profession. An HMO's requirement to obtain a PCP referral before seeing a specialist can create a meaningful friction point for architects who are in the middle of a project crunch. The scheduling delay between PCP visit (to obtain referral) and specialist visit can be 3–6 weeks. For a health issue that needs prompt specialist attention, this delay has real consequences. PPOs eliminate this friction entirely.
Architecture staff traveling to out-of-state project sites or conferences — or visiting family in other states — have essentially no coverage on an HMO plan except for emergency care. A Coral Springs architect visiting a project site in another state who sprains an ankle cannot use their HMO to visit an urgent care center outside of Florida. The PPO's out-of-network benefit, while at reduced reimbursement, covers this scenario. For a firm with regular multi-state project work, this gap is operationally relevant.
Some Coral Springs architecture firms renew the existing plan automatically each year without shopping alternatives. With Florida small group premiums increasing 12–18% in 2026, an auto-renewing firm may be paying significantly more than necessary for equivalent coverage. The annual renewal window is the only opportunity to change plan type — missing the window means another full year at the current plan and premium.
A licensed Florida agent can compare HMO and PPO plan options for your architecture firm at no cost.
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Related: Florida Small Business Health Insurance Guide Florida ACA Plans Broward County Plans Broward County Health Insurance Guide