Mark Cuban It doesn’t start from a polite middle ground. He’s planting his flag on a very real problem in the American health care system: Insurance can cost you money you’ll never use.
In an August article by X, the billionaire entrepreneur and cost-plus drugs The co-founder made a blunt point that troubles many Americans trying to cope with rising premiums and high deductibles: If you can’t afford your deductible, insurance may not protect you at all.
— Mark Cuban (@mcuban) August 18, 2025
The true health insurance scam is that they know that as deductibles increase, fewer and fewer people will be able to afford their coverage. This means they have no insurance. Although there is a premium to be paid.
It may sound counterintuitive, but if you can’t afford your deductible, you…
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“It may sound counterintuitive, but if you can’t afford the deductible, you’re better off not buying insurance,” Cuban wrote. “Your doctor or hospital has financing plans for when you need primary, preventive, or worse care.”
Cuban’s central point is not a slogan but a direct criticism of the way Medicare works today. As deductibles increase, fewer people can afford to actually use their plans. They pay premiums, but when they need care, they face bills they don’t have the cash to pay. Cuban called this a structural flaw:
“The real health insurance scam is that they know that as the deductible increases, fewer and fewer people can afford their coverage. That means they have no coverage. Despite having to pay the premium.”
Here, Cuban talks about the math behind coverage: premiums, deductibles, negotiated pricing — and how members end up paying the full rate on top of the premiums they’ve already paid.
Cuban isn’t giving up insurance entirely. He suggested that in some cases, paying providers directly and setting payment terms can actually save money compared to rarely used high-deductible plans.
“The cash price they finance will be cheaper than the price negotiated by your insurance company or employer,” he writes. “Now is the time to find a doctor who is willing to work directly with you and let you pay directly.”
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He acknowledges that the approach isn’t fully developed yet—it’s still emerging and not seamless—but it’s happening in some parts of the system.
“There’s still a lot of work to be done before this becomes easy and convenient. But it’s starting to happen.”
Cuban ended his post by inviting comments: “This is not a perfect approach, so all feedback is welcome!”
Users on X post their experiences and opinions. One commenter argued that insurance companies do negotiate significant discounts on lab work and that individuals cannot achieve these discounts on their own.
Cuban answered directly, cutting into the core digital reality:
“The cash price is almost always cheaper than the insurance negotiated price. Go to the hospital website to see what they have to pay.”
This answer underscores Cuban’s broader point: Negotiation doesn’t always mean lower, and transparency is important.
Other responses included skepticism about insurance and personal experiences with high premiums and deductibles.
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Cuban isn’t urging everyone to cancel their coverage. He urges readers to think about value, not just cost. When premiums and deductibles rise faster than people can pay, insurance can become more of an expense than protection.
His message focused on an economic reality of today’s U.S. health system:
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Paying for insurance does not guarantee that you will have access to it.
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Financing plans and transparent cash pricing from providers may result in lower out-of-pocket deductibles than those associated with high-premium plans.
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Individuals should evaluate whether insurance is better value than the direct payment option based on their financial situation and local network.
Cuban’s criticism reflects a broader discussion underway among patients, employers and some policymakers about how health care pricing and insurance design affect affordability in practice, not just theory.
Health insurance remains vital to many Americans, especially for major medical events or unpredictable emergencies. But Cuban’s point is about real usefulness, not theory.
For those trying to decide what path makes sense for their lives and finances, speaking with a trusted financial advisor can help weigh the tradeoffs between premiums, deductibles, direct pay pricing and long-term risk.
You should not count on insurance if you cannot afford it. Cuban’s message is a clear, data-based challenge to the status quo and an invitation to rethink how insurance coverage, pricing and care delivery come together.
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This article Mark Cuban says you’re ‘probably better off’ without health insurance if you can’t afford your deductible originally appeared on Benzinga.com
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