Kentucky Derby 2026 — The Health Insurance Problem Horse Country Doesn't Talk About

Private PPO • Kentucky • Self-Employed • 2026

Kentucky Derby Week — and the Health Insurance Problem Nobody in Horse Country Talks About

Fast take: Kentucky's horse industry employs over 60,000 workers — jockeys, trainers, grooms, exercise riders, veterinarians, and stable hands. Nearly all of them are independent contractors or self-employed. Almost none have access to a group health plan. For healthy workers in this industry, private medically underwritten PPO plans are often significantly cheaper than ACA marketplace rates and work in every state they travel to — which, for many in this industry, is every major racing state in the country.

The workforce behind the roses

The Kentucky Derby is the most watched two minutes in sports. Churchill Downs, the pageantry, the fashion, the horses — it's one of the great American spectacles. But behind every race is a workforce that operates almost entirely outside the traditional employment model.

Jockeys are independent contractors. Trainers run their own operations as self-employed business owners. Grooms, exercise riders, hot walkers, and stable hands are often paid per horse or per week — no benefits, no HR department, no group health plan. Veterinarians in private equine practice are self-employed professionals. The entire horse racing ecosystem in Kentucky and beyond runs on 1099 workers.

And virtually none of them have health insurance that actually works for the way they live and work.

Why this workforce is chronically underinsured

The ACA problem for horse industry workers

  • Income is often variable — per horse, per race, per season
  • Subsidy reconciliation creates tax risk when income varies year to year
  • ACA premiums up 18–20% in 2026 — largest increase since 2018
  • Kentucky marketplace often offers limited plan choices in rural counties
  • HMO/EPO networks are regional — don't work when traveling to other racing states

Why private PPO fits this workforce

  • Premium based on health — not income variability
  • No subsidy reconciliation — no year-end tax surprise
  • Nationwide PPO — works in Kentucky, Florida, California, New York, anywhere they race
  • No referrals — see any specialist, any state, any time
  • Available any month — no enrollment window
  • For healthy applicants, often significantly less than ACA

The travel problem — and why ACA often fails horse industry workers

The racing calendar doesn't stay in Kentucky. Trainers, jockeys, and their teams follow the horses — Keeneland in the spring, Churchill Downs for Derby week, Saratoga in August, Gulfstream in Florida, Santa Anita in California, Belmont in New York.

An ACA marketplace plan purchased in Kentucky often uses a Kentucky-based HMO or EPO network. The moment you're in Florida or California, you're out of network — and you're paying out of pocket for everything except emergencies.

A nationwide private PPO has no such restriction. You're in-network at any participating provider in any state. For a workforce that moves with the horses, this isn't a nice-to-have. It's the difference between usable coverage and coverage that fails you exactly when you need it.

Note for jockeys specifically: The Jockeys' Guild provides some safety and advocacy resources for its members, but does not offer comprehensive individual health insurance. Jockeys are among the highest-risk independent contractors in professional athletics — and most are responsible for obtaining their own coverage independently.

What does private PPO actually cost in Kentucky?

For healthy applicants in Kentucky, private medically underwritten plan estimates in 2026:

Age 25–35, healthy

  • $125–$255/month typical range
  • $0 deductible options available
  • Nationwide PPO access

Age 35–50, healthy

  • $225–$415/month typical range
  • Multiple deductible options
  • Works in all 50 states

vs ACA Kentucky (unsubsidized)

  • Silver: $345–$520/month
  • Gold: $420–$620/month
  • Often regional network only
  • Up 18–20% in 2026

*Estimates for healthy non-smokers. Actual premiums vary by age, plan, health history, and underwriting outcome.

Who this applies to beyond horse country

The same coverage gap exists for self-employed professionals across Kentucky — not just those in the horse industry. Independent contractors in Louisville, Lexington, Bowling Green, and across the state face identical challenges with ACA marketplace plans and the same opportunity with private PPO.

Horse industry workers

  • Jockeys — independent contractors
  • Trainers — self-employed
  • Grooms and stable hands — variable income
  • Equine veterinarians — private practice
  • Exercise riders — per-horse compensation

Other Kentucky self-employed

  • Real estate agents across Kentucky
  • Independent contractors in Louisville's logistics sector
  • Bourbon industry consultants and independent distillers
  • Freelancers and remote workers statewide
  • Small business owners without group plans

The common thread

  • 1099 income or self-employed
  • No employer group plan available
  • Often healthy — priced well for private PPO
  • May travel or work in multiple states
  • ACA full rate is expensive without subsidies
Kentucky self-employed? Get a free comparison.

We compare ACA marketplace vs private PPO options for your specific situation. We're licensed in Kentucky and 31 other states. No pressure, no obligation — just an honest comparison.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is RKA Insurance licensed in Kentucky?

Yes. RKA Insurance Advisors is licensed in Kentucky and 31 other states. We work with self-employed professionals and 1099 workers across Kentucky — from Louisville and Lexington to rural horse country.

Can I get coverage that works in multiple states if I travel with the racing circuit?

Yes — this is exactly what private medically underwritten PPO plans are designed for. A nationwide PPO gives you in-network access at any participating provider anywhere in the country, with no referrals and no prior authorization for most services. It's the only plan type that genuinely works for someone who follows the racing calendar across multiple states.

My income varies by season. Does that affect my premium?

No — private PPO premiums are based on your health, not your income. This is a significant advantage over ACA marketplace plans, where income fluctuation can create subsidy reconciliation issues and unexpected tax bills. With private PPO, your rate is set at underwriting and doesn't change based on what you earn that year.

What if I've been injured before — does that affect eligibility?

It depends on the nature and timing of the injury. Minor, fully resolved injuries often don't affect private plan eligibility. Ongoing orthopedic issues, surgeries within the past few years, or chronic conditions may affect underwriting. We pre-screen applicants before submitting a formal application so you have a realistic picture before anything goes on record.

What if I don't qualify for private PPO?

If private underwriting isn't available based on your health history, ACA marketplace coverage remains a solid option — and losing previous coverage is a qualifying life event that opens a special enrollment period. We'll give you an honest side-by-side comparison of both paths.

Run your horses. We'll handle your health coverage.

Independent broker. Licensed in Kentucky and 31 other states. Free quotes for self-employed horse industry workers and Kentucky professionals. No pressure, honest advice.

Robert Adams * President & Licensed Agent * NPN 19540130 * Licensed in 32 states including Kentucky. Premium estimates are illustrative ranges based on 2026 market data and are not guaranteed. Actual premiums vary by age, state, tobacco status, plan selection, carrier, and underwriting outcome. Private medically underwritten plans are not ACA-compliant and subject to medical underwriting — not all applicants qualify. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute insurance, legal, or financial advice.

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