“In states where the federal government helps run these (health care) marketplaces, the average American will have more than 50 different plans to choose from, with different levels of coverage.”

President Barack Obama on Sept. 26, 2013, in a speech at Largo, Md.

A central goal of the national health care law is to promote competition among insurance companies. This produced the online health insurance exchanges, now called marketplaces. In theory, these marketplaces will make it easier for people to shop for the best deal.

During a speech in Maryland, President Barack Obama touted the success the marketplaces had achieved in providing individuals with options. “In states where the federal government helps run these marketplaces, the average American will have more than 50 different plans to choose from, with different levels of coverage,” Obama told the crowd.

We took a closer look at that. Would the average person actually see 50 different offerings? To what extent does talking about averages mask wide variations?

We contacted the White House and the Department of Health and Human Services, and they pointed us to a report by HHS. That assessment stated, “Individuals will have an average of 53 qualified health plan choices in states where HHS will fully or partially run the Marketplace.”

To be clear, this was not a claim that if you went to a state website, you would find 53 insurance companies competing for your business. There might be four or seven or some other number of companies participating, but each of them offers multiple insurance plans. Some plans would cost less per month but put more risk on the buyer with higher deductibles, and others would cost more but be more generous if you become ill.

The government’s analysis included 36 states. There are 11 other states and the District of Columbia that run their marketplaces entirely on their own. The 36 states in the government study all rely on Washington completely or partially to operate their programs.

The HHS math

The report included a table with the states and the number of plans offered in each one. At the bottom of the column is a cell labeled “Average, 36 states” and the number for that cell is 53.

An HHS spokesperson told us that figure reflected the number of uninsured people in each state. So a state with a larger number of uninsured would have a bigger impact on the calculation than a state with fewer uninsured people.

So the president’s claim is in line with the HHS findings.

Averages mask big differences

Averages don’t lie, but they don’t tell the full truth either. A person going to Arizona’s online exchange would find 106 plans. But if you try to buy in Alabama, your choices are limited to seven plans.

The variation doesn’t end there. Within each state, there are insurance regions. In some larger states, some regions are flush with plans and others less so. For instance, in Texas, the spread is from 25 plans in some places to 71 in others.

The number of plans in a particular place depends on the decisions of private health insurance companies. Insurers contract with hospitals and other care providers. Generally speaking, insurance companies are active in places where they have contracts with local providers. There are exceptions, but as a rule, urban areas tend to have more competition than rural ones. This pattern existed before the Affordable Care Act, and it continues under it.

There’s a third level of variation, according to Sabrina Corlette, senior research fellow at Georgetown University’s Center on Health Insurance Reforms.

“If you only have one insurance company offering 50 different plans in an exchange, that might offer choice, but it ain’t competition,” Corlette said.

We didn’t find that exact scenario in any state, but we did see that in Missouri, just two companies are in the exchange. (Depending on the region, they offer between 12 and 23 plans.) In contrast, in Ohio, the average across the state’s regions is five, and one region has eight firms in the marketplace.

The number of insurance companies matters because it seems to be tied to competition. The HHS report found that “states with the lowest average premium tend to have a higher average number of issuers offering qualified health plans.”

Corlette said Obamacare (another term for the health care law) seems to have drawn new companies into the market. The law helped fund the creation of nonprofit health insurance co-ops, and Corlette counted 23 co-ops nationwide. Plus, she said companies that historically participated in the Medicaid program were moving into the commercial market to take advantage of the premium subsidies in Obamacare.

“I do concur with the general statement that exchanges are generating more competition,” Corlette said, “at least in some states.”

Our ruling

Obama said the average American will have more than 50 plans to choose from. A Department of Health and Human Services analysis of the number of plans offered in each state, weighted by population, backs up Obama’s figure.

But talking about the average number of plans masks significant variation among states and within regions of many states. The average obscures that some people may have far fewer plans to choose from.

We rate the claim Half True.