No, Liberty HealthShare is not insurance and does not count as insurance coverage. This is an important distinction that affects both legal status and member expectations. Liberty HealthShare is a healthcare sharing ministry—a faith-based organization where members voluntarily share each other's medical expenses based on Christian values and principles of mutual aid.
Liberty HealthShare operates as a non-profit 501(c)(3) charitable Christian medical cost-sharing ministry. The organization explicitly states that it "is not an insurance company nor is it offered through an insurance company." Healthcare sharing ministries are exempt from insurance regulations because they function as voluntary member-to-member sharing communities rather than as insurance products with contractual guarantees.
This classification has important implications. Liberty HealthShare's sharing programs "do not guarantee or promise that a member's medical bills will be paid or assigned to others for payment." Whether anyone chooses to contribute toward a member's medical bills is entirely voluntary, and members remain personally liable for any unpaid bills regardless of whether they receive payments for medical expenses.
While Liberty HealthShare is not insurance, it does hold an important federal designation. In 2014, the ministry received federal recognition as an eligible healthcare sharing ministry under the Affordable Care Act, making members exempt from ACA insurance mandates. This positioned Liberty HealthShare among a limited number of ministries to receive federal acknowledgment, allowing members to participate in healthcare sharing without facing penalties for not carrying traditional health insurance.
This exemption recognizes healthcare sharing ministries as a distinct category—neither insurance nor uninsured status, but rather an alternative approach to healthcare financing rooted in faith-based community support.
Because Liberty HealthShare is not bound by ACA mandates, it has the flexibility to design programs and tools specifically around member needs — including features like medical bill repricing and the Annual Unshared Amount (AUA) structure — that are aimed at reducing what members actually pay out of pocket. This is one of the structural reasons why monthly share amounts at Liberty HealthShare start as low as $89/month, significantly lower than average ACA individual premiums, which exceeded $500/month in 2024 (KFF Health Insurance Marketplace Calculator, 2024).
As Chief Executive Officer Dorsey Morrow explains, Liberty HealthShare's role is purely facilitative: "We're not trying to make a profit on this. Our focus is we facilitate and that's it. There's no other objective on our part. We just want to help our members get the best care possible at the best value." This facilitation model—free from insurance overhead and profit obligations —is what allows the ministry to keep costs lower and focus directly on member outcomes rather than contractual obligations.
Because Liberty HealthShare is not insurance, it operates under its own set of Sharing Guidelines that define which medical expenses are eligible for sharing. Rather than being bound by ACA-mandated categories, these guidelines are designed with the ministry's membership in mind. This is a meaningful feature of the non-insurance model: members know exactly what the guidelines cover, and Liberty HealthShare works actively to help them reduce expenses within that framework.
For individuals who align with the ministry's Christian values and prefer a community-based approach to healthcare financing, Liberty HealthShare offers an alternative model that has served members successfully for 30 years. Understanding that Liberty HealthShare is not insurance helps set appropriate expectations about how the ministry operates—and what makes it a genuinely different kind of healthcare community. To learn more about how it compares to traditional insurance, see What is the difference between insurance and a healthshare?