Enrollment season ends. Phones slow down. Deals are closed.
Now comes the part agents care about most. Getting paid.
Health insurance commission payouts after AEP and OEP feel simple on the surface. Sell policies. Wait. Collect commissions. In reality, payouts depend on a long chain of data, approvals, and timing that most agents never see. That lack of visibility is exactly why frustration peaks in December and January.
We break it down in plain English. No carrier jargon. No accounting talk. Just how commission payouts actually work after enrollment season, what affects timing, and where things usually go wrong.
How payouts start post-enrollment
Once AEP or OEP ends, carriers do not immediately send commission checks. The payout process starts with policy validation, not payment.
Here is what happens first.
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Carriers confirm the policy is active
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The member’s first premium clears
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The policy is not canceled or adjusted
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Enrollment data matches carrier records
Only after those steps does a policy qualify for commission consideration.
This matters because selling a policy does not guarantee a payout. A policy must survive the carrier’s validation window. That window often extends weeks past enrollment close.
For Medicare Advantage and Part D plans, carriers typically validate enrollments through late December into January. For ACA plans, validation can stretch further due to income verification and subsidy adjustments.
Until validation finishes, commission data stays in limbo.
Commission timing by policy type
Commission payout timing varies based on the type of health insurance sold. Understanding these differences helps set realistic expectations.
Medicare commission timing
Medicare commission payouts usually follow a monthly schedule.
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January effective policies often pay in late January or February
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Renewals and new enrollments follow similar timing
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Retroactive adjustments can occur months later
Carriers wait until the policy is confirmed active before releasing commissions. Any enrollment correction pushes payment back.
ACA commission timing
ACA commission payouts are less predictable.
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First payments may arrive 30 to 90 days after effectuation
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Income changes can delay payouts
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Carrier verification cycles differ widely
If a client updates income or subsidy information after enrollment, the carrier may pause or adjust commissions.
This is why ACA agents often see partial payments or delayed statements early in the year.
How commission splits really work
Commission splits sound straightforward. In practice, they introduce the most errors.
A single policy can involve:
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Writing agent
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Agency or upline
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FMO or MGA
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Internal overrides
Each level depends on correct hierarchy data being sent to the carrier. If one link breaks, payouts break too.
Common split issues include:
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Incorrect agent assignment
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Outdated hierarchy files
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Contract changes mid-season
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Manual overrides not documented
When a split is wrong at the carrier level, everyone downstream feels it. Fixing it often requires resubmitting data and waiting through another carrier cycle.
This is where agencies lose the most time after enrollment season.
Carrier dependencies that delay payouts
Commission payouts depend on systems agents never control.
Carriers rely on:
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Enrollment platforms
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CRM exports
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Contract records
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State and CMS reporting
If any system sends mismatched data, payouts stall.
Some common dependency issues include:
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Enrollment data submitted late
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Policy ID mismatches
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Contract effective date errors
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Agent NPN mismatches
These problems surface most often after high-volume seasons like AEP and OEP. Volume increases error rates. Carriers process corrections in batches. That creates long delays.
Agents feel the delay. Agencies feel the pressure. Carriers move on their own timeline.
Why payouts rarely match expectations
Most commission disputes are not caused by carriers shorting agents. They come from expectation gaps.
Agents expect payment based on:
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What they sold
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What they quoted
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What they remember
Carriers pay based on:
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Active status
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Approved enrollment data
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Final plan details
Those two views rarely line up perfectly.
Other factors that change payout amounts include:
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Plan changes after enrollment
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Member non-payment
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Policy cancellations
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Retroactive effective date changes
By the time a commission posts, it may not match the original sale. Without visibility, agents assume something is wrong.
Sometimes it is. Sometimes it is just how the system works.
Where agencies lose the most money
After enrollment season, agencies typically lose money in three places.
Missed commissions
Policies fall through cracks due to missing data or incorrect hierarchy setup.
Delayed payouts
Manual tracking slows down issue resolution and pushes payments out months.
Agent disputes
Time spent answering payout questions drains operational resources.
None of these problems come from selling. They come from managing commissions at scale.
Enrollment season exposes weak processes. Post-enrollment season is when those weaknesses cost real money.
How Comissio fits post-enrollment
Comissio exists for this exact phase of the year.
After AEP and OEP, agencies and FMOs need clarity. They need to see:
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Who should be paid
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How much is expected
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Where data does not line up
Comissio centralizes commission data so teams can track payouts across carriers and hierarchies without relying on spreadsheets and email chains.
That visibility changes how teams operate in January.
Instead of reacting to problems, they spot issues early. Instead of guessing, they work from real data. Instead of chasing carriers blindly, they know where to focus.
Post-enrollment is when commission systems either prove their value or fall apart.
Enrollment ends. The work does not.
Commissions decide how strong the year starts.
Visibility decides how fast problems get fixed.
That is where Comissio changes the conversation.

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