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Benefits

CHIP in Hawaii — children's health insurance for immigrant families

How to apply for CHIP in Hawaii for uninsured children of families with modest incomes. CHIPRA Option adoption, requirements, state agency.

CHIP in Hawaii

Hawaii at a glance

Hawaii is home to about 261,130 foreign-born residents (18.1% of the state’s 1,445,635 people) and 142,225 residents of Hispanic or Latino origin (9.8%), per the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey (2023 5-year estimates). The procedures below apply to everyone in Hawaii regardless of immigration status unless noted.

CHIP covers health insurance for uninsured children from families earning too much for Medicaid but unable to afford private insurance.

CHIP eligibility limits in Hawaii (verified data)

Source: Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) — CHIP data by state

Verified on: 2026-05-25

Children’s health coverage in Hawaii

Child ageMedicaid (% FPL)
Infants 0-1 yearup to 191% FPL
Children 1-5 yearsup to 139% FPL
Children 6-18 yearsup to 133% FPL

CHIP upper income limit in Hawaii: 313% of FPL

How to apply for CHIP in Hawaii

  1. Combined Medicaid+CHIP application via healthcare.gov
  2. Hawaii state application (some states have own portal)
  3. By phone: 1-877-KIDS-NOW (1-877-543-7669)

Hawaii adopted CHIPRA Option

Hawaii adopted the CHIPRA option, eliminating the 5-year bar for permanent-resident children. This means a child with a new green card (under 5 years in US) can qualify for CHIP in Hawaii without waiting.

How to apply for CHIP in Hawaii

  1. Visit Healthcare.gov or Hawaii’s Medicaid/CHIP portal
  2. Complete the application — ONE application covers both Medicaid AND CHIP automatically
  3. Hawaii determines if your child qualifies for one or the other

Typical coverage

CHIP covers: doctor visits, vaccines, hospitalization, dental, vision, prescriptions, mental health.

Income limits

Generally 200-300% federal poverty level. For family of 4: ~$60,000-$90,000/year.

Costs

CHIP has very low co-pays (sometimes $0) and low monthly premiums ($0-$50/month).


Last verified: 2026-05-24.

Apply for CHIP in Hawaii

Where to apply

  • Federal Marketplace: healthcare.gov — combined Medicaid+CHIP application
  • Hawaii state application — some states have separate portal
  • By phone: 1-877-KIDS-NOW (1-877-543-7669)
  • In person at FQHCs, schools, Head Start centers

Documents to apply

  • Child’s identity: passport, birth certificate, green card
  • Parent’s identity: any ID (passport, matrícula consular, license)
  • Income: last 2 paystubs, ITIN return, employer letter
  • Hawaii residency: utility bill, lease
  • If receiving other benefits: approval letters

Approval timeline

  • Generally 30-45 days from application
  • Urgent cases (child with medical emergency): some states grant “presumptive eligibility” immediately

Annual renewal

CHIP requires renewing coverage every 12 months. DON’T ignore renewal letters — you’ll lose coverage. States send notice 60-90 days before.

CHIP vs Medicaid vs Marketplace

  • CHIP: children in families earning more than Medicaid limit
  • Medicaid: children + adults below lower limit (varies by state)
  • Marketplace plans with subsidies: families above both limits but below 400% FPL

Immigrant families with USC children generally find CHIP the best option.


Last verified: 2026-05-25.

General procedural information for educational purposes. Not legal, tax, or immigration advice. Laws and fees change — verify with the issuing agency before taking action. For case-specific guidance, consult a licensed immigration attorney or other appropriate professional.

Frequently asked questions

Does my child qualify for CHIP in Hawaii?
CHIP covers children in families earning too much for Medicaid but unable to afford private insurance. Limits vary by state: generally 138-355% of Federal Poverty Level. In Hawaii verify current limits with the health department.
Does CHIP in Hawaii require my SSN or immigration status?
The CHILD must be US citizen, LPR, refugee, or have eligible status. Does NOT require parents to show status — they can have ITIN or be undocumented. Some states extend CHIP to undocumented children.
How much does CHIP cost in Hawaii?
CHIP is FREE or very low cost. Families below FPL pay $0. Families above pay monthly premiums $5-$40 and copays $0-$25 per visit. Much cheaper than private insurance.
Does CHIP cover dental and vision in Hawaii?
YES. CHIP covers by federal law: medical care, vaccines, hospital, basic dental (cleanings, fillings), vision (exam + glasses), mental health, specialists. Comparable to Medicaid for children.