Medicare Part B Premiums Set To Rise About $18 Per Month In 2026
The 10% increase is due in part to the higher costs associated with running Medicare Advantage, which is handled by private health insurers, Stat reports. The costlier premiums could strain enrollees who live on fixed incomes. Plus, what's ahead in the effort to extend ACA subsidies.
Most Medicare enrollees will face premiums that are 10% higher next year, creating budget anxiety for millions of seniors. Older adults and people with disabilities will pay almost $203 per month in 2026 for their Medicare Part B premium, the Trump administration said late Friday. That鈥檚 about 10% higher than the $185 per month that Medicare beneficiaries pay this year. (Herman, 11/14)
On ACA costs and coverage 鈥
Dr. Mehmet Oz, the administrator for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), said Sunday the Trump administration is holding 鈥渄iscussions鈥 on extending subsidies offered under the Affordable Care Act (ACA).聽鈥淭here are discussions around extending the subsidies, if we deal with the fraud, waste and abuse that, right now, is paralyzing the system,鈥 Oz told host Dana Bash on CNN鈥檚 鈥淪tate of the Union.鈥澛(Rego, 11/16)
The nation鈥檚 20 state Obamacare exchanges appear poised to quickly update premiums if Congress passes a straightforward extension of enhanced subsidies when it votes on the matter next month. But there鈥檚 another, increasingly likely scenario that could catch them flat-footed. That鈥檚 if lawmakers decide to go a different route 鈥 for example, by paying the subsidies directly to consumers, a plan touted by President Donald Trump, or changing the eligibility rules by adding an income cap, which many conservatives would like to see. (King, 11/16)
Insurers and drug companies facing dire threats to their bottom lines this year from President Donald Trump and Republicans in Congress had to make a choice: Stand and fight, or go to ground and cut some deals. Insurers fought in a bid to kill the threat; drugmakers cut deals to mitigate the damage. The early results are revealing. (Chu, 11/16)
Are health savings accounts (HSAs) a good way to make health insurance more affordable? And if so, should the funds currently being used to expand Affordable Care Act (ACA) premium tax credits be used to fund HSAs instead? Those are some of the questions members of the American Medical Association (AMA) House of Delegates were wrestling with Saturday during their interim meeting here. (Frieden, 11/16)
Virginia Gilbert was shocked and angry after she learned last week that premiums for her Affordable Care Act (ACA) insurance policy will more than double next year, jumping from $930 to $2,042. She was freshly outraged after U.S. senators reached an agreement this week to end the six-week government shutdown without securing an extension of enhanced premium tax credits for ACA-backed plans. (DeWitt, 11/15)
Also 鈥
Robert Hays, an industrial electronics salesman in Arkansas, thought he鈥檇 purchased conventional medical insurance. So did Essie Nath, 67, a retired cafeteria worker in Wyoming. So did Martin Liz, 47, a Key West chef. Each enrolled in the kind of private health insurance that Trump administration officials have promoted as an alternative to plans sold under Obamacare. (Whoriskey, 11/15)
New Jersey Attorney General Matt Platkin on Friday announced a $100 million settlement with Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey claiming that the insurer fraudulently overcharged the state for health care on its public employee health plans. The announcement from Platkin stems from Horizon鈥檚 contract with the state to administer its multibillion-dollar public worker health insurance programs, which provides health insurance to around 750,000 New Jerseyans. (Han, 11/14)
麻豆女优 Health News:
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麻豆女优 Health News Southern California correspondent Claudia Boyd-Barrett discussed rising health care premiums on KPFA鈥檚 鈥淯p Front鈥 on Nov. 13. (11/15)