麻豆女优

Skip to content
ACA Subsidies Expired. Open Enrollment Ended. But It Will Still Take Awhile To Register the Results.
The Week in Brief

ACA Subsidies Expired. Open Enrollment Ended. But It Will Still Take Awhile To Register the Results.

It鈥檚 February, so open enrollment for the Affordable Care Act is over. We鈥檙e getting the first glimpses of how sign-ups are shaking out after the expiration of enhanced subsidies that helped most people with their premium costs. 

While more Americans enrolled than聽, the number聽was聽聽what聽it was聽at the same time last year. And experts say聽it will聽be聽months聽until聽the numbers聽are final.听The timing聽will depend on聽how many of those people聽who signed up for coverage聽actually pay their premiums and remain enrolled.听

In coming weeks, 鈥渃onsumers may find they really can鈥檛 afford the premiums and cancel their plans, while carriers may also cancel coverage for nonpayment,鈥 said Pat Kelly, executive director of Your Health Idaho, a state-based ACA marketplace, during a Jan. 22 call with reporters. 

The drop comes after several years of record-breaking enrollment, with 24.2 million sign-ups for the 2025 enrollment year. Enrollment growth took off after enhanced subsidies 鈥 which lowered the amount most households had to pay out of their own income toward premiums and removed an upper-income cap 鈥 went into effect during the Biden administration. Lawmakers, in adopting the enhanced subsidies, set an expiration date of Dec. 31, 2025. 

Congressional debate over extending those more generous subsidies was heated, even . Now, the subsidies are back to their original level, and people who earn more than four times the federal poverty rate (about $62,600 for an individual or $84,600 for a couple) can鈥檛 qualify for any at all. 

 in most states this year, with the biggest drop in North Carolina, where sign-ups fell by nearly 22%, . 

In a few places 鈥 including New Mexico, Texas, and Maryland, as well as the District of Columbia 鈥 the number of people selecting ACA plans increased.听

The jump was largest in New Mexico, with its tally of people selecting plans up by nearly 18%. Increases were in the single digits in the other states and Washington, D.C. 

New Mexico 鈥 uniquely 鈥 used its own tax dollars to fully offset the loss of the more generous federal tax subsidies for all consumers. , including California, Colorado, Maryland, and Washington, used state money to help some enrollees. 

We鈥檒l keep watching to see how this unfolds over the coming weeks.

Obamacare Sign-Ups Drop, but the Extent Won鈥檛 Be Clear for Months

Experts say Affordable Care Act sign-up data won鈥檛 be clear until people who were enrolled have paid 鈥 or haven’t paid 鈥 their new, often much higher, premiums.

Read More