plawolf
Lieutenant General
TrumpCare (only about your money).
Affordable Care Act premiums will rise 114% in 2026 if subsidies expires
Premiums for health plans purchased over the Affordable Care Act marketplace will more than double in 2026 if enhanced subsidies expire at year’s end as scheduled, according to an analysis published Tuesday by KFF, a nonpartisan health policy research group.
The finding comes as Democrats and Republicans are locked in a stalemate tied to the enhanced subsidies that threatens to shut down the federal government early Wednesday morning.
The enhanced subsidies, or enhanced premium tax credits, make health insurance premiums cheaper for 22 million ACA enrollees.
They’re scheduled to expire at the end of 2025, absent congressional action.
If the enhanced credits end, recipients would see their premiums increase to $1,906 in 2026 from $888 this year, on average — a 114% increase, according to KFF’s analysis.
Democrats want to extend the enhanced subsidies as part of a deal to fully fund the federal government in fiscal year 2026. Republicans say negotiations on continuing those credits should happen after the Senate approves a funding resolution.
Premium tax credits were established under the Affordable Care Act and were originally available for households with incomes between 100% and 400% of the federal poverty level.
In 2021, the American Rescue Plan Act, a pandemic relief law, temporarily increased the amount of the premium tax credit and expanded eligibility to households with an annual income of more than 400% of the federal poverty limit. This includes a family of four with income of more than $128,600 in 2025, for example.
The law also capped the amount a household pays out of pocket toward insurance premiums at 8.5% of income.
Democrats temporarily extended those enhanced subsidies in the Inflation Reduction Act, which former President Joe Biden signed in 2022.
The enhanced subsidies saved recipients an average of $705 annually in 2024 on their health premiums, according to KFF.
Other factors would compound the cost increase for enrollees, according to the KFF analysis.
For one, the Trump administration changed the way tax credits are calculated, and as a result, enrollees will have to pay a higher share of their income toward a benchmark ACA plan in 2026, KFF said.
Insurers in the ACA marketplace have also proposed raising rates by a median of 18%, due to rising health care costs and the expiration of enhanced subsidies, KFF said. That would be the largest rate increase since 2018.
Premium increases in 2026 would occur across income groups, KFF found.
For example, a 60-year-old couple making $85,000, or 402% of the federal poverty level, would see their yearly premium payments rise by over $22,600 next year, on average, after accounting for the loss of enhanced credits and insurers’ rate increases, KFF found.
A 45-year-old earning $20,000, or 128% of the federal poverty level, in a state that hasn’t expanded Medicaid coverage would see premiums for a benchmark health plan rise from $0 to $420 per year, on average, from the loss of enhanced premium tax credits, KFF said.
For example, a 60-year-old couple making $85,000, or 402% of the federal poverty level, would see their yearly premium payments rise by over $22,600 next year, on averageIf the enhanced credits end, recipients would see their premiums increase to $1,906 in 2026 from $888 this year, on average — a 114% increase,
The reception from the Chinese public has not been favourable to say the least:K-visa countdown. Queues already forming outside Chinese consulate in New Delhi:
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U.S. government will shut down after midnight as Congress fails to pass funding bills
The U.S. government will shut down just after midnight on Wednesday after Congress failed to pass stopgap funding bills.
- House Speaker Mike Johnson blasted Democrats for holding out against passing a stopgap funding bill that would avoid a shutdown of the U.S. government at the end of the day.
- “They “need to come to their senses here, and do the right thing,” Johnson, R-La., said during an interview on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”
- Jeffries, in his own interview on “Squawk Box,” said of Republicans, “If the government shuts down, it’s their decision to do it.”
Republicans and Democrats refused to budge from their opposing positions on a funding deal to avoid a shutdown. A key sticking point was Democrats’ insistence on including the extension of enhanced Affordable Care Act tax credits in any stopgap funding bill.
Sen. John Fetterman, a Pennsylvania Democrat who broke ranks with most of the rest of his party’s caucus to support a Republican stopgap funding bill Tuesday, said, “It’s a sad day for our nation.”
“Our government shuts down at midnight,” Fetterman said in a statement.
“I won’t vote for the chaos of shuttering our government,” he said. “My vote was for our country over my party.”
The Business Roundtable, a group of leading U.S. company chief executive officers, called for quick measures to reopen the government.
“Funding the government is an essential responsibility of Congress,” said Business Roundtable CEO Joshua Bolten in a statement.
“A government shutdown would create uncertainty, disrupt critical services and harm American businesses, workers and families,” Bolten said. “Business Roundtable urges Congress to act promptly to avoid a government shutdown.”
Lawmakers took to the airwaves to blame each other for the looming shutdown, which the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated would result in the furlough of about 750,000 federal employees.
“The total daily cost of their compensation would be roughly $400 million,” the CBO said in a letter to Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, who had requested office calculate the financial fallout to federal workers if furloughs happen.
“The number of furloughed employees could vary by the day because some agencies might furlough more employees the longer a shutdown persists and others might recall some initially furloughed employees,” the letter said.
House Speaker Mike Johnson, during an interview on CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” said Democrats “need to come to their senses here, and do the right thing.”
Johnson, R-La., said that top Democrats — Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, both of New York — have “painted themselves into a corner” by making policy demands in exchange for passing a funding bill that would keep the government open for at least seven weeks.
Those demands, Johnson said, are irrelevant to the urgent need to pass that continuing resolution.
Democrats are insisting that any continuing resolution to keep the government funded in the near term include an extension of enhanced Affordable Care Act tax credits.
Those credits, which lower the cost of health insurance premiums paid by millions of Americans who buy coverage on ACA exchanges, are due to expire at the end of 2025.
Johnson accused Democrats of trying to protect Schumer’s “backside” by pressing that and other demands.
He said Schumer and other Democratic leaders were concerned that Schumer would become vulnerable to challenges to his position and House seat by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., a leader of the party’s progressive wing, if they did not hold firm against Republican demands for a “clean” continuing resolution without any provisions for health-care protections.
Johnson said a debate about how to reform the ACA — popularly known as Obamacare — could happen later.
And he accused Democrats of wanting to give undocumented immigrants federal health benefits.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., in a separate interview with “Squawk Box,” called the question of ACA tax credit extension “a made-up problem by the Democrats,” who are trying to satisfy a voter base that is opposed to President Donald Trump.
“This is Donald Trump,” Thune said. “Nothing more, nothing less.”
Jeffries, in his own interview on “Squawk Box,” said of Republicans, “If the government shuts down, it’s their decision to do it.”
“We are ready and willing and able to find a bipartisan way forward,” Jeffries said.
But he said Democrats are unwilling to support a bill that does not include health-care protections.
“We will not support a partisan Republican spending bill that continues to gut the health care of the American people,” Jeffries said.
He said that on Wednesday, “notices are going to start going out” to tens of millions of Americans about higher insurance premiums that they will pay if the ACA subsidies are not extended.
“We are fighting to deal with the health care of the American people,” Jeffries said.
Asked by CNBC’s Becky Quick, “Is it true you want to restore American taxpayer benefits to illegal immigrants?” Jeffries replied, “Of course not.”
“And thank you for asking that question, because this is also an outright lie,” Jeffries said.
“Federal law prohibits the use of taxpayer dollars to provide medical coverage to undocumented individuals,” he said. “That’s the law, and there is nothing in anything that we have proposed that is trying to change that law.”
Not surprising, considering that these are the heinous ways Israel spreads propaganda and perpetrates gaslighting:Will be seeing more of this on TikTok