An analysis published Sept. 30 by KFF found that Health Insurance Marketplace enrollees who currently benefit from the enhanced premium tax credits would pay more than double their current premium payments if the EPTCs expire at the end of this year. KFF estimated that if Congress does not extend the tax credits, enrollees would see a 114% increase in premium payments, from an average of $888 in 2025 to $1,904 in 2026. If Congress does extend the tax credits, KFF estimated enrollees would save $1,016 in premium payments on average in 2026. KFF said the projected increases are higher than previous estimates due to administration changes to tax credit calculations in the Marketplace Integrity and Affordability final rule and rising 2026 premiums. 

Related News Articles

Perspective
Public
Every year tens of millions of Americans dig deep into their pocketbooks to pay for health insurance plans that will cover both preventive and necessary care…
Headline
The White House released a health care plan Jan. 15 addressing drug prices, health insurance premiums and price transparency efforts. The plan includes…
Headline
The House Jan. 8 passed legislation granting a three-year extension of the enhanced premium tax credits, which the federal government offers to help some…
Headline
The House Dec. 17 passed the Lower Health Care Premiums for All Americans Act (H.R. 6703), legislation to expand association health plans, increase…
Headline
The AHA Dec. 17 urged Elevance Health, which is the parent company of the Anthem brand of health plans, to rescind Anthem’s nonparticipating provider…
Headline
The American Medical Association Dec. 16 released its latest annual report on health insurance competition, finding that 97% of commercial markets were highly…