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. 

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The House Education and Workforce Committee May 21 unanimously passed the Transparency in Billing Act (H.R. 8684). The bill would require off-campus hospital…
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A KFF analysis published May 19 examined early indicators of how the expiration of the enhanced premium tax credits has impacted effectuated enrollment levels…
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The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services May 15 released its 2027 final standards for the health insurance marketplaces, including the issuers and…
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A blog by Noah Isserman, AHA director of health insurance and coverage policy, explains why Anthem’s nonparticipating provider policy limits patients’ …
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Patients are best served when insurers act as transparent and reasonable partners, not when they invoke patient protection laws to justify payment strategies…
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The AHA shared the following statement with the media in response to a report released May 7 by Families USA.   “This report is long on rhetoric and…