Early Filings suggest 2026 ACA Premiums will Be Spiking

Looks like the revenge of the healthcare insurance corporate powers coming next year. If you think Herr Tr__p will be stepping in to control the rising healthcare insurance prices, I tend to think not. Indeed, Joe Biden will take the fall on this as Tr__mp does not have a solution other than to pass blame. It is a good report and we should start to make plans. Of course, many people who can not afford the increases will fall by the wayside.

Each spring and summer, health insurers submit rate filings to state regulators to justify premium changes for the coming calendar year. Several factors drive premium changes, and usually the cost of medical care (the prices of health services and the amount of care people are receiving) is the primary driver of premiums. However, heading into 2026, there are also policy changes that insurers expect will drive up their costs and, thus, increase premiums beyond what they would otherwise charge.

Some of the Factors Insurers cite as contributing to higher rates next year include:

Early indications are that individual market insurers will be increasing premiums in 2026 by more than they have since 2018, the last time policy uncertainty contributed to sharp premium increases. Across 105 ACA Marketplace insurers in 20 markets (19 states and the District of Columbia), premiums are increasing by a median of 15%. These filings are still preliminary and may change.

Driving the Premium Increases?

How are premiums changing in 2026?

“Across over 100 ACA Marketplace insurers, premiums are rising by a median of 15% in 2026.”

Finalized 2026 rate changes are expected to be published in late summer, and individuals will be able to see how their plan’s premium is changing shortly before open enrollment starts November 1.

Analysis reviews insurers from the District of Columbia, and the following 19 states: Connecticut, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, Texas, Vermont, and Washington.