Health Insurance Premium Spikes in Another Month as Enhancements Set to Expire

Abbreviated look at the impact of discontinuance of ACA subsidies in 2025 if Congress does not extend them. Keep in mind the discontinuance of these subsidies will help to balance out the tax breaks President Trump and Republicans have planned for upper income brackets. Much needed by Republicans and Tru_p..

A record 93 percent of marketplace enrollees, or over 20 million people, receive premium tax credits (PTCs). These tax credits provide upfront financial assistance to help people afford the individual or family health insurance plans offered in their state through the ACA marketplaces.

The PTC enhancements help these enrollees by:

  • lowering the caps on the share of income that people at all income levels pay in premiums;
  • allowing people with incomes between 100 and 150 percent of the poverty level (roughly $16,000 to $23,000 for an individual) to pay $0 in premiums for “benchmark” silver-level plans; and
  • extending eligibility for PTCs to people with incomes above 400 percent of poverty (roughly $63,000 for an individual) if their benchmark premiums would exceed 8.5 percent of household income.

Without the PTC enhancements, the amount the average enrollee receiving PTCs pays in premiums out of pocket will more than double, rising by more than $1,000 a year.

Enhancements Result in Record Coverage Among Black and Latino People and Families with Low Incomes

ACA premium enhancements resulted in a doubling of enrollment in the ACA healthcare insurance plans. The record-low uninsured premium rates expire at the end of 2025. Congress and the President need to extend them. Potential ACA enrollees are starting to see the impact as insurers have finalized their 2026 premium rates. Enrollees can see their 2026 premiums on marketplace websites. Open enrollment started November 1. Millions of Americans are facing extreme sticker shock.

If Congress waits until the end of the year to extend the enhancements. .5 million more people will be uninsured in 2026 compared to an earlier extension, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates.

The PTC enhancements have been especially critical for increasing enrollment among Black and Latino people. People of color made up 54 percent of marketplace enrollees in 2024, up from 46 percent in 2021. Between 2021 and 2024, marketplace enrollment among Black and Latino people grew by 186 percent and 158 percent, respectively, compared to 63 percent for other racial and ethnic groups. Marketplace enrollment rates of Asian American people have long been higher than other racial and ethnic groups, potentially due to robust and language-specific enrollment assistance among nonprofits and insurance brokers.

The PTC enhancements help to spur enrollment among people with lower incomes, those just above the minimum income level for PTC eligibility. Between 2021 and 2025, marketplace enrollment among people with incomes between 100 and 200 percent of the federal poverty level grew by 143 percent. More than twice the 59 percent growth rate among those with other incomes. Marketplace PTCs overwhelmingly benefit people with low to moderate incomes. More than 9 in 10 enrollees have incomes below 400 percent of the federal poverty level, or about $63,000 for an individual in 2025.  (Figure 2 Below)

The total dollar value of the PTC enhancements is also overwhelmingly concentrated among people with low and moderate incomes. According to the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT), if the enhancements are extended, the majority of the benefits would go to households making less than $80,000, and 94 percent would go to households with incomes under $200,000. No benefits would go to households with incomes above $500,000, according to JCT. (See Figure 3 Below.)

Finally, the PTC enhancements have been crucial for self-employed workers and small business owners who, prior to the ACA, had limited options for affordable coverage and who disproportionately benefit from the ACA marketplaces. Self-employed workers and small business owners generally make up about 1 in 4 marketplace enrollees, the Treasury Department estimates; based on this figure, CBPP estimates that more than 5 million self-employed workers and small business owners are enrolled in ACA marketplaces.

Many of these coverage gains will be lost if the PTC enhancements are allowed to lapse. Without the enhancements, CBO projects that 3.8 million more people will be uninsured in 2035. According to the Urban Institute, the number of Black people who are uninsured in 2026 will increase by 30 percent or 925,000, the largest rate of increase among racial/ethnic groups. Marketplace enrollment would decline in every state and congressional district, with the number of enrollees receiving PTCs declining by 38 percent overall.

Recent focus groups convened by CBPP show the real-world impacts that the PTC enhancements have had on people’s lives — and the repercussions if they expire. For Tracy, a 57-year-old customer service representative from Georgia whose plan’s out-of-pocket premiums are set to rise by $350 per month, the rise in marketplace premiums would “most likely mean sacrificing essentials: groceries, gas, basic necessities that I rely on.” Losing the PTC enhancements would force tough decisions, including for people with chronic conditions. M. M., a 45-year-old IT consultant from Illinois, might “hold back on some of those medications, eat less … take less insulin to treat my diabetes.”

Premiums Would Rise in Every State, for All Ages and Income Levels

If the PTC enhancements expire, premium costs will soon increase for people across states, ages, and income levels. Many have already experienced “rate shock” and more will continue to do so, as insurers in some states have sent renewal notices showing spiking 2026 premiums and premiums are already viewable on many marketplace websites. And the premium increases would come on top of premium and other out-of-pocket cost increases already set to begin in 2026 due to a recent Trump Administration rule.

People with lower incomes will tend to face the largest percentage increases in premium costs if the PTC enhancements expire. For example:

  • A single individual making $22,000 (140 percent of the poverty level) will no longer be eligible for a zero-premium silver plan with cost-sharing reductions and will see their monthly marketplace premium rise from $0 to $66 — an annual increase of $786.
  • A single individual making $32,000 (204 percent of the poverty level) will see their monthly marketplace premium rise from $58 to $180 — an annual increase of $1,468.
  • A couple making $44,000 (208 percent of the poverty level) will see their monthly marketplace premium rise from $85 to $253 — an annual increase of $2,013.
  • A family of four making $66,000 (205 percent of the poverty level) will see their monthly marketplace premium rise from $121 to $373 — an annual increase of about $3,025.

See below for a family of four at different income levels; Appendix Table 1 for premium increases among people of various family sizes, ages, and incomes; and Appendix Table 2 for premium increases at the state level. State-by-state graphics of sample households are also available.

As a result of the enhancements, people with incomes above 400 percent of the poverty level became newly eligible for PTCs if their marketplace premiums would exceed 8.5 percent of household income. This was especially beneficial for some people earning just over 400 percent of poverty, whose premiums would otherwise have taken up a large share of their income. If the PTC enhancements are not extended, people in this group will face dramatic premium increases:

  • A typical 60-year-old couple making $85,000 (401 percent of the poverty level) will see monthly marketplace premiums jump from $602 to $2,647 — an annual increase of roughly $24,500.
  • A typical family of four making $130,000 (404 percent of the poverty level) will see their monthly marketplace premium go from $921 to $1,992 — an annual increase of about $12,900.

Dramatic premium spikes are most likely to occur:

  • in states with high underlying marketplace premiums, such as West Virginia and Wyoming;
  • for older enrollees, who pay higher premiums under ACA rules than younger people; and
  • for people with incomes above 400 percent of the poverty level (roughly $63,000 for an individual), who would lose subsidies entirely if the enhancements expired.

For example, a 60-year-old West Virginia couple making $85,000 will see annual premiums for a benchmark silver plan skyrocket from $7,225 to over $54,000. (See below and Appendix Table 2).