Get all-access to Lincoln Square content, and to help us amplify the content that you’re reading to Americans who aren’t paying attention, please consider upgrading your subscription today with this limited-time offer: The Trump Administration's Plan to Make Your Health Care Much, Much Worse"We'd cut them in half with a machine gun and then give them a Band-Aid."
For months, I've been shouting from the rooftops about the imminent expiration of the improved federal tax credits for ACA enrollees, repeatedly pointing out that those already paying full price are gonna get hit with average premium hikes of over 23% while most of the 92% of exchange enrollees who currently receive at least some federal assistance will see their net premiums skyrocket by up to 100%, 200% or even 300% or more. Having helped cause this crisis in the first place both by refusing to push Congressional Republicans to extend the enhanced subsidies as well as by changing the Premium Adjustment Percentage Index formula (PAPI) to make the remaining subsidies even less generous, the Trump Regime has come up with what I'm sure they think of as a brilliant "solution" to the problem. Via the HHS Department website this week:
Let's stop a moment and look at what Catastrophic Plans actually are. There are five main categories of ACA-compliant health insurance policies for the individual market: The four "Metal Tiers" of Bronze, Silver, Gold, Platinum which have to cover an average of roughly 60%, 70%, 80% or 90% of the aggregate enrollees medical claims...plus a fifth category at the low end (below Bronze) called Catastrophic plans. I'll let my colleague Louise Norris explain:
Until now there've been very few Catastrophic Plan enrollees...just 54,000 or so this year out of over 24 million nationally, for several reasons:
OK, back to this week's HHS announcement: What's changing going forward?
If I'm understanding this correctly, they're vastly expanding the "hardship exemption" to enrollees of any age who earn more than 250% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL), since that's the income threshold limit for Cost Sharing Reduction (CSR) eligibility. Beginning November 1, 2025, consumers can apply for the hardship exemption in two ways:
Side note: Not only do you have to submit it by mail, the PDF won't even open unless you use Adobe Reader, which takes me back to the "Your Browser Doesn't Support Flash" days of the internet ...
Side note: This link doesn't actually take you to today's specific changes but to a generic page of hundreds of CMS regulations dating back to 2011. I had to hunt around to find the specific file in question. A fact sheet on HHS’ hardship exemption guidance for catastrophic coverage is available here. The phrasing in the fact sheet is rather telling:
In all seriousness, though, making it easier for more people to qualify for catastrophic plans isn't in and of itself necessarily a terrible idea ... but it reminds me of a line from Apocalypse Now:
It's also worth noting that unless they were given a heads up about this announcement prior to it going public (or possibly even if they were), insurance carrier actuaries across the nation are likely having heart attacks (or at least ulcers), since, as a colleague of mine far more knowledgable about Risk Adjustment than I am put it:
Remember, Catastrophic plans are kept in a separate risk pool from metal level plans. Since catastrophic enrollees tend to be young (under 30) and affluent (earn too much for tax credits), that means they're generally much healthier than the other 99%+ of the ACA individual market...which is what allows the premiums for these plans to be so low. Except that by dramatically loosening the requirements for enrollment starting just two months from now (and going into effect in less than four months), Trump and RFK Jr. just made it very likely that the Catastrophic risk pool is about to become considerably sicker ... while ironically also ensuring that the metal level risk pool is also made sicker at the same time (basically, those likely to make the move from Metal to Catastrophic are healthier than the former but sicker than the latter). As I just posted, at least 15 states have already locked in their final, approved 2026 rate filings for their ACA individual market carriers. This announcement has the potential to completely mess up every assumption those carriers made about the 2026 market ... and not in a positive way. Charles Gaba is a health care analyst who tracks policy and politics at ACASignups.net. He also runs Blue26.org, which makes it easy to donate to Democratic candidates at the federal, statewide and local levels. Read the original article here. You’re currently a free subscriber to Lincoln Square Media. For full access to our content, our Lincoln Loyal community, and to help us amplify the facts about the assault on our rights and freedoms, please consider upgrading your subscription today with this limited-time offer: |