Next up: Premiums, Advance Premium Tax Credits (APTC) and Cost Sharing Reduction (CSR) assistance.
Nationally, the average unsubsidized premiums for 2025 exchange-based Open Enrollment Period enrollees is $619/month, up $14 or just 2.3% from $605 last year.
This is a noteworthy because 2025 ACA exchange premiums "should" have increase by more like 6-7% on average. This discrepancy is mostly because that 6-7% assumed that 100% of those enrolled in each plan in 2024 renewed the exact same policy (without any attrition or additional enrollment), which of course is never the case...even if total QHP selections were identical year over year, not all of the enrollees would be the same people, millions of them would switch to different policies and so on.
New Hampshire has the lowest average ACA premiums for the second year in a row at $469/month, while West Virginia once again has by far the highest at a whopping $1,170/month...up $51 from last year. Again, these are the unsubsidized average prices.
Now it's time to move on to the actual demographic breakout of 2025 Open Enrollment Period (OEP) Qualified Health Plan (QHP) enrollment.
First up: Breaking out new enrollees vs. existing enrollees who either actively re-enroll in an exchange plan for another year or who passively allow themselves to be automatically renewed into their current plan (or to be "mapped" to a similar plan if the current one is no longer available).
Nationally, 17% of all exchange QHP enrollees were new this year. The other 83% are current enrollees who signed up for another year, either actively (39%) or passively (45%).
New York had the lowest percent of new enrollees (11%), while Minnesota had the highest at 28%.
As I've noted before, there's still a massive divide between federal and state-based exchanges when it comes to active renewals: Over 45% of federal exchange states actively renewed (which is good!)...but only 22% of state-based exchange enrollees did. Active renewals range from just 8% in Rhode Island & DC to 58% in Utah.
The most recent press release from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) which included actual enrollment data about the 2025 ACA Open Enrollment Period (OEP) came out back on January 17, 2025 as one of the final communications from the outgoing Biden/Harris Administration.
This press release didn't include any accompanying Public Use Files (PUFs) since it only included semi-final enrollment data for the 2025 period.
Final top-line numbers were available for the 31 states hosted via the Federally Facilitated Marketplace (FFM), HealthCare.Gov...but the enrollment data was still preliminary for the 20 State-Based Marketplaces (SBEs), several of which hadn't even wrapped up Open Enrollment yet (including CA, DC, MA, NJ, NY, RI & VA). A few states final enrollment deadlines wouldn't hit until January 31st, over a week into the new Musk/Trump Regime.
With all the understandable focus on Congressional Republicans efforts to effectively end Medicaid coverage for nearly 21 million Americans enrolled via ACA expansion, there's been much less attention paid to the other looming threat to healthcare coverage: The expiration of the upgraded financial subsidies for ~24.2 million ACA exchange enrollees, which are currently scheduled to end this New Year's Eve.
As I've explained numerous times before, the ACA's original premium subsidy formula was always far too stingy to make individual market policies affordable for many people...and worse yet, the subsidies cut off entirely for households making more than 4 times the Federal Poverty Level (FPL).
With the pending dire threat to several of these programs (primarily Medicaid & the ACA) from the House Republican Budget Proposal which recently passed, I'm going a step further and am generating pie charts which visualize just how much of every Congressional District's total population is at risk of losing healthcare coverage.
USE THE DROP-DOWN MENU ABOVE TO FIND YOUR STATE & DISTRICT.
With the pending dire threat to several of these programs (primarily Medicaid & the ACA) from the House Republican Budget Proposal which recently passed, I'm going a step further and am generating pie charts which visualize just how much of every Congressional District's total population is at risk of losing healthcare coverage.
USE THE DROP-DOWN MENU ABOVE TO FIND YOUR STATE & DISTRICT.
With the pending dire threat to several of these programs (primarily Medicaid & the ACA) from the House Republican Budget Proposal which recently passed, I'm going a step further and am generating pie charts which visualize just how much of every Congressional District's total population is at risk of losing healthcare coverage.
USE THE DROP-DOWN MENU ABOVE TO FIND YOUR STATE & DISTRICT.
With the pending dire threat to several of these programs (primarily Medicaid & the ACA) from the House Republican Budget Proposal which recently passed, I'm going a step further and am generating pie charts which visualize just how much of every Congressional District's total population is at risk of losing healthcare coverage.
USE THE DROP-DOWN MENU ABOVE TO FIND YOUR STATE & DISTRICT.
With the pending dire threat to several of these programs (primarily Medicaid & the ACA) from the House Republican Budget Proposal which recently passed, I'm going a step further and am generating pie charts which visualize just how much of every Congressional District's total population is at risk of losing healthcare coverage.
USE THE DROP-DOWN MENU ABOVE TO FIND YOUR STATE & DISTRICT.
With the pending dire threat to several of these programs (primarily Medicaid & the ACA) from the House Republican Budget Proposal which recently passed, I'm going a step further and am generating pie charts which visualize just how much of every Congressional District's total population is at risk of losing healthcare coverage.
USE THE DROP-DOWN MENU ABOVE TO FIND YOUR STATE & DISTRICT.