Analysis: More Than Half of Uninsured People Eligible for Marketplace Insurance Could Pay Less for Health Plan Than Individual Mandate Penalty
A new
Within that 5.8 million, about 4.5 million (42% of the total) could obtain a bronze-level plan at no cost in 2018, after taking income-related premium tax credits into account, the analysis finds.
Most people without insurance who are eligible to buy marketplace coverage qualify for subsidies in the form of tax credits to help pay premiums for marketplace plans (8.3 million out of 10.7 million). Among those eligible for premium subsidies, the analysis finds that 70 percent could pay less in premiums than what they'd owe as a tax penalty for lacking coverage, with 54 percent able to purchase a bronze plan at no cost and 16 percent contributing less to their health insurance premium than the tax penalty they owe.
Among the 2.4 million uninsured, marketplace-eligible people who do not qualify for a premium subsidy, 2 percent would be able to pay less for marketplace insurance than they'd owe for their 2018 penalty, the analysis finds.
The Affordable Care Act's individual mandate requires that most people have health coverage or be subject to a tax penalty unless they qualify for certain exemptions. The individual mandate is still in effect, though
Consumers can compare their estimated 2018 individual mandate penalty with the cost of marketplace insurance in their area with KFF's new Individual Mandate Penalty Calculator.
The deadline for ACA open enrollment in most states is
This document was posted showing the date:
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