Covered California insurance rates to increase in 2023
Premiums for health insurance plans sold through the state marketplace will increase an average of 6% next year, Covered California officials announced Tuesday.
This rate hike is the largest
Rate changes vary by region — from an 11.7 percent increase in
When premiums increase, an individual's financial aid usually does, too. Aid is based on household income, so subsidies may offset some of the increase. But people who don't qualify for subsidies will bear the full cost of the rate hike.
"Premiums are a capturing of what health care costs are, how they vary across geographies and communities, how health care costs are growing over time, which we know in this country are already too high and rising," said
She noted that
The rate increase, Altman said, is largely attributed to people resuming doctor visits and procedures that they postponed during peaks of the COVID-19 pandemic. There is also the cost of general inflation.
About 1% of the increase, however, is attributed to the potential loss of enhanced subsidies from the federal government, which are set to expire at the end of this year. Without the additional aid, people will pay more for their premiums, likely pushing young, healthy people to drop their coverage. And when healthy people leave the marketplace, premiums go up for everyone.
The federal government's American Rescue Plan last year provided
Currently 1.7 million Californians buy their coverage through the state marketplace. Covered
"(The rate increase) for the subsidized population is almost divorced from what they pay out of pocket. What's more important is what happens with the (American Rescue Plan) subsidies," said
Altman said the sooner
"There have been references both ways — 'Will it be permanent? Will it be temporary? Will it stay in the current form? ... Or will there be some adjustments to it?' — and we really don't know," Altman said about the conversations happening in
Covered



The Fed could get lucky or things might go wrong. A guide to where the economy might go from here
Dueling lawsuits filed over the Tenneva hotel collapse in downtown Bristol
Advisor News
- Trump targets ‘retirement gap’ with new executive order
- Younger investors are engaged and advisors must adapt
- Plugging the hidden budget leaks of retirement
- Hagens Berman: Retired First Responders Sue Washington State over Rights to $3.3B Pension Funds Threatened by Lawmakers
- Financially support your adult children without risking your future
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- A new opportunity for advisors: Younger indexed annuity buyers
- Most employers support embedding guaranteed lifetime income options into DC Plans
- InspereX Partners with AuguStar Retirement for Strategic Expansion into Annuity Market
- FACC and DOL enter stipulation to dismiss 2020 guidance lawsuit
- Zinnia’s Zahara policy admin system adds FIA chassis to product library
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- Nashville Attorney, Cody Allison, Invited to Present on Strafford National Panel as ERISA Disability Benefits Expert
- Health insurance quagmire: Clark County residents face difficult choices after Regence splits with Legacy Health
- CareSource reverses course on recouping overpayments from some behavioral health providers
- UHC claims ECU Health refused to continue negotiations
- Rob Sand unveils water quality, public health plan
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- Ann Heiss
- Convertible market dynamics and the portfolio implications for insurers
- Finalists announced for Lincoln's 2026 Best Places to Work
- Investors Heritage Promotes Anna Reynolds to Senior Vice President and General Counsel
- AM Best Affirms Credit Ratings of Old Republic International Corporation’s Subsidiaries
More Life Insurance News