Expanded Affordable Care Act subsidies – now expired – drove major increases in marketplace health insurance enrollment across key groups: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
2026 FEB 26 (NewsRx) -- By a
Overall, the proportion of marketplace enrollment among eligible individuals-including those with ACA marketplace plans and those who were uninsured-increased by an estimated 6.7 percentage points, a 27.5% increase, after the subsidies were implemented in
The study was published online
The Affordable Care Act, enacted in 2010, expanded health insurance access by offering private health insurance plans through marketplaces in all 50 states and the
The American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) of 2021 and Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) of 2022 enhanced ACA subsidies through the end of last year. Now expired, marketplace enrollment will likely drop absent renewal or alternative subsidies. Costs for current enrollees have already increased, according to media reports and policy forecasts.
“Lowering premium costs translated into higher enrollment, particularly for populations that have historically faced greater barriers to coverage,” says study author,
Jacobs calculated marketplace take-up-the percentage of eligible individuals who enrolled in marketplace coverage-across key groups before and after the subsidies were implemented in
Key take-up findings include:
The analysis also found that 7.8 million enrollees retained marketplace coverage over the 2021-2022 period compared with 5.5 million over the 2018-19 period.
“These are not incidental changes,” Jacobs says. “Before the enhanced subsidies, there were large gaps in who took up marketplace coverage across racial and ethnic groups. After the subsidies, those gaps essentially disappeared. This tells us the enhanced subsidies changed who could realistically afford insurance.”
The ACA originally tied premium contributions to income. However, many middle-income households still faced high costs. Those earning just over four times the federal poverty level-$111,000 for a family of four in 2022, according to the
In addition to lowering premiums and expanding income eligibility, the ARPA/IRA reforms capped premiums at 8.5% of income and expanded access to zero-premium plans for many enrollees. Together these changes dramatically reduced the net cost of coverage. The paper notes that before the enhanced subsidies were implemented, a family of four earning twice the federal poverty level-$55,500 in 2022-paid about 6.5% of its income for a benchmark plan; under the enhanced subsidies, that share had fallen to about 2%.
The paper notes that factors beyond the enhanced subsidies may have also caused changes in enrollment.
“These results suggest that marketplace enrollment will decline among key groups without the enhanced subsidies,” Jacobs says. “That would widen longstanding disparities in insurance coverage for groups that have been historically priced out of coverage.”
“Take Up of Marketplace Insurance Increased After Enhanced Premium Subsidies” was authored by
Keywords for this news article include: Economics,
(Our reports deliver fact-based news of research and discoveries from around the world.)



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