Higher cost, worse coverage: Affordable Care Act enrollees say expiring subsidies will hit them hard
For a single mom in
Less than three weeks remain until the expiration of COVID-era enhanced tax credits that have helped millions of Americans pay their monthly fees for Affordable Care Act coverage for the past four years.
The
Here are a few of their stories.
From a gold plan to a bronze plan, a couple spends more on less
He and his wife, Kelley, 60, both retirees, cut their own firewood to reduce their electricity costs in their home in
But to the extent that they have always been frugal, they will be forced to be even more so now, Bruns said. That is because their coverage under the health law enacted under former President
This year, the Brunses were paying
But in 2026, that same plan is rising to an unattainable
“We have to pray that we don’t have to have surgery or don’t have to have some medical procedure done that we’re not aware of,” she said. “It would be very devastating.”
Family facing higher costs prepares to go without insurance
Dave Roof’s family of four has been on ACA insurance since the program started in 2014. Back then, the accessibility of insurance on the marketplace helped him feel comfortable taking the leap to start a small music production and performance company in his hometown of
The coverage has worked for them so far, even when emergencies come up, such as an ATV accident their 21-year-old daughter had last year.
But now, with the expiration of subsidies that kept their premiums down, the 53-year-old Roof said their
With their joint income of about
Roof said his family is already living cheaply and has not taken a vacation together since 2021. As it is, they do not save money or add it to their retirement accounts. So even though forgoing insurance is stressful, it is what they must do.
“The fear and anxiety that it’s going to put on my wife and I is really hard to measure,” Roof said. “But we can’t pay for what we can’t pay for.”
Single mom strains her January budget in hopes Congress acts soon
If you ask
The 37-year-old social worker in
Next year, that is going to be even tougher.
The monthly fee on her plan is going up from
If
The strain of one month alone is enough to have an impact.
“I’m going to have to reprioritize the next couple of months to rebalance that budget,” Provost said. “Christmas will be much smaller.”



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