Insurance subsidies likely to expire, spiking costs for thousands in Nevada
Thousands of middle-income
Even with the lengthy back-and-forth over whether to extend the subsidies,
While the premium increases will hit everyone who buys health insurance, middle-income residents who benefited from the pandemic-era subsidy would see their costs more than double due to increased premiums and a loss of the subsidy, according to the nonpartisan health policy organization KFF.
There are 112,000 insurance marketplace participants in
A KFF survey of 2025 marketplace participants released Thursday said one in three surveyed nationally said they were very likely to shop for a lower-premium plan, and one in four said they would be very likely to go uninsured.
Party-line debate continues
Both
Sen.
“This way our colleagues on the other side, who should be worried about this for their constituents, they can’t say, ‘Well, the
Rosen said that larger reform — such as fraud and other system abuses often elevated by
Meanwhile in the
Rep.
“Is it way past high time to do something? Yes,” Amodei said in a Thursday interview. “Is it going to be one big, beautiful fix in two weeks? No, but there’s all sorts of opportunity to take some significant steps.”
What subsidies are we talking about, anyway?
The debate in
Changing federal policy and rising premiums — the fixed amount users pay for their insurance — have made affordability more of a challenge, threatening those gains.
“A consumer’s actual monthly premium depends on several individual factors, including household size, coverage needs, plan selection, and eligibility for federal subsidies available under the Affordable Care Act,” insurance division spokesperson
Other tax credits and subsidies remain for those under that household income benchmark. For instance, a family of four making up to
Navigating open enrollment
Alejandre said navigators have been coaching insurance shoppers through “the worst-case scenario” of increased premiums and the subsidy loss. She said they acknowledge the higher premiums do not include any expiring tax credits, but that any extensions or new subsidies passed in the future would count as a “qualifying life event” that would allow them to change their insurance plan.
Rosen said the navigators and consumers she has spoken to are “trying to find creative ways” to keep premium costs down while maintaining coverage. She said one parent in a family of four was advised to use their employee-sponsored plan, and then the other three family members go through the Marketplace to make their overall costs more affordable.
“It’s the ones that think, ‘Oh, the premium is too high right now, I’ll wait to see if something happens,’” Alejandre said. “If you go without health insurance and you pass the enrollment period, even if they were to change the subsidies, at this moment because you already had no insurance, you don’t have the (qualifying life event). Those are the people I’m afraid that we’ll lose — that think nothing will happen, and then they’ll be stuck until the next year.”
Contact
Enrollment on Nevada Health Link runs until
Call the Nevada Health Link at 1-800-547-2927 or visit nevadahealthlink.com to find local and virtual enrollment assistance. The call center is open
©2025 Las Vegas Review-Journal. Visit reviewjournal.com.. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
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