Iowa Medicaid faces shortfall
State Auditor
State health officials and Republican leaders countered that rising patient needs and drug costs, not budgeting practices, are driving Medicaid's projected shortfalls.
Iowa Medicaid covers about 700,000 Iowans, including low-income children and families, people with disabilities and older adults. At the same time, policymakers are weighing potential federal funding cuts and new work requirements for recipients, adding to uncertainty about the future of the program.
Forecast: Deficits after short-term surpluses
A report released
For fiscal year 2025, forecasters expect another surplus of
But those reserves disappear after that. Declines in revenues from
The LSA memo warned that expenditures will continue to climb, with managed care capitation rates expected to increase by nearly
"There was a shortfall last year, and another is projected this year due primarily to the increase of chronic illness among those on taxpayer-funded health care," Mauro said in a statement to The Gazette. "Rest assured, we'll ensure that the most vulnerable Iowans continue to receive the care they need."
State health officials emphasized that
While
Ekstrand stressed that the state has a robust process to ensure managed care organizations balance financial sustainability with access to care, including routine monitoring of provider networks. She added that detailed information about Medicaid managed care contracts and capitation rates is publicly available on the Iowa HHS website.
Auditor blasts reliance on one-time funds
Sand said state leaders squandered pandemic aid by relying on it to paper over structural budget issues instead of making sustainable decisions. Federal support during the public health emergency totaled
"My predecessors and I have always cautioned that reliance on one-time funding, such as COVID-19 funds, for long-term budget needs is irresponsible," Sand said in a statement. "This, combined with intentional decline in revenue yet also increased spending on things like Education Savings Accounts (ESA), creates a fiscal time bomb. We now know, among the first in the path of the shock wave are
"
Newly elected
"The state has billions of dollars in reserves, and the budget will be able to withstand this increase in Medicaid costs," Klimesh said in statement to The Gazette. "We have been dedicated to responsible budgeting, measured increases in important areas, and historic tax relief and we will continue down that path."
As of July, the state was projected to have a
Reynolds and legislative
Because of those state income tax reductions, state revenue this year fell short of planned spending for the state budget year that began
In an op-ed published in The Gazette, Rep.
Meyer, a registered nurse, also defended new eligibility checks and work requirements included in the law as "common sense" safeguards, rejecting Sand's claim that the law will "kick people off their insurance."
"Based on Sand's previous comments, it's clear he lacks a fundamental understanding of how the Iowa Medicaid program works," Saitz said. "What he has shared about his plans if elected would mean major Medicaid cuts, resulting in the loss of services and rural hospitals."
H.R. 1, enacted in July as the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act," makes several changes that reduce Medicaid's Federal Medical Assistance Percentage and shift costs to states. The cuts are part of a broader federal budget reconciliation effort to decrease spending.
The federal law also imposes new eligibility and access restrictions for the state's Medicaid expansion population — the roughly 180,000 low-income, non-elderly adults with incomes at or below 133% of the federal poverty level in the
The law requires states to redetermine eligibility for Medicaid expansion enrollees every six months instead of annually. It also constrains the ways states can finance their share of Medicaid program costs.
Medicaid director: Difficult choices ahead
Speaking Thursday during The Gazette's Iowa Ideas conference, Iowa Medicaid Director
Ultimately, Grossman, who marked one month on the job this week, said there are only three major levers to close funding gaps: who Medicaid covers, what services are included and how much providers are paid. Decisions on those fronts, he stressed, rest with the governor and Legislature, and must be made carefully and transparently with input from policymakers and data from his agency.
Grossman said his agency is focused on providing data-driven analysis and recommendations to policymakers but acknowledged the stakes are high.
"Certainly, those are difficult conversations, but we have to face them head on," he said. "We've got to talk through those and do that together, again, as policymakers in particular for what the best course is for the state of



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