Minnesota health insurers warn of ‘dire’ premium spikes, lost coverage in 2026
Chief executives at Minnesota’s four largest nonprofit health insurers are warning premiums could spike and thousands of residents could lose coverage in 2026 if the state’s congressional delegation doesn’t help save enhanced federal tax credits that subsidize coverage bought through the public MNsure exchange.
The extra federal subsidies are set to expire at the end of next year, which will coincide with the end of state funding for a different program that also controls costs for people shopping in the individual market through a mechanism called reinsurance.
As a result, premiums could jump 55% and about 93,000 Minnesotans could lose coverage in 2026, according to a study commissioned by the health insurers that was published earlier this year. The impact would come solely in the individual market, where roughly 3% of state residents buy coverage from private health plans governed by the Affordable Care Act.
“Losing enhanced tax credits and the state reinsurance program at the same time would have a compounding and dire effect on the cost of health insurance in the state and the number of Minnesotans who would lose health insurance coverage,” the CEOs of
The extra tax credit dollars first became available through federal stimulus legislation passed in 2021. The subsidies were then extended through the end of next year by the federal Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, which also is adding to medication benefits in Medicare health plans and letting the government negotiate prices on a limited number of drugs.
Meanwhile, in 2018 Minnesota implemented its reinsurance program, which has been credited with reducing premiums by about 15% to 20% per year in the individual market.
Both programs are focused on a slice of the health insurance market that’s received a tremendous amount of attention from politicians and policymakers over the past decade. This is the “Obamacare” market, including MNsure in
About 186,000 people in
For eligible households, the average monthly premium after tax credits is expected to increase by about
ACA tax credits are awarded based on a complicated formula that compares an individual’s income with the monthly cost for the “benchmark” health plan being sold in their county. The law stipulates that people pay no more than a fixed percentage of their annual earnings on the premium for the benchmark health plan.
Since 2021, the federal enhancements reduced the prices consumers pay at different income levels. They also expanded access by eliminating an income-based eligibility cap.
The administration of President-elect
“President Trump delivered on his promise to protect
There’s speculation, however, that Trump and Congressional Republicans won’t extend the extra ACA subsidies, but instead use the savings to help fund tax cuts.
“I think the progressive enhancements that occurred during the Biden years will be allowed to expire,” said
“I believe those numbers they laid out there,” Klobuchar said of the letter from the insurance company CEOs. Of
Reinsurance has worked to control consumer costs by giving health insurers taxpayer-funded reimbursement for high-cost medical claims incurred by people in the individual market. Back in 2017, the idea was championed by state
The program operates through an agreement with the federal government that provides partial funding, and the current authorization runs through the end of 2027. But the state government has provided funds for the program only through the end of next year.
Sen.
“It’s accomplished what needed to be accomplished and has bipartisan support,” Dahms said. “The program is in place, the program is working and everybody knows how to deal with it.”
Jacobs, however, said he had doubts that
Insurers, however, stress the benefits for consumers.
Some DFLers, meanwhile, had been hoping to advance a “public option” in the individual market, where consumers shopping via MNsure would have the chance to buy into the state’s MinnesotaCare program. The coverage is available to state residents who make too much for the state-federal Medicaid program, such as single adults with incomes between roughly
“It’s a disaster,” Paul said.
But even with control of both state legislative chambers, the DFL last session couldn’t advance legislation to fund the public option. The state had been pursuing a model that would have tapped federal funding, but this now would require approval from the
Long, who sponsored public-option legislation in the House, said supporters are considering next steps following the election results. Like Long, Sen.
Jacobs offered a more blunt assessment, given Trump’s victory over Democrat
“It has no chance,” he said of the public option. “If the DFL had maintained its majority in the [state] House, and Harris had been elected, then I think you’d say: OK, well, this is still in active consideration. But we’re in an entirely new political environment. ... It’s hard to see another opening for progressive health reform for some time.”
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