Missouri health premiums to rise as much as 30% for 2026 amid uncertainty over subsidies
Most individual health insurance plans sold in
The state
Premiums will increase for the other eight carriers offering plans in all or part of the state.
The costs for some Missourians will increase 70% or more if
The federal government has been shut down since
Premiums will increase for the other eight carriers offering plans in all or part of the state.
There are at least two companies offering health plans in every county, with a handful in the
"First and foremost, Missourians need to know our state continues to have a competitive market, which means they will continue to have meaningful choices when it comes to their health coverage,"
In addition to reporting the average change, the department also provided the largest change in cost for any single plan offered by the nine carriers. Those increases ranged from 6.4% for an
Open enrollment for the individual health plans begins Saturday. Consumers who purchase coverage by
Missourians will start considering their choices without knowing whether enhanced subsidies enacted during the COVID-19 pandemic emergency will be extended.
The original Affordable Care Act subsidies that took effect in 2014 tied the actual cost to consumers to a percentage of their income for people earning less than four times the federal poverty level. Consumers with poverty level income —
The enhanced tax credits put a cap on out-of-pocket premium costs for all consumers, with the highest earners paying 8.5% of their income and those with incomes below 150% of poverty level paying no premiums for their insurance.
"There is still a tremendous amount of uncertainty about whether
Only two of the eight companies offering individual plans in
The average monthly premium is about
An individual with an income of
Cost increase impacts
A panel of community members and experts hosted by the
"When folks can't afford to buy insurance, it doesn't mean they won't get sick," Weisgrau said. When they do enter the health system, providers pick up the cost, "and again, that eventually gets passed on to everybody else."
As Missourians confront higher insurance premiums, 650,000 low-income residents of the state could also be forced to cope with a loss of federal food benefits, with the
Panelists on Thursday said instability across federal safety net programs means communities will have to fill in the gaps through mutual aid.
"I think the neighborhood, the village, needs to be recreated," said
"There's someone probably on your block that has extra," Robinson said. "Maybe
Panelists said policy conversations don't address the difficulty of accessing safety net programs even when they are not being cut or suspended.
Her doctors vouched for her, but, Woods said, "it still wasn't enough."
"Who has the time to wait online or wait on a call for nearly three hours to talk to someone, to get it?" Woods asked.
"There are flaws in our insurance markets that put people in this situation," McBride said. "That's the truth of the matter, and you don't hear that from
This story originally appeared here.
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