Pennsylvanians are scrambling to afford Affordable Care Act health insurance price hikes after no subsidy deal in Congress
From Philly and the Pa. suburbs to
For the past year,
The 29-year-old lives in
"I got blood tests, I got every gynecological, I mean, I did things I probably didn't really even need," she said. "I got dental exams and my eye exams. I mean, it's been amazing in that way."
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But people like McCausland are now scrambling to figure out how they will afford health insurance next year as premium prices rise and COVID-era boosted tax credits that help offset those costs are set to expire at the end of December.
The situation has become even bleaker, some Pennie customers say, after
"Passionate and pissed.
Premiums 'double' for Pennsylvanians next year
Nearly 500,000 Pennsylvanians who either don't get health benefits through an employer or who run their own businesses get insurance through Pennie. Annual open enrollment began
Most customers have qualified for premium tax credits after the subsidies were expanded in 2021. Now, those additional credits will expire unless
About 3 in 4 people will still qualify for some amount of financial assistance, said Devon Trolley, executive director at Pennie. But the amounts will generally be smaller.
Others will pay double, on average, to keep their health insurance in 2026, she said.
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Small business owner
"It's pretty intense and
The sticker shock is causing some people to drop insurance altogether.
"Typically, we see a lot more new enrollments than we do people dropping coverage. This year, it's in reverse," Trolley said. "We see a lot more people dropping coverage than signing up for the first time. About a 2-to-1 ratio. So, we're seeing about twice as many people drop than sign up."
Cutting costs to keep coverage
With an annual income of
To afford it, McCausland said she'd need to get a second job or make cuts elsewhere.
"This is the most amount of money I've made in a very long time, steadily," she said, "and I still save no money. And I don't even live that crazily. I don't even have Wi-Fi. I cut that out when I got the first notice that 'Your health insurance might go up.'"
McCausland also started selling some furniture to make extra cash and is considering having a roommate.
"I do need to figure something out," she said. "It's just that the
McCausland has gone uninsured before. After studying film and media and graduating from college, she did some work with a documentary team and took on multiple part-time jobs in food service and retail. None of those gigs came with health benefits.
It was a risk then, she said. But as she gets older with more health care needs, it feels even riskier.
"I did just walk around like, 'Well that's what poor artists do, it's how it's always been,'" she said. "The older I get, the less being uninsured is like, 'Whatever man, I'll make it work' or 'I have credit cards.' You just start to think about five years down the line."
She's also considering switching to a cheaper catastrophic health plan, which has high deductibles, but covers preventative health services and can be used for costly and serious illnesses and injuries.
An individual might have to spend over
"I just feel like the only hope is that more people are pissed and passionate," she said.
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