RURAL MISSOURIANS MORE LIKELY TO LACK HEALTH INSURANCE THAN URBAN RESIDENTS
The following information was released by the
Missourians living in rural communities are more likely to lack health insurance than those in urban areas, according to a new policy brief from researchers at
Yet that statewide figure masks a sharper divide between rural and urban communities. In rural
The resulting 3-percentage-point rural-urban gap is far wider than the national difference of about 0.6 percentage points, indicating that
Researchers say the gap reflects structural differences in the types of jobs available in rural areas. Residents are more likely to work for smaller employers or in sectors such as agriculture, retail and service industries where coverage is less common. Rural workers also are more likely to work part time and earn lower incomes, making private coverage harder to obtain. Health insurance premiums tend to be higher in rural areas, and disability rates are higher, creating additional barriers to consistent coverage.
"These jobs are less likely to offer health insurance," said
"That difference in employer-sponsored coverage is one of the key factors behind the rural-urban gap we see in
Public programs fill rural gaps
Uninsured rates are lowest among adults ages 65 and older because most people in that group qualify for Medicare. Residents under age 65 in rural
In 2024, 60.6% of rural residents had private insurance, roughly 10 percentage points lower than the 70.8% rate in urban areas. Employer-sponsored coverage accounted for much of the difference: 46.1% of rural Missourians had job-based coverage, compared with 59% of urban residents.
Urban Missourians are also more likely to have private coverage than urban residents nationally, reflecting a higher concentration of jobs that offer employer-sponsored insurance, including positions in health care, finance, legal services and education.
With fewer rural workers covered through employers, public programs fill a larger share of the gap. In 2024, 21.9% of rural residents were covered by Medicaid, compared with 16% of urban residents. Overall, 43.2% of rural Missourians were covered by public programs such as Medicare, Medicaid and veterans benefits, compared with 33.7% of urban residents.
"Employer-sponsored insurance is still the main pathway to coverage for most Americans," McBride said. "When fewer rural residents have access to those jobs, public programs like Medicaid become an even more important source of coverage."
Medicaid unwinding shifts rural coverage
Medicaid coverage declined in rural
The share of rural residents covered by Medicaid fell by 1.9 percentage points, contributing to a broader 1-percentage-point drop in public program coverage overall. Coverage changes in urban areas were minimal over the same time period.
Some residents shifted to other forms of coverage, including employer-sponsored insurance, but the changes still led to a small increase in the uninsured rate. In rural
Children experienced the largest coverage declines. Public insurance coverage for children in rural
Researchers said it will be important to monitor how insurance coverage changes in the coming years, particularly as Medicaid enrollment continues to adjust following the end of pandemic-era eligibility protections.
The policy brief, written by
The research was supported by the



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