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Some Can Get Marketplace Plans With No Premiums,Though With Higher
Deductibles and Cost-Sharing
Many low-income consumers who are eligible for
federal financial help under the Affordable Care Act can get a bronze-level
plan and pay nothing out-of-pocket in premiums in more than 2,000 counties
next year, depending on their annual income, according to a new analysis from KFF (the Kaiser Family
Foundation). Such plans come with higher deductibles and out-of-pocket
maximums, however.
The analysis finds that the ACA’s premium tax
credits would cover the full premium of the lowest-cost bronze marketplace
plan in 2,532 counties in 2019 for a 40-year-old with an annual income of
$20,000. Going up the income ladder, the figure is 2,014 counties for a
40-year-old making $25,000; 659 counties for a person the same age who makes
$30,000; 417 counties for someone making $35,000; and 120 counties for a
40-year-old making $40,000.
The analysis examines how ACA marketplace premiums
are changing in 2019. It features interactive maps with county-level data
illustrating changes in premiums for the lowest-cost bronze, silver and gold
plans in counties across the U.S.
Nationally, the
average unsubsidized premium for the lowest-cost bronze plan is decreasing by
0.3 percent in 2019. Unsubsidized premiums for the lowest-cost silver and
gold plans are falling by one percent and two percent, on average,
respectively. Costs often will be even lower for consumers who receive
premium tax credits, although these tax credits will be smaller than in 2018
for many consumers.
The availability of bronze plans for no or low
premiums is in large part the result of insurers increasing silver premiums
following the termination cost-sharing payments to insurers by the Trump
administration in late 2017. Insurers are still required to provide reduced
cost-sharing to low-income consumers in silver plans, and those eligible for
those reductions should shop around and consider their options carefully as
bronze plans come with high deductibles. For example, a single individual
making between 100-200% of the poverty level can qualify for a silver plan
with an out-of-pocket maximum of no more than $2,600, and the deductible
would likely be much lower than that. For a bronze plan, the out-of-pocket
maximum and deductible could be upwards to $7,900. Zero- or low-premium plans
may not be cheaper overall if the enrollee is sick or has high health
spending.
Also available is KFF’s Health Insurance Marketplace Calculator, which allows
users to enter their income, age, and family size and get estimates of
premiums and available subsidies for insurance purchased on the ACA
exchanges.
Filling
the need for trusted information on national health issues, the Kaiser Family Foundation is a nonprofit
organization based in San Francisco, California.
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To be a Medicare Agent's source of information on topics affecting the agent and their business, and most importantly, their clientele, is the intention of this site. Sourced from various means rooted in the health insurance industry - insurance carriers, governmental agencies, and industry news agencies, this is aimed as a resource of varying viewpoints to spark critical thought and discussion. We welcome your contributions.
Monday, November 26, 2018
Some Can Get Marketplace Plans With No Premiums,Though With Higher Deductibles and Cost-Sharing
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