But High Deductibles Mean Consumers Might Be
Better Off Paying More in Premiums for a Silver Plan That Offers Cost-Sharing
Help
Published: Dec 11, 2018
Published: Dec 11, 2018
As the Affordable Care
Act’s open enrollment period nears an end in most areas this week, a new
analysis from KFF (the Kaiser Family Foundation) finds that 4.2
million currently uninsured people could get a bronze-level plan for 2019 and
pay nothing in premiums after factoring in tax credits.
That works out to 27
percent of the 15.9 million uninsured individuals who could shop in the ACA
marketplaces. In some states the share with access to a free bronze plan is far
higher, including: Delaware (49%), Nebraska (49%), Iowa (48%), Utah (46%),
Alaska (42%), Oklahoma (42%), Wisconsin (42%), Wyoming (41%), and Idaho (40%).
Looked at another way,
over half (52%) of the uninsured who could get a free bronze plan live in four
states: Texas (1,010,428 people), Florida (623,434), North Carolina (296,892)
and Georgia (254,296). The analysis has detailed data on the number and share
of the uninsured in each state who have access to a free bronze plan.
However, with bronze
deductibles averaging $6,258 a year, getting a $0 premium bronze plan isn’t
quite the no-brainer for the uninsured that it initially may seem. Many people
eligible for a free bronze plan would also be eligible for significant
cost-sharing assistance under the ACA by purchasing a silver plan instead.
Silver plans may provide more financial protection, including lower
deductibles, for those who get sick and use medical services.
The availability of $0
premium bronze plans arises from insurers’ practice of “silver loading”, the
increasing of silver plan premiums in response to the Trump administration’s
termination of cost-sharing payments to insurers in late 2017. That triggered
higher ACA premium tax credits for consumers (since they are calculated using
the second-lowest cost silver plan as a benchmark) and, in turn, made bronze
plans more likely to be available for $0 in premiums.
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. We also have a
searchable online archive of 300
frequently asked questions about the ACA and the health
insurance Marketplace.
https://www.kff.org/health-reform/press-release/4-2-million-uninsured-people-could-get-a-bronze-plan-in-the-aca-marketplace-with-0-premiums-after-tax-credits/?utm_campaign=KFF-2018-The-Latest&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=68283020&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-9f7-OTmnRifZgx4kQCl8YtglTQBeWs-_kAFHSqXyXUF1stAIijw8FXQKcAb54LWqXYOqDv-_SrJqSCONYpga_n6dkO3A&_hsmi=68283020
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