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Key Takeaways
- Thursday is the last day in most states to enroll in Affordable Care Act plans for 2026.
- Enrollees are facing monthly payments that are more than double on average because Congress allowed a pandemic-era health care subsidy to expire.
- Households across the country are facing financial hardship due to premium hikes, and more are choosing to go without insurance.
On the final day to sign up for an Affordable Care Act plan for the year, people seeking health insurance must choose between paying skyrocketing premiums or risking financial catastrophe if they get sick.
Because of rising insurance premiums and the expiration of a pandemic-era government subsidy, ACA plan premiums in 2026 have doubled from 2025, forcing difficult decisions for the 45 million people enrolled in ACA-related plans. Thursday is the deadline to enroll in a 2026 health insurance plan through Healthcare.gov and many state-run marketplaces, while nine states and Washington, D.C., have extended the deadline to the end of January.
Efforts by lawmakers to remedy the situation have fallen short. A Democrat-sponsored bill to extend the subsidies passed the House of Representatives but was blocked by Republicans in the Senate on Wednesday. Republican proposals to overhaul the ACA by replacing subsidies with health savings accounts have similarly failed to gain traction.
As a result, people enrolled in ACA plans will have to pay on average more than double the premiums they would if the subsidies were extended, according to an estimate by KFF, a nonpartisan health care policy organization. The increase is more than $1,000 per year on average for the same coverage they had in 2025.
An Impossible Choice
For some enrollees, the increases are much steeper.
Heather Kory runs a consulting agency in Bay City, Michigan, that helps people and businesses choose and enroll in Affordable Care Act plans. The increases are “financially devastating” for about 15% of her clients, she said.
“It’s enough to make their life not so comfortable,” she said.
One couple, aged 58 and 60, with an annual income of $32,000, had been paying $88 a month for a plan with a $900 annual deductible, she said.
What This Means for Your Finances
The expiration of the expanded health care subsidy means monthly health insurance payments will rise by hundreds, or in some cases thousands, of dollars, straining household budgets for millions of people.
The same plan for 2026 would cost them $1,935 a month, according to Kory. To stay insured, they downgraded to a plan with a $9,500 deductible and a $241 premium, more than double their previous premium. They had to sell some of their possessions to pay the higher bills, Kory said.
Lori Hunt, a Des Moines, Iowa, resident and breast cancer survivor, had her monthly premium increase to $90 from $8. Having recently lost her job at a nonprofit, Hunt said her budget is tight and she isn’t sure how long she will be able to continue paying premiums.
“Luckily, I don’t have a lot of prescriptions,” she said. “I don’t really have a chronic health condition like diabetes or something like that. So I’m very grateful for that. But you never know what can happen.”
Kory said many of her clients can’t afford the increased premiums for their silver-level plans and have been forced into bronze-level plans that have much higher deductibles.
“Let’s say your child is in football and breaks his thumb, and then you go to the hospital, and you have to have the X-rays, and the doctors come in, the nurses come in,” Kory said. “You’re at a $4,000 bill, and that’s just to set the finger again. So then you’re out of pocket a whole $4,000 with no chance of having any kind of coinsurance until you reach that deductible.”
And for many of her clients, meeting those multi-thousand-dollar deductibles is unrealistic.
If people do go to the hospital, they are banking on “trying to get financial assistance from the hospitals and doctors to help with their bill,” Kory said.
A few of her clients have had to go without health insurance entirely.
That choice is becoming more common nationwide. As of Monday, 1.4 million fewer people had enrolled in ACA plans through Healthcare.gov than at the same point in 2025, according to the Department of Health and Human Services.
The number of health insurance dropouts is expected to rise, as people whose coverage was automatically renewed may not be able to afford the increased premiums. Kory anticipates a large drop-off starting in March.
“I think that a lot of them are going to just decide not to pay their bill and not to go forward with insurance,” she said.

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