2026年2月10日 / 美国东部时间凌晨5:00 / KFF健康新闻
在保费补贴大幅削减后,今年选择《平价医疗法案》(ACA)医疗保险计划的美国人数量超出预期,但随着医疗成本上升,他们是否会继续保留保险仍是未知数。
这一切都源于2026年开放注册期的激烈争议。国会就是否延长拜登政府提供的更慷慨补贴展开辩论,导致有史以来最长的政府停摆,并使公众关注医疗保健成本上升和可负担性问题。
这些增强型补贴通过降低家庭收入中用于医疗保健的比例并取消收入上限,扩大了资格范围,但已于去年年底到期。结果,几乎所有购买ACA保险的人都看到了费用增加。对一些人来说,即使仍有补贴,他们支付的保费也翻倍甚至更多。
许多专家预计,2025年达到创纪录的2400万注册人数后,今年的ACA注册人数会下降。
罗伯特·伍德·约翰逊基金会高级政策官员凯瑟琳·亨普斯特德表示:”如果你大幅提高某样东西的价格,经济学告诉我们,很多人会减少购买或根本不买。”
现在需要关注的问题:
初步数据并非最终结果
国会预算办公室(CBO)在2024年12月告诉议员,不延长增强型补贴将导致2026年有220万人失去保险,未来几年这一数字还会进一步增加。沃克利咨询集团的分析师也估计,今年将有数百万美国人选择退出保险。
联邦官员1月28日发布的数据显示,联邦医疗保健.gov市场及各州运营的市场的注册人数同比下降约120万,总数为2300万,其中包括340万新注册ACA保险的人。
去年同期,注册人数为2420万,其中390万是新注册用户。
但实际情况远比这些初步数据复杂。
一方面,两年的数据都是以联邦市场1月15日关闭开放注册期为基准统计的。然而,运营自己市场的州的数据大多仅统计到1月10日或11日,尽管一些州的开放注册期持续到月底。因此,这些数字未能反映最后几天可能出现的情况:各州是否出现注册激增?或者相反,市场是否有更多参保人取消了保险?
此外,这些初步数据包含新注册的ACA用户和现有客户,其中许多人被自动续期到2026年——这又带来了其他问题。
对于已续期的老客户,实际数字要等数周或数月才能确定,那时才能清楚有多少人实际缴纳了保费。一些消费者可能没有关注续期费用,或者曾寄希望于国会延长补贴。
这一点很重要,因为CBO和沃克利对数百万人失去保险的估计是基于全年覆盖的预测,而非初始注册数据。
爱达荷州健康市场执行主任帕特·凯利在1月22日的记者会上表示:”未来几周,消费者可能会发现自己真的负担不起保费而取消计划,保险公司也可能因未付款而取消覆盖。”
各州注册模式差异显著
在另外19个运营自己交易所的州(以及哥伦比亚特区),情况也在发生变化,其中一些州发布了比联邦市场更详细的注册数据。
联邦数据显示,大多数州2026年的注册人数比上一年有所下降,北卡罗来纳州降幅最大,近22%。
但在少数州——包括新墨西哥州、得克萨斯州、加利福尼亚州、马里兰州以及哥伦比亚特区——选择ACA计划的人数有所增加。
新墨西哥州的增幅最大,初始注册人数增加了近14%。其他州和华盛顿特区的增幅都在个位数。
新墨西哥州是唯一的例外,它用自己的税收收入全额抵消了所有消费者失去更慷慨联邦税收补贴的损失。其他几个州,包括加利福尼亚州、科罗拉多州、马里兰州和华盛顿州,也用州资金帮助了一些参保人。
由国家卫生政策学院支持的22个州市场组成的州市场网络表示,初步注册数据令人担忧。与去年同期相比,科罗拉多州计划取消率上升83%,爱达荷州的退保率是去年的四倍,弗吉尼亚州的取消率翻倍。
加州数据显示,新注册人数同比下降32%。宾夕法尼亚州数据显示,55至64岁(保费最高的群体)和26至34岁的年轻人终止保险的人数比其他年龄组更多。
宾夕法尼亚州医疗保险交易所管理局执行主任德文·特罗利表示:”我们的医保覆盖终止率大幅上升。在过去两个月里,有7万人退保,从提前退休人员到小企业主再到农民,都因难以维持生计而退出。”
2月9日,宾夕法尼亚州发布最终数据,显示注册人数比去年下降约2%,但这一数字掩盖了部分影响。该州表示,近18%的参保人完全取消了保险,老年人和农村居民最容易退出。
一些共和党人将这一下降归因于特朗普政府支持的反欺诈措施,包括一系列监管和立法变化,这些措施被认为收紧了系统。尽管其中一些行动被联邦法院暂停且尚未生效,但这些ACA批评者(其中一些人曾发布有争议的估计称数百万参保人可能被不当注册)表示,这是注册下降的原因。他们之前曾指责更慷慨的补贴导致了未经授权的注册或经纪人因佣金而促使的ACA计划转换。
然而,运营自己ACA市场的州报告称,这种未经授权的转换很少或根本没有。与联邦市场相比,州立ACA平台采用了额外的保障措施,防止经纪人未经授权访问消费者的保险。
华盛顿特区健康福利交易所管理局执行主任米拉·科夫曼表示,未重返市场的消费者的主要原因是成本。
“当我们调查这些人的情况时,一半是小企业主,”科夫曼说,”他们不是在进行欺诈的人。”
保费更低,免赔额更高
许多州的现有客户没有选择自动续期,而是大幅转向价格较低的”铜级”计划,这些计划的免赔额比银、金、铂级计划更高。
州市场网络报告称,加州73%的续保成员转换了计划,选择了铜级计划,而去年同期这一比例为27%。在缅因州,铜级计划现在占所有购买计划的近60%。
乔治敦大学健康保险改革中心高级研究员斯泰西·波格表示:”人们在考虑月度预算,寻找更低的保费,有些可能希望自己不会需要满足免赔额。”
平均而言,铜级计划的年度免赔额为7500美元。所有ACA计划都必须覆盖某些预防性服务(如某些疫苗接种、癌症筛查和其他检测),且不收取共付额或免赔额,但大多数其他医疗服务只有在满足年度免赔额后才能覆盖。
亨普斯特德表示,高免赔额可能导致一些患者避免就医。
“人们害怕使用医疗服务,可能会把问题拖到更严重的时候再处理,”她说。
她补充说,包括医院和医生在内的医疗服务提供者正准备应对更多无法负担免赔额的参保患者。
“每个人都在预期医院将不得不提供更多慈善医疗,这将损害他们的利润底线,并可能导致裁员、关闭或减少服务,”她说。
联系KFF健康新闻:您是否难以负担医疗保险费用?是否决定放弃保险?请点击此处联系KFF健康新闻并分享您的故事。
KFF健康新闻是一个全国性新闻编辑部,专注于健康问题的深度报道,是KFF(健康政策研究、民调及新闻的独立信息来源)的核心运营项目之一。
Obamacare sign-ups drop, but the extent won’t be clear for months
February 10, 2026 / 5:00 AM EST / KFF Health News
More Americans than expected enrolled in Affordable Care Act health insurance plans for this year, after premium subsidies were dramatically cut — but it remains to be seen whether they’ll keep the coverage as their costs mount.
It’s all part of a drama that roiled the ACA’s 2026 open enrollment period. Congressional debate over whether to extend more generous subsidies made available under the Biden administration led to the longest-ever government shutdown and focused public attention on rising health care costs and the affordability issue.
The enhanced subsidies, which expanded eligibility both by lowering the percentage of household income people had to pay toward their care and removing an income cap, expired at the end of last year. As a result, just about everyone buying ACA coverage saw their costs increase. For some, what they paid toward premiums doubled or more, even though less generous subsidies remain in place.
Many experts expected ACA enrollment, which hit a record 24 million in 2025, to fall this time around.
“If you raise the price of something a whole lot, economics tell us that a lot of people will buy less of it or not buy at all,” said Katherine Hempstead, a senior policy officer with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Here are things to watch now:
Initial numbers aren’t final
The Congressional Budget Office told lawmakers in December 2024 that not extending the enhanced subsidies would cause 2.2 million people to lose insurance in 2026, with further increases in following years. Analysts with the Wakely Consulting Group also estimated that millions would opt out of insurance for this year.
Data released Jan. 28 by federal officials showed a year-over-year drop of about 1.2 million enrollments across the federal healthcare.gov marketplace and those run by states. Overall, there were 23 million enrollees, including 3.4 million new to ACA coverage.
At about the same time last year, there were 24.2 million sign-ups, with 3.9 million new to the marketplaces.
But there’s more to it than those initial numbers.
For one thing, both years’ data was pegged to Jan. 15 for the federal marketplace, which closed its open enrollment period that day. But, the data for the states that run their own marketplaces included sign-ups in most cases only through Jan. 10 or 11, even though some held open enrollment until the end of the month. Thus, the numbers don’t reflect what might have happened in those last days. Was there a surge in state sign-ups? Or, conversely, did the marketplaces see more enrollees cancel their coverage?
Additionally, those initial numbers are a mix of newly minted ACA enrollees and existing customers, many of whom were auto-reenrolled for 2026 — which raises other issues.
For existing, reenrolled policyholders, the real figures won’t be known for weeks or months, when it becomes clear how many actually pay their premiums. Some consumers may not have focused on their reenrollment costs or may have hoped Congress would extend the subsidies.
That’s an important factor to keep in mind because the CBO and Wakely estimates of millions losing insurance were based on projections for full-year coverage, not initial sign-ups.
In the coming weeks, “consumers may find they really can’t afford the premiums and cancel their plans, while carriers may also cancel coverage for nonpayment,” said Pat Kelly, executive director of Your Health Idaho, a state-based ACA marketplace, during a Jan. 22 call with reporters.
Sharp differences in state enrollment patterns
Changes are also afoot in the 19 other states (and the District of Columbia) that run their own exchanges, some of which have issued more detailed data about enrollment than the federal marketplace.
Most states saw lower enrollment for 2026 than the prior year, with the biggest drop in North Carolina, where sign-ups fell by nearly 22%, federal data shows.
In a few states — including New Mexico, Texas, California, and Maryland, as well as the District of Columbia — the number of people selecting ACA plans increased.
The jump was largest in New Mexico, with its initial number of people selecting plans up by nearly 14%. Increases were in the single digits in the other states and Washington, D.C.
New Mexico — uniquely — used its own tax dollars to fully offset the loss of the more generous federal tax subsidies for all consumers. A few other states, including California, Colorado, Maryland, and Washington, used state money to help some enrollees.
The State Marketplace Network, a collective of 22 state marketplaces supported by the National Academy for State Health Policy, said initial enrollment figures raise concern. Compared with the same time last year, outright plan cancellations are up 83% in Colorado, disenrollments are four times what they were in Idaho, and Virginia has seen cancellations double.
New enrollments are down 32% in California from the same period last year, according to data from the state. In Pennsylvania, people ages 55 to 64, the group with the highest premiums, and young people 26 to 34 are terminating their coverage in higher numbers than other age groups, state data shows.
“We have drastically higher rates of people dropping their coverage,” said Devon Trolley, executive director of the Pennsylvania Health Insurance Exchange Authority. “We had 70,000 drop in the last two months, from early retirees to small-business owners to farmers not knowing how to make ends meet.”
On Feb. 9, Pennsylvania released final numbers, showing enrollment dropped by about 2% from last year, although that figure masks some of the effects. The state says nearly 18% of enrollees dropped coverage altogether, with older and rural residents being the most likely to fall out.
Some Republicans credited Trump-administration-backed anti-fraud measures, which included a range of regulatory and legislative changes, for tightening the system. Although some of those actions were paused by a federal court and have not taken effect, those ACA critics, some of whom have produced controversial estimates that millions may have been improperly enrolled, say that’s behind the decline. They have previously blamed the more generous subsidies for unauthorized enrollments or ACA plan-switching by commission-seeking brokers.
States that run their own ACA marketplaces, however, reported little or no such unauthorized switching. Relative to the federal marketplace, the state-based ACA platforms employ additional safeguards to prevent brokers from accessing consumers’ coverage without authorization.
Among consumers not returning to the marketplace, the main reason is cost, said Mila Kofman, executive director of the DC Health Benefit Exchange Authority, which runs the district’s ACA marketplace.
“When we looked at who these folks are, half are small-business owners,” Kofman said. “They are not folks committing fraud.”
Lower premiums, higher deductibles
Rather than sticking with automatic reenrollment, existing customers in many states shifted sharply into lower-priced “bronze” plans that come with higher deductibles than silver, gold, and platinum plans.
California saw 73% of renewing members who switched plans move to a bronze plan, up from 27% at the same time last year, the State Marketplace Network reported. In Maine, bronze enrollment now represents almost 60% of all plans purchased.
People are “looking at what works in their monthly budget, looking for that lower premium,” said Stacey Pogue, a senior research fellow at the Center on Health Insurance Reforms at Georgetown University. “Some might be crossing their fingers that they won’t need to meet their deductible.”
On average, bronze plans have an annual deductible of $7,500. All ACA plans are required to cover certain preventive services — such as some vaccinations, cancer screenings, and other tests — without a copayment or deductible, but most everything else is covered only after an annual deductible is met.
High deductibles can lead some patients to avoid seeking medical care, Hempstead said.
“People are terrified to use their care,” she said. “They may delay something until it’s more serious.”
She added that medical providers, including hospitals and doctors, are bracing for an increase in the number of insured patients who can’t afford to pay their deductibles.
“Everyone is anticipating that hospitals will have to give out more charity care, which will hurt their bottom lines and might lead them to have to lay off people or close or reduce services,” she said.
Connect with KFF Health News: Are you struggling to afford health insurance? Have you decided to forgo coverage? Click here to contact KFF Health News and share your story.
KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.