The administration of President Donald Trump is preparing to keep the Affordable Care Act public exchange system and the premium tax credit system alive next year.
The U.S. Department of the Health and Human Services and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services — the HHS agency that runs HealthCare.gov and oversees state-based exchange programs — are publishing the proposed ACA benefit and payment parameters for 2027 in the Federal Register Wednesday.
“The Trump administration remains committed to maintaining stable, competitive and affordable health insurance markets while ensuring federal programs operate with integrity and accountability,” officials said in an announcement about the filing of the 2027 parameters draft.
What it means: Some benefits advisors are now promoting use of individual coverage health reimbursement arrangements and similar arrangements. The arrangements provide employer cash that workers can use to buy their own individual coverage.
The new 2027 ACA exchange parameters draft may support the ICHRA marketing efforts, by increasing the odds that ACA exchange plans and other types individual major medical coverage will continue to be available in 2027.
ACA exchange basics: The ACA exchange programs provides government-run “online supermarkets for health insurance.” Private insurers can use the federal government’s HealthCare.gov and states’ own state-based exchange programs, such as Covered California and Connect for Health Colorado, to sell commercial coverage to U.S. consumers. Consumers can shop for coverage through the exchange programs, buy coverage without going through medical underwriting, and pay for the coverage with help from federal ACA “advanced premium tax credit” subsidies.
Eligibility rules: HHS and CMS expect to tighten application verification rules in 2027. One change could keep about 1.2 million noncitizens who do not have permanent resident status or similar status from using federal subsidies to pay for their coverage, according to HHS and CMS projections.
Officials want to give states the option of using web brokers and other entities to run their ACA exchange programs, through a “state based exchange direct enrollment option,” instead of requiring states to use a centralized, government-run organization to provide state-based ACA exchange services.