Congress Went Home for Holidays, Leaving Millions to Face Rising Healthcare Costs

By Robert Applebaum

Dec. 15, 2025 – the deadline for enrolling in a marketplace plan through the Affordable Care Act for 2026 – came and went without an agreement on the federal subsidies that kept ACA plans more affordable for many Americans. 

Despite a last-ditch attempt in the House to extend ACA subsidies, with Congress adjourning for the year on Dec. 19, it’s looking almost certain that Americans relying on ACA subsidies will face a steep increase in health care costs in 2026.

As a gerontologist who studies the U.S. health care system, I’m aware that disagreements about health care in America have a long history. The main bone of contention is whether providing health care is the responsibility of the government, or of individuals or their employers.

The ACA, passed in 2010 as the country’s first major piece of health legislation since the passage of Medicare and Medicaid in 1965, represents one more chapter in that long-standing debate. That debate explains why the health law has fueled so much political divisiveness – including a standoff that spurred a record-breaking 43-day-long government shutdown, which began on Oct. 1, 2025.

In my view, regardless of how Congress resolves, or doesn’t resolve, the current dispute over ACA subsidies, a durable U.S. health care policy will remain out of reach until lawmakers address the core question of who should shoulder the cost of health care.

The ACA’s Roots

In the years before the ACA’s passage, some 49 million Americans – 15% of the population – lacked health insurance. This number had been rising in the wake of the 2008 recession. That’s because the majority of Americans ages 18 to 64 with health insurance receive their health benefits through their employer. In the 2008 downturn, people who lost their jobs basically lost their health care coverage.

For those who believed government had a primary role in providing health insurance for its citizens, the growing number of people lacking coverage hit a crisis point that required an intervention. Those who place responsibility on individuals and employers saw the ACA as perversion of the government’s purpose. The political parties could find no common ground – and this challenge continues.

The major goal of the ACA was to reduce the number of uninsured Americans by about 30 million people, or to about 3% of the U.S. population. It got about halfway there: Today, about 26 million Americans, or 8%, are uninsured, though this number fluctuates based on changes in the economy and federal and state policy.

Health Insurance for All?

The ACA implemented an array of strategies to accomplish this goal. Some were popular, such as allowing parents to keep their kids on their family insurance until age 26. Some were unpopular, such as the mandate that everyone must have insurance.

But two strategies in particular had the biggest impact on the number of uninsured. One was expanding the Medicaid program to include workers whose income was below 138% of the poverty line. The other was providing subsidies to people with low and moderate incomes that could help them buy health insurance through the ACA marketplace, a state or federal health exchange through which consumers could choose health insurance plans.

Medicaid expansion was controversial from the start. Originally, the ACA mandated it for all states, but the Supreme Court eventually ruled that it was up to each state, not the federal government, to decide whether to do so. As of December 2025, 40 states and the District of Columbia have implemented Medicaid expansion, insuring about 20 million Americans.

Meanwhile, the marketplace subsidies, which were designed to help people who were working but could not access an employer-based health plan, were not especially contentious early on. Everyone receiving a subsidy was required to contribute to their insurance plan’s monthly premium. People earning US$18,000 or less annually, which in 2010 was 115% of the income threshold set by the federal government as poverty level, contributed 2.1% of their plan’s cost, and those earning $60,240, which was 400% of the federal poverty level, contributed 10%. People making more than that were not eligible for subsidies at all.

In 2021, legislation passed by the Biden administration to stave off the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic increased the subsidy that people could receive. The law eliminated premiums entirely for the lowest income people and reduced the cost for those earning more. And, unlike before, people making more than 400% of the federal poverty level – about 10% of marketplace enrollees – could also get a subsidy.

These pandemic-era subsidies are set to expire at the end of 2025.

Cost vs Coverage

If the COVID-19-era subsidies expire, health care costs would increase substantially for most consumers, as ACA subsidies return to their original levels. So someone making $45,000 annually will now need to pay $360 a month for health insurance, increasing their payment by 74%, or $153 monthly. What’s more, these changes come on top of price hikes to insurance plans themselves, which are estimated to increase by about 18% in 2026.

With these two factors combined, many ACA marketplace users could see their health insurance cost rise more than 100%. Some proponents of extending COVID-19-era subsidies contend that the rollback will result in an estimated 6 million to 7 million people leaving the ACA marketplace and that some 5 million of these Americans could become uninsured in 2026.

Policies in the tax and spending package signed into law by President Donald Trump in July 2025 are amplifying the challenge of keeping Americans insured. The Congressional Budget Office projects that the Medicaid cuts alone, stipulated in the package, may result in more than 7 million people becoming uninsured. Combined with other policy changes outlined in the law and the rollback of the ACA subsidies, that number could hit 16 million by 2034 – essentially wiping out the majority of gains in health insurance coverage that the ACA achieved since 2010.

Subsidy Downsides

These enhanced ACA subsidies are so divisive now in part because they have dramatically driven up the federal government’s health care bill. Between 2021 and 2024, the number of people receiving subsidies doubled – resulting in many more people having health insurance, but also increasing federal ACA expenditures.

In 2025, almost 22 million Americans who purchased a marketplace plan received a federal subsidy to help with the costs, up from 9.2 million in 2020 – a 137% increase.

Those who oppose the extension counter that the subsidies cost the government too much and fund high earners who don’t need government support – and that temporary emergencies, even ones as serious as a pandemic, should not result in permanent changes.

Another critique is that employers are using the ACA to reduce their responsibility for employee coverage. Under the ACA, employers with more than 50 employees must provide health insurance, but for companies with fewer employers, that requirement is optional.

In 2010, 92% of employers with 25 to 49 workers offered health insurance, but by 2025, that proportion had dropped to 64%, suggesting that companies of this size are allowing the ACA to cover their employees.

Dueling Solutions

The U.S. has the most expensive health care system in the world by far. The projected increase in the number of uninsured people over the next 10 years could result in even higher costs, as fewer people get preventive care and delayed health care interventions, ultimately leading to more complex medical care

Federal policy clearly shapes health insurance coverage, but state-level policies play a role too. Nationally, about 8% of people under age 65 were uninsured in 2023, yet that rate varied widely – from 3% in Massachusetts to 18.6% in Texas. States under Republican leadership on average have a higher percentage of uninsured people than do those under Democratic leadership, mirroring the political differences driving the national debate over who is responsible for shouldering the costs of health care.

With dueling ideologies come dueling solutions. For those who believe that the government is responsible for the health of its citizens, expanding health insurance coverage and financing this expansion through taxes presents a clear approach. For those who say the burden should fall on individuals, reliance on the free market drives the fix – on the premise that competition between health insurers and providers offers a more effective way to solve the cost challenges than a government intervention.

Without finding resolution on this core issue, the U.S. will likely still be embroiled in this same debate for years, if not decades, to come.

Robert Applebaum, PhD,  is a Senior Research Scholar in the Department of Sociology and Gerontology at Miami University. He is also Director of the Ohio Long-Term Care Research Project and Senior Research Scholar at the Scripps Gerontology Center.

This article originally appeared in The Conversation and is republished with permission.


Government Shutdown Highlights Absurd Cost of Health Insurance

By Crystal Lindell

Health insurance has gotten so expensive that it almost makes sense to ask, “Is it worth the price?”

Insurance is sold to consumers through a “worst-case scenario” framework. Companies tell people they have to have health insurance or risk disaster.

“What if you suddenly need millions of dollars in ICU care? You need to have our health insurance to pay that bill!” is how they frame it.

Naturally, the insurance companies follow that up with, “If we are saving you millions of dollars in medical expenses, then tens of thousands of dollars for your policy is actually quite a bargain, right?”

“Tens of thousands of dollars” might seem like an exaggeration if you haven’t been paying close attention to health insurance prices lately, but it’s not.

According to data recently released by KFF, a health policy nonprofit, family premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance reached an average of $26,993 this year.

Their data shows that workers pay $6,850 of that out of their own paychecks. As such, that’s the price most people associate with their plans.

But in reality, employees are paying the full $26,993, because every penny that companies spend on your health insurance is a penny that could be in your paycheck instead. Hiding those costs behind “employer contributions” is just a neat trick insurance companies use to hide the real price you’re paying.

And if you’re buying insurance on the Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplace, then the real cost of your plan is hidden in a different way: behind federal subsidies. Some of those subsidies will expire at the end of the year, and it’s forcing people to confront just how expensive insurance has gotten. 

The ACA subsidies are at the heart of why our federal government is currently shut down. Democrats want them to continue, and Republicans do not.

The potentially devastating effects of ending them for the 24 million people currently enrolled through the ACA are becoming apparent. Open enrollment for 2026 coverage begins Nov.1, and people have to make their decisions soon.

The Washington State Standard reports that individual insurance in that state bought through the ACA are set to rise an average of 21% next year. 

As of now, the subsidies save ACA enrollees an average of $1,330 per year, according to Washington Gov. Bob Ferguson’s office. For seniors, those savings jump to more than $1,900 annually.

Going Without Coverage

NBC News reports that some people are planning to forego health insurance, rather than pay higher prices. They shared the story of Arkansas residents Ginny Murray and her husband, Chaz. The couple plans to drop coverage and pay out of their own pocket if an unexpected illness strikes.

“Our plan is to keep putting the money we’re already paying towards health care in savings,” Ginny explained. “And really just hoping that we don’t have a stroke or we don’t have a heart attack.”

It’s a plan I myself adopted years ago after getting laid off and deciding to make a go of it as a freelancer who does odds and ends on the side to survive. When I tried to look into health insurance plans, I quickly realized that it was much cheaper to just pay cash out of pocket for my doctor appointments and prescriptions.

Especially since even if I pay for insurance, deductibles and co-pays mean I could still end up with thousands of dollars of medical debt. 

Yes, I live under the constant fear that I will be one of the people that health insurance companies warn about. That someday I will find myself in the ICU in need of millions of dollars of care that I can’t pay for.

But it’s a risk I have to take at this stage of my life because I just cannot afford to buy my own health insurance, even with the ACA subsidies. 

Last I checked, I did not qualify for Medicaid, although that too brings its own set of problems. Currently my primary care doctor is across the state line at the closest university hospital to my house. He’s well equipped to handle the chronic, complex health problems that I face But if I got onto Medicaid in my state, I may not be able to see him anymore.

Mine is just one story among millions who are trying to figure out how to pay for their health care under a private health insurance system where companies have every incentive to raise prices to eternal heights.

That’s why, in reality, we should be striving for more than just some ACA subsidies for health insurance. Medical expenses and health insurance costs should not constantly loom over people’s heads. 

We could be implementing universal Medicare at the very least. A program like Medicare for All would be life changing for me. I’m sick, but not sick enough for disability. And since I am only 42, I can’t get Medicare yet.

It doesn’t have to be that way. What if I could get the same health insurance my grandma has? Why do I have to wait until I’m 65 to do that? Why is 65 the arbitrary number?

Other developed countries have better alternatives, such as universal healthcare coverage, than the current U.S. system. We should have better access to health insurance too – or at least something more affordable.