Affordable Care Act

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  • Recibí un Formulario 1095-B por correo. ¿Qué es?

    FAQs

    Las aseguradoras, algunos planes de salud patrocinados por el empleador y los programas de salud pública como Medicaid pueden proporcionarle documentación sobre los meses que estuvo cubierto bajo un plan el año anterior. A mediados de marzo, debería recibir un formulario 1095-B ya sea por correo o de manera electrónica.

  • ¿Quién puede comprar un plan catastrófico?

    FAQs

    En general, sólo los adultos jóvenes menores de 30 años son elegibles para comprar un plan catastrófico. Sin embargo, los adultos mayores pueden comprar un plan catastrófico si ningún otro plan de salud calificado ofrecido a través del mercado de seguros de salud en 2024 costaría menos del 7,97% de sus ingresos.

  • Mi pareja y yo no estamos casados y tenemos dos hijos. ¿Cómo contamos el tamaño y los ingresos de nuestro hogar cuando solicitamos subsidios en el mercado de seguros? ¿Podemos comprar una póliza para cubrir a toda la familia?

    FAQs

    Suponiendo que sea elegible para recibir créditos fiscales para pagar las primas, el monto de su crédito se calculará en función de cómo presente sus impuestos. Si, por ejemplo, declara a su pareja y a sus hijos como dependientes fiscales, se le considerará un hogar de cuatro personas cuando solicite las subvenciones.

  • Deductibles in ACA Marketplace Plans, 2014-2025

    Issue Brief

    This analysis documents average deductibles for Affordable Care Act Marketplace plans available on Healthcare.gov in 2025 for all metal tiers, including silver plans after cost-sharing reductions are applied, as well as trend data since 2014.

  • Utilization of Health Care Services by Medicaid Expansion Status

    Issue Brief

    Some critics of Medicaid expansion have argued that expansion diverts resources away from other groups of Medicaid enrollees, including people with disabilities and children, and that expansion enrollees are “able-bodied” implying they have minimal health care needs. However, data show that expansion states spend more per enrollee overall and on each eligibility group than non-expansion states and that nearly half of expansion enrollees have a chronic condition. This data note analyzes 2021 Medicaid claims data to compare utilization of health care services among Medicaid expansion enrollees with other Medicaid enrollees in expansion states and to compare utilization of health care services among adult Medicaid enrollees living in expansion and non-expansion states.

  • The Spotlight Is on Medicaid Cuts, But the ACA Marketplaces Could See a One-Third Cut in Enrollment

    From Drew Altman

    In his latest column, President and CEO Drew Altman shows how proposals contained in the House reconciliation bill could result in a one-third reduction in ACA Marketplace enrollment. “While all eyes are on the big Medicaid cuts being proposed in the House,” he writes, “significant changes are also being proposed that together would dramatically reduce enrollment in the ACA Marketplaces.”

  • Marketplace Enrollees with Unpredictable Incomes Could Face Bigger Penalties Under House Reconciliation Bill Provision

    Issue Brief

    This analysis illustrates how provisions included in the House budget reconciliation bill could expose Marketplace enrollees with unpredictable incomes to higher penalties when filing taxes if they underestimate their incomes. About one in four potential Marketplace shoppers had incomes that varied at least 20 percent from the beginning to the end of the year.

  • On Medicaid Expansion, History Matters

    From Drew Altman

    In his latest column, KFF President and CEO Drew Altman discusses the history of the battles over the ACA’s provisions that were designed to expand coverage for the uninsured, which helps explain the effort to cut federal funding for the Medicaid expansion today. The real underlying issues, he says, are the same divisions that have always plagued the debate about covering the uninsured.