UPDATE: 2024 ACA Open Enrollment Period officially ends in all remaining states except CA & NY #GetCovered

The official 2024 ACA Open Enrollment Period (OEP) ended last night in most states, but millions of Americans are still eligible to #GetCovered!

This is the best OEP ever for the ACA for several reasons:

  • A dozen states are either launching or expanding their own state-based subsidy programs to make ACA plans even more affordable for their enrollees;

And remember, millions of people will be eligible for zero premium comprehensive major medical policies.

If you've never enrolled in an ACA healthcare policy before, or if you looked into it a few years back but weren't impressed, please give it another shot now. Thanks to these major improvements it's a whole different ballgame.

Here's some important things to know when you #GetCovered for 2024:


1. DON'T DELAY; GET COVERED SOONER RATHER THAN LATER!

There are five remaining states where residents still have until JANUARY 31st to #GetCovered!

  • California: For coverage starting February 1st

UPDATE: CoveredCA announced that they're extending their deadline through February 9 due to a call center issue they had over the past few days. Coverage will still be retroactive until February 1st, however.

UPDATE: NY State of Health has also quietly extended their deadline out until February 15th,  although unlike CA, coverage for NY residents who enroll between now and then won't start until March 1st. 

  • District of Columbia: For coverage starting March 1st
  • New Jersey: For coverage starting February 1st
  • New York: For coverage starting March 1st
  • Rhode Island: For coverage starting February 1st

BUT WAIT, THERE'S MORE!

Residents of any state earning less than 1.5x the Federal Poverty Level are eligible to enroll year-round, as are members of federally-recognized Native American tribes or Alaska Natives. In addition, people who are eligible for Medicaid or the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) are eligible to enroll in those programs year-round.

In addition, there are several state-specific programs which allow eligible enrollees to do so year round. These include "Covered Connecticut" in Connecticut; "ConnectorCare" in Massachusetts; MinnesotaCare in Minnesota and the Essential Plan in New York. I'll discuss each of these in more detail below.

Anyone else who wants to enroll during the off season has to qualify for a Special Enrollment Period (SEP).

Qualifying Life Experiences (QLEs) which make you eligible for a SEP include things like:

  • Losing employer-sponsored healthcare coverage
  • Getting married or divorced
  • Giving birth/adopting a child
  • Turning 26 and having to move to your own policy
  • Losing eligibility for Medicaid or CHIP
  • Moving out of your current rating area

2. ONLY ENROLL VIA AN OFFICIAL ACA HEALTH EXCHANGE OR AN AUTHORIZED ENROLLMENT PARTNER.

ACA financial subsidies are available to millions more Americans than they used to be...but they're only availalble to eligible enrollees who sign up through an official ACA exchange or an authorized 3rd-party exchange entity, known as an Enhanced Direct Enrollment (EDE) entity.

There's a ton of junk plans and scam artists out there, especially these days. Fraudulent plans are being hawked endlessly via both robocalls, spam emails and fly-by-night websites. If you're enrolling online, make sure to use one of the official ACA exchange websites:

As noted above, VIRGINIA just launched their brand-new state-based ACA exchange a few weeks ago.

Note: While some insurance carrier websites are also hooked into the federal exchange via an EDE, they (understandably) only list their own plans. I still recommend only using one of the websites listed above. Remember, whether via an official exchange site or an EDE, you have to enroll on-exchange to be eligible for financial help!

On a related note...


3. IF YOU'RE ENROLLED OFF-EXCHANGE, SEE IF YOU CAN ENROLL ON-EXCHANGE INSTEAD.

As far as I can figure, somewhere around 2 million Americans are still enrolled in OFF-exchange, ACA-compliant individual market policies. Historically, the main reason for this has been that they didn't qualify for financial help, so didn't see the point of filling out any additional forms by enrolling on-exchange.

The reality, however, is that many of these off-exchange enrollees may have been eligible for ACA subsidies after all if they had enrolled in the exact same plan but had done so via their ACA exchange instead of directly through the carrier...and thanks to the dramatically improved subsidies of the American Rescue Plan/Inflation Reduction Act (plus supplemental subsidies in some states), many of these people are leaving thousands of dollars in savings on the table if they don't make the switch!

Again: If you weren't eligible a few years ago or even last year, check again this year; you may be in for a very pleasant surprise!

On average, full-price/unsubsidized ACA premiums went up around 3.5% overall in 2022 and around 7% in 2023. For 2024 they're going up another 6.6% or so, with wide ranges from state to state, carrier to carrier and plan to plan.

I can't repeat this enough times: If you enroll off-exchange, there's a good chance you'll be leaving potentially thousands of dollars in savings on the table.


4. MILLIONS OF AMERICANS CAUGHT IN THE "FAMILY GLITCH" MAY NOW BE ELIGIBLE FOR UP TO THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS IN SAVINGS!

As I explained here, due to how the U.S. Treasury Dept. and the Obama Administration interpreted an obscure provision of the Patient Protection & Affordable Care Act regarding employer coverage affordability thresholds, there are several million people who really should have been eligible for ACA subsidies for years now but who haven't been.

The very short version of the problem is this:

  • Let's say you have healthcare coverage for yourself only through your employer, and you only have to pay, say, 5% of your annual household income for your premiums
  • However, you're married with two kids, and adding each of them would tack on another 5% in premiums apiece. Covering all four of you would cost 20% of your annual household income, ouch.
  • Because your individual premiums come in at less than ~9.12% of your income, the rest of your family doesn't qualify for ACA subsidies even though the premiums for the family as a whole costs far more than the maximum amount you'd otherwise have to pay for an ACA exchange plan.

Thankfully, since 2022, this is no longer an issue for most of these folks.


5. OTHERS WHO DIDN'T USED TO QUALIFY FOR FINANCIAL HELP NOW QUALIFY AS WELL!

Before I get into this, it's important to understand what the Federal Poverty Line (or FPL) is. 100% FPL depends on how many people live in your household. For a single adult with no dependents, it's $14,580/year; for a family of four, it's $30,000/year. These amounts increase a bit each year to account for inflation.

Prior to the American Rescue Plan/Inflation Reduction Act, ACA subsidies were limited (on a sliding income scale) to enrollees earning between 100 - 400% FPL (roughly $58,000/year for one person or $120,000/year for a family of four this year). If you earned more than 400% FPL, however, you had to pay full price no matter how expensive the premiums were.

Thanks to the ARP/IRA, however, the ACA's infamous "Subsidy Cliff" has been killed at last through at least the end of 2025.

This means two extremely important things:

  • First: Households earning less than 400% of the Federal Poverty Line (FPL) are now eligible for more generous financial assistance than they were pre-ARP/IRA.
  • Second: Millions of people who earn more than 400% FPL, who weren't eligible for any financial help pre-ARP/IRA, are now eligible for financial help after all, which can mean thousands of dollars in savings for many of them.

Here's a table laying out the percent of your household income which you're restricted to paying for the benchmark Silver plan in your area for 2024:


6. ELEVEN STATES ARE OFFERING *ADDITIONAL* SAVINGS *ON TOP OF* THE EXPANDED ARP SUBSIDIES!

In addition, several states have special programs and/or additional savings on top of the enhanced federal subsidies which can save many lower-income enrollees even more!

Over 600,000 CA residents are expected to benefit from the new program which eliminates deductibles for all CoveredCA enrollees earning up to 250% FPL while also dramatically reducing co-pays & other cost sharing for those earning 150 - 250% FPL. This effectively turns all CSR Silver plans into Secret Ultra Platinum plans.

CoveredCA also plans on automatically upgrading ~35,000 enrollees into High CSR plans to save them money, while also covering the $1/month abortion rider fee for every enrollee.

Over 50,000 CO residents are already benefitting from this program, which again upgrades enrollees earning up to 250% FPL to the same Platinum plan status as those earning less than 150% FPL by reducing out-of-pocket expenses (deductibles, co-pays, etc.) even further. An additional 22,000 residents are expected to become eligible for the program this year.

In addition, up to 11,000 undocumented immigrants earning up to 300% FPL who aren't eligible for federal subsidies are eligible for state-based premium subsidies as well via Colorado's unique OmniSalud program.

This program, which has around 17,000 Ct residents enrolled, raises the actuarial value of ACA plans to a stunning 100% (ie, no cost sharing at all) for all Silver CSR enrollees earning up to 175% FPL. This even includes no-cost dental insurance and non-emergency medical transportation.

Over 110,000 Minnesota resents with household income is up to 200% FPL are enrolled in the states expanded MinnesotaCare Basic Health Plan program.

Minnesotacare features $0 premiums for households earning up to 160% FPL and $4 - $28 premiums on a sliding scale for households earning 160 – 200% FPL. Children up to 20 years old have no cost sharing, and adults 21+ only pay $100 for ER visits and have very low co-pays for other typical services.

Around 43,000 Maryland residents are enrolled in this program. If at least one of the enrollees in your household is between the ages of 18 - 37 and your household income is up to 400% FPL, they may qualify for additional premium savings. It reduces net premiums after federal subsidies are applied by an additional 2.5 percentage points for enrollees from 18-33 and by smaller amounts over that on a sliding scale.

Around 128,000 MA residents are enrolled in ConnectorCare plans, which are special Qualified Health Plans (QHPs) only available to MA Health Connector enrollees who earn up to 500% FPL (previously 300% FPL). They feature $0 deductibles, low out-of-pocket caps, low co-pays and nominal (or even $0) premiums. An additional 50,000 Bay Staters are expected to be eligible this year!

This program, which nearly every enrollee at Get Covered NJ benefits from to some degree, automatically further reduces premiums for eligible enrollees who earn up to 600% FPL. These are flat “wraparound” subsidies provided on a monthly basis as a supplement to the federal APTC subsidies.

This program was introduced last year; it benchmark Silver premiums for enrollees earning up to 200% FPL down to $0, while also reducing them by lesser amounts for enrollees earning between 200 - 400% FPL. It also dramatically upgrades the cost sharing reduction subsidiesm while rebranding Silver CSR plans as “Turquoise Plans” for easier consumer marketing.

A stunning 1.3 MILLION New Yorkers are now enrolled in this Basic Health Plan program; similar to MinnesotaCare, residents earning up to 200% FPL are eligible for the Essential Plan, which has been expanded to the point that enrollees pay NO premiums and have NO deductibles! In addition, enrollees earning up to 150% FPL pay almost nothing in cost sharing, which is pretty nominal for those earning 150 - 200% FPL.

Available to Vermont residents (around 15,000 are enrolled at the moment) earning up to 300% FPL, VPA subsidies are unusual in that they reduce net premiums by 1.5 percentage points...which means that some low-income enrollees are technically paying negative premiums. In reality, the "excess" subsidies just go to cover any premiums for services not covered by federal subsidies (no, you don't actually get paid for enrolling).

Available for enrollees earning less than 250% FPL who enroll in Silver or Gold “Cascade Care” plans (Cascade Care plans are Washington’s quasi-”public option” ACA policies). Further reduces net premiums down to as low as $0/month; most pay $10/month or less. Cascade Care plans have deductibles/co-pays around $1,000 lower than non-Cascade Care Silver plans.


7. MILLIONS OF PEOPLE ARE ELIGIBLE FOR FREE "SECRET PLATINUM" PLANS (LABELED AS SILVER)!

As I explain in detail here, if your household earns less than 200% FPL in any state (around $29,000/yr if you're single; around $60,000/yr for a family of four), make sure to choose a SILVER plan! Thanks to the ACA's Cost Sharing Reductions (CSR) system, you'll receive additional financial help which will lower your deductible, co-pays and coinsurance so much it effectively transforms Silver plans into Platinum plans!

Furthermore, thanks to the expanded ARP/IRA subsidies, the premiums for these "Secret Platinum" plans are literally nothing for anyone earning under 150% FPL and max out at just 2% of your annual income from 150 - 200% FPL! (As noted above, in some states you may not have to pay a dime in premiums for a Silver plan even if your income is as high as 200% FPL).


8. VIA PREMIUM ALIGNMENT & SILVER LOADING, SOME SUBSIDIZED ENROLLEES MAY BE ABLE TO GET FREE GOLD PLANS!

As I explained here, due to a long, strange series of events, subsidized enrollees earning 200% FPL or more may end up getting a Gold plan for less than Silver, or a Bronze plan for free!).

In 2021, David Anderson ran an analysis and finds that there were 820 counties where at least one Gold plan was priced lower than the benchmark Silver plan even at full price! Once you add Silver Loading into the mix, this means many people will qualify for a ZERO-PREMIUM GOLD plan even if they earn over 200% FPL!

This is especially true in states which have fully embraced both Silver Loading and Premium Alignment, including Colorado, Maryland, New Mexico, Pennsylvania and Texas (both Illinois and New Jersey have bills in committee to do this as well; I hope Michigan will do so soon!)


9. THE INDIVIDUAL MANDATE IS STILL AROUND IN FIVE STATES!

The single most controversial part of the Patient Protection & Affordable Care Act was the Shared Responsibility Provision, commonly known as the "Individual Mandate Penalty." In essence, all American citizens who didn't qualify for an exemption were required to either have ACA-compliant healthcare coverage (this could include Medicare, Medicaid, CHIP, qualifying Employer-Sponsored healthcare policies, or ACA exchange plans) or they would be charged a financial penalty for not having qualifying coverage.

The federal ACA individual mandate was reduced to nothing in 2019, so it isn't an issue any longer...but there are actually five states which have since reinstituted their own healthcare coverage requirement:

  • CALIFORNIA
  • DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA (I know, it's not actually a state...yet)
  • MASSACHUSETTS
  • NEW JERSEY
  • RHODE ISLAND

In CA, DC, NJ & RI, the penalty either identical or very close to the old federal penalty. Massachusetts uses their own formula. The financial penalty for not having coverage (assuming you don't qualify for an exemption) will be charged when residents file their 2022 state taxes in spring 2023.


10. SOME CARRIERS HAVE EITHER NEWLY ENTERED OR EXITED DIFFERENT STATES

Every year sees churn on the ACA markets as new carriers enter or expand their coverage areas to more counties/states...or as currently-participating carriers pull out of them. In addition, existing carriers often add new plans or phase out current ones. Here's just some of the changes for 2024:

New carriers are joining the market in these states:

  • California: Inland Empire
  • Colorado: SelectHealth
  • Delaware: Celtic
  • Indiana: Aetna Health
  • Maryland: Aetna Health
  • Nevada: Imperial Insurance Co; Molina Healthcare of NV
  • New Jersey: UnitedHealthcare
  • New Mexico: UnitedHealthcare of NM
  • Oklahoma: Taro Health
  • Pennsylvania: Jefferson Health Plans
  • South Carolina: UnitedHealthcare
  • Utah: Aetna Health; Imperial Health Plan of the SW
  • Wisconsin: UnitedHealthcare
  • Other carriers are leaving states, such as Bright and Friday Health Plans (both of which went belly-up last/this year), or Oscar Health leaving California.

Any time a carrier reduces their participation in a given county or state it means that anyone currently enrolled in their policies will either be automatically "mapped" to a similar plan with a different carrier or they have to actively seek out a new policy to enroll in.


11. STANDARDIZED PLANS ARE BACK!

I debated a long time on whether to make this its own separate category or not.

Several states such as California and Massachusetts already mandate "Standardized" ACA policies. This means that every plan offered within a given metal level category (Bronze, Silver, Gold, Platinum) has to have the same cost sharing across the board. That is, co-pays, deductibles, etc. have to be the same. This simplifies the decision process for enrollees by allowing them to focus on premiums and networks instead of having to sweat the co-pays for 80 different services.

Standardized plans were offered by some carriers on the federal ACA exchange a few years back, but it was pretty scattershot since they didn't have to. All carriers offering plans on HealthCare.Gov now have to include standardized plans at every metal level.

Related to this, new for 2024: HC.gov is limiting the total number of plans offered by each carrier to no more than 4 non-standardized plans per network type, metal level, service area & dental/vision benefit. This is being done in an attempt to reduce the mountain of confusing, virtually-identical plans offered on the exchange, although honestly that still allows for something like 24 plans per metal level per carrier. Still, it's a start; next year it will be reduced to 2 plans per option, which should help reduce the clutter.

So why was I hesitant to give standardized plans (aka "Easy Pricing") their own bullet point on this list? Because unlike CA & MA, the "Easy Pricing" plans which have to be included on HealthCare.Gov's offerings are in addition to the dozens (or even hundreds) of existing "non-standardized" plans already offered. This means that instead of simplifying the shopping experience, it could actually make it more confusing for some people.

All of this can get understandably confusing to the point that it becomes overwhelming. Fortunately...


12. THE NAVIGATOR PROGRAM IS BACK AT FULL STRENGTH, BABY!

Years ago, the Trump Administration effectively gutted both the ACA's marketing/outreach budget (slashing it down by 90%) as well as its "Navigator" program, causing dozens of organizations around the country devoted to helping ACA enrollees find their way through the confusing world of health insurance enrollment (as well as those needing guidance to get into Medicaid, CHIP and other healthcare programs).

Thankfully, those days are no more: The Biden Administration reversed this damage, quadrupling the number of ACA Navigators to over 1,500 and increasing the grant program to nearly $100 million this year.

The news is even better for underserved communities...those who need help the most:

Navigators serve an important role in connecting communities to health coverage, including communities that historically have experienced lower access to health coverage and greater disparities in health outcomes. Entities and individuals cannot serve as Navigators without receiving federal cooperative agreement funding, authorized in the Affordable Care Act, to perform Navigator duties.

To find authorized local help, search here. If you live in a state with its own ACA exchange you'll be redirected there.

Advertisement