via the Minnesota Commerce Dept:

State Highlights Rising 2026 Health Insurance Rate Proposals

SAINT PAUL, MN: Minnesotans are facing unnecessarily higher health insurance rate hikes, and the blame lies with new Republican-led federal policy changes passed in Washington, says Minnesota Commerce Commissioner Grace Arnold.

“While HR1 has been dubbed the “One Big Beautiful Bill” by Republicans, many in our state will find nothing beautiful in health insurance premium increases they’ll experience for 2026,” Arnold said. “These will be the highest rate hikes since 2017 for individual and group markets.

Connecticut

originally posted 6/7/25

via the Connecticut Insurance Dept:

The Connecticut Insurance Department has posted the initial proposed health insurance rate filings for the 2026 individual and small group markets. There are 8 filings made by 7 health insurers for plans that currently cover approximately 224,000 people (158,000 individual and 66,000 small group).

Anthem has filed rates for both individual and small group plans that will be marketed through Access Health CT, the state-sponsored health insurance exchange. ConnectiCare Benefits Inc. (CBI) and ConnectiCare Insurance Company, Inc. have filed rates for the individual market on the exchange.

Before I continue, note that yes, I'm aware the 17.8% average shown below doesn't match the 22.9% average in the headline above. There's a reason for this which should be obvious if you read on:

The 2026 rate proposals for the individual and small group market are on average higher than last year:

Last week I noted that Colorado legislators passed (and Gov. Polis signed) legislation to scrape together up to $100 million in emergency funding to backfill perhaps 40% or so of the federal tax credits the state expects their ~225,000 subsidized enrollees to lose in 2026 when the enhanced IRA credits expire this December:

Via Colorado NewsLine:

...The Senate then approved House Bill 25B-1006, which would sell tax credits to bring in money for the Health Insurance Affordability Enterprise fund. That pays for programs to reduce individual insurance market premiums.

The bill aims to raise $100 million for that enterprise to soften the impact of the expiration of federal enhanced premium tax credits. Health insurance premiums for people who buy insurance on the individual market are expected to face an average of a 28% increase next year, with higher increases along the Western Slope.

Originally posted 5/28/25

via the Office of the Washington Insurance Commissioner:

OLYMPIA, Wash. — Fourteen health insurers have requested an average rate change of 21.2% for Washington state's 2026 Individual Health Insurance Market. Insurers base their requested rate changes on assumptions they make about the services their policyholders will use and the cost to deliver that care. The health plans and proposed rate changes are currently under review by the Office of the Insurance Commissioner.

Wellpoint Washington, Inc. is new to the market and plans to sell in Grays Harbor, King and Spokane counties. 

Back in June I ran an analysis to try and break out just how many Americans are likely to lose healthcare coverage in every Congressional District nationally under the recently-passed MAGA Murder Bill, officially known as H.R.1, the One Big Beautiful Bill.

As I showed at the time, while there's around 65% more people enrolled in Medicaid via ACA expansion in House districts held by Democrats (roughly 12.7 million in blue districts vs. 7.7 million in red districts), there's around 34% more ACA exchange enrollees in red districts (around ~13.9 million vs. ~10.4 million in blue districts).

I then went a step further and broke out the House districts into 10 tiers based on what percent of the vote Donald Trump received last year to take a more granular look and found that, shocker, there's no "winners" here; every district is a loser across the ideological spectrum.

originally posted 6/23/25

via the Illinois Dept. of Insurance:

Affordable Care Act (ACA) - Illinois Rate Filings

The chart below contains proposed rates for Plan Year 2026, which will be reviewed for compliance with federal and state requirements.

Please submit any comments on the initially proposed Plan Year 2026 rates to DOI.HealthRateReview@illinois.gov by July 11, 2025.

The good news is, the Illinois Insurance Dept. now provides a handy, simple table with the actual average rate changes as well as direct links to the actuarial memos & other filing forms for every carrier, which made it easy for me to plug in the effectuated enrollment & calculate the weighted average rate hikes for every carrier in both the individual and small group markets.

The bad news is, some of the actuarial memos themselves are heavily redacted, meaning I'm unable to see how much of the rate hikes are due to the IRA subsidies expiring, CSR payments being reinstated or Trump's tariffs.

This is just a quick update to my ongoing 2026 ACA indy market rate change tracking project.

As of this morning I've confirmed final/approved filings across 17 states. Across these state the weighted average year over year increase is 21.5%, down about 1.4 points from the preliminary increase of 23.0%.

I expect final filings for at least a dozen more states to come in over the next week or so, but unless a couple of large states like Texas or Florida have dramatic reductions in their rate increases along the lines of New York or Vermont, I'd still expect the overall national average to and up over 20%.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services just published updated enrollment data for Medicare, adding May 2025 to the data archive.

Whether the data posted since January 20, 2025 is accurate or not, I can't say for certain, but at least they're updating it...and so far, at least, I don't see anything in their monthly reports which is setting off any obvious red flags.

In any event, according to the latest report, as of May 2025:

via Pennie:

PENNSYLVANIA – August 26, 2025 – Pennie, Pennsylvania’s official health insurance marketplace, in coordination with Health Market Connect LLC (HMC), the newly appointed contractor of Pennie’s Assister Network, is taking a major step forward in connecting the uninsured with affordable health coverage. Pennie and HMC are launching a new network of regional organizations dedicated to providing localized support throughout the Commonwealth.

This innovative and community-centered model is designed to ensure that every Pennsylvanian, regardless of where they live, has access to trusted, in-person assistance when exploring their health coverage options. The appointed regional organizations will be responsible for hiring local Pennie-Certified Assisters who will serve as trusted guides throughout the enrollment process and conducting outreach to the uninsured.

via the National Academy for State Health Policy (published by Covered California):

Marketplace enrollees from across the country joined State-based Health Insurance Marketplace leaders and insurance experts at a virtual press conference today to discuss the immediate, real-world impacts of potentially losing their health insurance tax credits.

More than 24 million Americans enrolled in Health Insurance Marketplaces have come to rely on increased insurance affordability, thanks to enhanced premium tax credits (EPTCs) set to expire at the end of 2025. Without Congressional action by September 30, the loss of EPTCs is estimated to cause 4.2 million Americans to lose their health insurance. Marketplace consumers are expected to see an average 75 percent cost increase across states.

From small towns to the nation’s most populous state, enhanced premium tax credits are helping millions of Americans get the financial help they need to get connected to affordable health insurance.

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