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Affordable Care Act exchange

Q&A: Couple worries about soaring ACA health care premiums

August 11, 2025 By Liz Weston Leave a Comment

Dear Liz: My wife and I have health insurance through the Affordable Care Act exchange. With the enhanced tax credit ending this year, our insurance bill could go up from $500 a month to about $2,000 a month. Are there any good options or plans you can recommend? Would filing taxes separately help if my wife’s income made her eligible for MediCal?

Answer: ACA premiums for next year have not been set, although the cost of coverage is expected to rise sharply after Congress ended enhanced premium tax credits that made coverage more affordable. The Peterson Center on Healthcare and KFF estimate that out-of-pocket premium payments will increase about 75% on average next year because of this change. In addition, insurers are asking for premium increases to cover rising healthcare costs and tariffs may further add to the cost of drugs, medical equipment and supplies.

Shop carefully during open enrollment, and consider a plan with a higher deductible to help control costs. You also could talk to a tax pro about ways to reduce your income in 2026, if it will help you qualify for a premium subsidy.

Just filing your taxes differently won’t get your wife qualified for MediCal, which is California’s Medicaid health insurance program for low-income people. MediCal looks at household income when determining eligibility. Actually being separated might work, but discuss this option with an attorney and a tax pro since it will have many legal and tax implications.

Filed Under: Health Insurance, Medicare, Q&A Tagged With: ACA, ACA exchange, ACA health insurance, affordable care act, Affordable Care Act exchange, health insurance premiums, obamacare

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