Lee B Posted 23 hours ago Report Posted 23 hours ago If you have clients who buy their health insurance through one of the Marketplace Exchanges there are a number of changes. The annual enrollment window has been shortened by one month No more automatic re-enrollment - everyone will have to resubmit all of their documentation every year. The Premium Tax Credit repayment cap will expire at the end of this year. The Enhanced Premium Tax Credit also expires at the end of this year. So far Congress has not renewed the large Premium Tax Subsidies paid to Health Insurance Companies to hold down the health insurance premiums of health insurance offered on the Marketplace Exchanges. 3 Quote
kathyc2 Posted 22 hours ago Report Posted 22 hours ago Yep. I pointed that out months ago. No more subsidies for anyone over 400% FLP. Can't repeal it outright, so death by 1000 cuts. Also not being talked about is clean energy credits end 9/30/25 and residential energy credits end 12/31/25. 1 3 Quote
Abby Normal Posted 22 hours ago Report Posted 22 hours ago 54 minutes ago, Lee B said: If you have clients who buy their health insurance through one of the Marketplace Exchanges there are a number of changes. The annual enrollment window has been shortened by one month No more automatic re-enrollment - everyone will have to resubmit all of their documentation every year. The Premium Tax Credit repayment cap will expire at the end of this year. The Enhanced Premium Tax Credit also expires at the end of this year. So far Congress has not renewed the large Premium Tax Subsidies paid to Health Insurance Companies to hold down the health insurance premiums of health insurance offered on the Marketplace Exchanges. This is one HUGE step backwards. I was talking to a friend, with a family of 4 paying $400/month for a great plan. Now, she'll pay more for a less great plan, if she can even afford it all. She was opposed to Obamacare when it started but now she loves it. Or, should I say, loved it. A lot of people are going to feel a lot of pain. 4 1 Quote
Lee B Posted 17 hours ago Author Report Posted 17 hours ago Medical debt is already one of the leading causes of personal bankruptcy 1 3 Quote
BulldogTom Posted 14 hours ago Report Posted 14 hours ago If my memory serves correctly, those enhancements to the program by the previous administration were supposed to be temporary because of the pandemic. So now there is no more pandemic, and we go back to normal Obamacare, which a lot of folks forgot what it was like. Tom Longview, TX Quote
TexTaxToo Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago More details here: https://www.kff.org/policy-watch/how-will-the-2025-budget-reconciliation-affect-the-aca-medicaid-and-the-uninsured-rate/ 2 2 Quote
kathyc2 Posted 3 hours ago Report Posted 3 hours ago 10 hours ago, BulldogTom said: So now there is no more pandemic, and we go back to normal Obamacare, which a lot of folks forgot what it was like. I remember before ACA insurance premiums were 15% of my gross income. I remember rates increasing on average 10% a year. I remember calculating that at some point I wouldn't be able to continue paying them without taking money from retirement accounts. I remember researching putting assets in a trust so a prolonged hospital stay wouldn't wipe me out if I could no longer afford payments. So, instead of saying people should remember what "normal" ACA is, how about remembering what some of us went through before it was enacted? Would you like me to remember back further when my Dad had cancer and the small company Mom worked for changed carriers and they refused to enroll him? 4 Quote
Lee B Posted 2 hours ago Author Report Posted 2 hours ago Ah, yes back to corporate healthcare focused on maximizing the profits of Insurance companies and pharmacy benefit managers. Back to rural hospitals and local pharmacies going out of business. Back to the U S A with the highest per person healthcare costs in the world. 1 Quote
Abby Normal Posted 2 hours ago Report Posted 2 hours ago 11 hours ago, BulldogTom said: we go back to normal Obamacare If only that were the case. It goes much further both disqualifying some completely, making it harder and more burdensome to enroll and making it much more expensive. If this doesn't lead to universal healthcare, then there's no hope for us. 3 Quote
kathyc2 Posted 2 hours ago Report Posted 2 hours ago From IRS 2022 published tax return data: 7.9M returns had PTC for a total cost of 54B which works out to 6,853 per return 594K returns with AGI over 1M, had a QBI deduction of 95B. Assuming a 35% rate, that's 33.3B of tax or 55,992 per return. Millionaires did fine before QBI. But they were the ones that needed "help". 2 Quote
Lee B Posted 2 hours ago Author Report Posted 2 hours ago 10 minutes ago, Abby Normal said: If only that were the case. It goes much further both disqualifying some completely, making it harder and more burdensome to enroll and making it much more expensive. If this doesn't lead to universal healthcare, then there's no hope for us. Perhaps someday Billionaires will realize that they are standing on our shoulders 1 1 Quote
mcb39 Posted 1 hour ago Report Posted 1 hour ago 1 hour ago, kathyc2 said: I remember before ACA insurance premiums were 15% of my gross income. I remember rates increasing on average 10% a year. I remember calculating that at some point I wouldn't be able to continue paying them without taking money from retirement accounts. I remember researching putting assets in a trust so a prolonged hospital stay wouldn't wipe me out if I could no longer afford payments. So, instead of saying people should remember what "normal" ACA is, how about remembering what some of us went through before it was enacted? Would you like me to remember back further when my Dad had cancer and the small company Mom worked for changed carriers and they refused to enroll him? Excruciating for self=employed people then. I remember deductibles that kept climbing right along with premiums. We had to pay in order to protect what we had and never collected any benefits. I worked a part-time job just to pay for health insurance premiums and the deductible was always higher than the bill. 1 Quote
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