The amount Texans will pay toward their ACA premiums will likely rise more steeply, with enhanced subsidies set to expire.
Affordable Care Act premiums are set to rise by 35.2%, on average, in Texas when open enrollment begins Nov. 1, a consequence of the insurance industry’s response to rising costs and the likelihood of expiring premium tax credits.
The sticker shock from this percent increase will be more pronounced in Texas than in all but five states. An average benchmark monthly premium — the premium for the second-lowest cost silver plan, which is used to calculate the size of tax credits — for a 40-year-old individual was $489, before tax credits are applied, for 2025; health policy organization KFF found that Texas insurers are charging ACA enrollees $661 for benchmark plans, on average, in 2026. That was the biggest percentage change since 2018.
Source: Gabby Birenbaum, The Texas Tribune
Photo Credit: Affordable Care Act assistance hours at Bibliotech, a digital public library in San Antonio, on Jan. 17, 2014. Jennifer Whitney for The Texas Tribune
The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.
