Lawmakers weigh replacing Obamacare tax credits with health savings accounts

Lawmakers weigh replacing Obamacare tax credits with health savings accounts

Spread the love

With millions of Americans’ health insurance premiums projected to rise in 2026, due partially to enhanced Obamacare subsidies expiring, Republicans are eyeing health savings accounts as a solution.

“Both sides agree the cost of health care is too high. But sending billions of dollars to insurance companies while premiums continue to rise and the deficit continues to grow is not a solution,” Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, said in a Wednesday hearing.

Crapo reiterated the general view of Republicans that renewing the enhanced Obamacare Premium Tax Credits, which are set to revert to original pre-pandemic levels on Dec. 31, will do nothing to address rising health care costs.

The taxpayer-funded PTC – established under the Affordable Care Act and temporarily expanded during the COVID-19 pandemic – is a subsidy that goes directly to health insurance companies, which use it to lower ACA marketplace enrollees’ monthly premiums.

Republicans argue the subsidies benefit insurers over patients, and that the expansion of the PTC led to increased fraud and inflated premiums.

President of Paragon Health Institute Brian Blase, whom Republicans called in as a witness, called the subsidies “ill-designed and inflationary.”

“More subsidies lock in a high-cost system and permit large insurers and hospital systems to remain inefficient,” Blase told lawmakers. “When enrollees pay only a small slice of the premium, or no premium at all, insurers face almost no price discipline. Insurers can raise premiums knowing that taxpayers will absorb almost all of the increase.”

He said the very structure of the subsidies – particularly with the COVID-19 additions that included 100% coverage of some enrollees’ monthly premiums and lifted the subsidy cap at four times the Federal Poverty Level – incentivize misreporting and fraud.

The Paragon Institute estimates that the number of ineligible enrollees in fully subsidized health insurance plans rose from an estimated 5 million to 6.4 million from 2024 to 2025, likely costing taxpayers $27 billion in 2025 alone.

“Extending temporary emergency subsidies would deepen a broken system instead of fixing it,” Blase said. “The enhanced subsidies have supercharged fraud, benefitted insurers more than patients, and increased taxpayer exposure.”

Instead of extending the enhanced PTC, Congress should expand health savings accounts (HSA) and allow for more flexible options by relaxing deductible thresholds, he said.

Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., has pushed for lawmakers to explore replacing the PTC credits, which go directly to insurers, with HSAs or flexible savings accounts (FSA) that would give the money directly to patients.

He pointed out that under ACA’s medical loss ratio, insurance companies are allowed to use up to 20% of the subsidies for overhead expenses and profit, rather than towards direct medical care.

“Under the status quo that my colleagues are pushing, 20% is going to the insurance company for overhead and for profit – 80% for the health care that the insurance company believes that the patient needs,” Cassidy, a physician, said. “And under what we’re proposing, is that 100% of this goes to a patient-driven account – which she can use for a physician or dentist or drugs – 100% goes.”

If patients and families received the money directly, they could either subsidize the premiums of whatever insurance plan they choose, or use it to pay for health care services directly, depending on what form the savings accounts take.

Either way, this would increase patient choice and lower health insurance plan costs by driving competition among insurers in the marketplace, Cassidy argued.

But Democratic lawmakers, who shut down the federal government for 43 days over demands that the enhanced subsidies be renewed, say that allowing the temporary expansion of the subsidies to expire will force millions off their health insurance. It could also drive healthy people to leave the marketplace, spiking premiums for those remaining in the pool.

Jason Levitis from Urban Institute, whom committee Democrats tapped as a witness in the hearing, said that Congress should extend the enhanced PTC regardless of any other health care reforms.

“It’s certainly worth considering longer-term options to lower health care costs. Unfortunately, the calendar has overtaken the opportunity to implement such changes for 2026,” he said. “[P]utting in a place a new policy would require months or years of implementation time…At this point, the only feasible option is a clean extension of the existing enhancements.”

Cassidy responded that Republicans’ budget reconciliation bill has already established under law that people on Bronze plans are eligible for HSAs.

“I am asking that we move from our entrenched positions. Right now, it’s like trench warfare,” Cassidy said. “If a Republican proposes it, reflexively Democrats oppose, and vice versa.”

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Screenshot 2026-04-25 at 8.34.35 AM

Lincoln-Way D210 Approves $483,000 Agreement with Illinois Bone and Joint Institute, Adds Seventh Athletic Trainer

Lincoln-Way Community High School District 210 Meeting | April 16, 2026 Article Summary: The Board of Education approved a new three-year, $483,000 contract with the Illinois Bone and Joint Institute...
Candidates vie for Georgia's 10th District post

Candidates vie for Georgia’s 10th District post

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Democrat and Republican candidates are clamoring to fill an open seat in Georgia’s 10th Congressional District. The district, which stretches across central-east Georgia, is open...
Senate candidates debate healthcare, abortion, stocks

Senate candidates debate healthcare, abortion, stocks

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Republican candidates running for U.S. Senate in Georgia debated healthcare policies, access to abortion and congressional stock trading on Sunday. The Atlanta Press Club hosted...
Screenshot 2026-05-09 at 4.13.15 PM

Frankfort Approves Pavlov Media Fiber Optic Hub Lease in Exchange for Municipal Internet Service

Frankfort Village Board Meeting | April 20, 2026 Article Summary: The Village entered into a 10-year lease agreement allowing Pavlov Media to construct a fiber optic hub on municipal property,...

Everyday Economics: Housing sets the stage, but the Fed, PCE are the main event

By Orphe DivounguyThe Center Square This week begins with housing, but the real macro story comes later: the Federal Reserve chair’s press conference and the Personal Consumption Expenditures inflation report....
DOJ: Shooting suspect targeted Trump admin officials

DOJ: Shooting suspect targeted Trump admin officials

By Dan McCaleb and Jon StyfThe Center Square The California man accused of storming security at Saturday night's White House Correspondents’ Dinner and shooting a Secret Service officer before being...
23 state AGs demand top ratings agencies explain ESG-driven downgrades

23 state AGs demand top ratings agencies explain ESG-driven downgrades

By Tate MillerThe Center Square Nearly two dozen state attorneys general are asking the three top ratings agencies to explain their “ESG-driven” downgrades of fossil-fuel companies. In a letter to...
Bacon says Pentagon raided housing fund for troop bonuses, demands repayment

Bacon says Pentagon raided housing fund for troop bonuses, demands repayment

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square A retiring Republican congressman plans to confront Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth this week over how $2.6 billion appropriated by Congress for military housing assistance was...
Will County Board Graphic.02

Will County Passes Comprehensive Adult Entertainment Ordinance

Will County Board Meeting | April 16, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Board passed Ordinance 26-133, enacting Chapter 119 of the Business Regulations to establish rigorous licensing, operational, and...
Correspondents' dinner attacker detained with multiple weapons

Correspondents’ dinner attacker detained with multiple weapons

By Jon StyfThe Center Square A California man charged security with multiple weapons at a magnetometer screening area outside the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on Saturday night before he shot...
BREAKING: Trump, cabinet OK after shots fired at White House Correspondents dinner

BREAKING: Trump, cabinet OK after shots fired at White House Correspondents dinner

By Dan McCalebThe Center Square President Donald Trump, First Lady Melania Trump, and members of Trump's cabinet are OK after being rushed out of the White House Correspondents' Association dinner...
frankfort township graphic

Frankfort Township Board Approves Highway Salt Purchase, Restructures Financial Signers

Frankfort Township Board Meeting | March 9, 2026 Article Summary: The Frankfort Township Board unanimously approved a resolution updating its Illinois Fund authorized signers and greenlit the Highway Department's 2026-2027 salt...
U.S. House Republicans face jam-packed week ahead

U.S. House Republicans face jam-packed week ahead

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square U.S. House Republicans face a daunting legislative to-do list for the week ahead. The Department of Homeland Security has been shut down for more than...
Trump again scraps peace talks with Iran

Trump again scraps peace talks with Iran

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump called off a planned diplomatic mission to Pakistan on Saturday, refusing to send his team on what he described as an unproductive...
U.S. Supreme Court to hear TPS for Haiti, Syria Wednesday

U.S. Supreme Court to hear TPS for Haiti, Syria Wednesday

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments on Wednesday in two cases that could determine the temporary protected status for Haitian and Syrian immigrants. Justices...