NEW YORK — The number of Americans signing up for Affordable Care Act health insurance for 2026 is moderately higher than it was at a similar time last year, initial new federal data shows, even as subsidies set to expire at the end of 2025 will make the coverage more expensive for many.
Seen at face value, the data from the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services seems to defy predictions that many Americans facing pricier plans would drop out of marketplace coverage altogether next year. But experts caution that the numbers are an incomplete snapshot of total enrollment, which could still show a decline by the end of the open enrollment period.
''Overall, it's just too early to know what any of this means,'' said Jason Levitis, a senior fellow in the health policy division at the Urban Institute.
The data released Friday shows that by day 29 of the window for Americans to shop for Affordable Care Act plans this year, nearly 5.8 million people had picked one. That's nearly 400,000 more enrollments than by day 30 of the open enrollment period last year.
Meanwhile, this year's enrollment numbers are about 1.5 million lower than the 7.3 million or so people who had signed up 32 days into the open enrollment period two years ago, showing there is some fluctuation year to year in when people sign up for coverage.
In most states, for Americans who want coverage to start Jan. 1, the window to shop for Affordable Care Act coverage began Nov. 1 and ends Dec. 15. People who want their coverage to start later can continue to select plans through Jan. 15.
Five years ago, about 12 million people selected an Affordable Care Act plan. Enhanced tax credits were introduced the following year and four years later enrollment had doubled to over 24 million. Today, millions of people benefit from the enhanced subsidies — and if they expire as expected in the new year, the average person who receives a subsidy will see their annual premiums more than double, according to health care research nonprofit KFF.
The tax credits have been at the heart of fierce discussions in Congress in recent weeks, with Democrats insisting that they be extended to help Americans with rising health costs. The Senate is expected to vote this week on a Democratic proposal to extend the subsidies without major changes. But Republicans in charge have already rejected that proposal, and hopes for any extension are diminishing with many Republicans opposed.