Health insurance premiums under the Affordable Care Act are poised for sharp increases in 2026, with experts highlighting three principal forces behind the spike: guaranteed coverage, community-rating rules and mandated service benefits.
First, the law’s guaranteed-issue provision requires insurers to cover all applicants regardless of health status, meaning older and higher-risk individuals enter the market alongside healthier ones—raising costs across the board.
Second, the community-rating rule limits how much insurers can charge older enrollees compared to younger ones, effectively forcing premiums for younger, healthier people higher to compensate—functioning as a built-in price-floor system.
Third, the law demands that all plans include a wide array of “essential health benefits,” such as mental health services and prescription drug coverage, whether or not consumers would opt for them otherwise—adding to the base cost of each plan.
As these structural features combine with other pressures—like rising medical costs and the potential expiration of expanded federal subsidies—the result is a heavier premium burden for many Americans shopping in the marketplace.
