📣 Final 2026 #ACA Open Enrollment Report Part 6: Household Income (under 138% FPL) acasignups.net/2026_oep/fin...

Final 2026 Open Enrollment Rep...
Final 2026 Open Enrollment Report: Household Income (

Next, we come to HOUSEHOLD INCOME BRACKETS. This is, of course, extremely important since household income is one of the most critical factors in calculating how much financial assistance enrollees receive (or if they're eligible for Advance Premium Tax Credits (ATPC) at all). Since there's so many income bracket columns and there's a lot to delve into for many of them, I've broken the full spreadsheet out into several sections/posts. The first focuses on exchange enrollees who earn less than 138% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL). This is a critical threshold because it's the cut-off point for ACA Medicaid expansion eligibility in the 40 states (+DC) which have expanded the program. There's actually two distinct populations here: Enrollees who earn less than 100% FPL and those who earn between 100 - 138% FPL. ACA enrollees earning under 100% FPL make up a pretty small portion of total ACA exchange enrollment for several reasons. The first, of course, is because most states have expanded Medicaid out to the 138% FPL threshold; the second is that even in non-expansion states, federal tax credits are generally only available to enrollees who earn more than 100% FPL.

ACA Signups
Enrollment below the poverty level fell off a cliff via a particularly cruel Trump/GOP policy change. Until 2026, *documented* immigrants (those who followed all the rules/etc) who weren't eligible for Medicaid because they hadn't lived here for 5 years were eligible for ACA tax credits instead.
Unfortunately, via the #BigUglyBill and #TrumpRegime policy changes, that population is no longer eligible. Result: #ACA exchange enrollment of those who earn less than 100% FPL (just $15,650/yr if you're single) plummeted by 45%, w/over 240,000 losing coverage.
GEORGIA has been hit especially hard by this relative to their population: Last year over 150,000 Georgians earning less than 100% FPL were enrolled in ACA exchange coverage. This year that's been cut by more than 77,000.