What’s the Status of Enhanced Premium Tax Credits and Keeping Texans Insured?

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AUSTIN, Texas (Jan. 27, 2026) – It feels a bit like running to stand still as America’s health remains in limbo.

After critical federal tax credit subsidies expired at the end of 2025, perhaps around 1 million Texans have lost aid that helped make health insurance premiums financially within their reach. Without the subsidies, access to their physician’s care might be out of reach as well.

If Congress does not act soon to reinstate these enhanced premium tax credits, the loss of this targeted relief – which helps working Texans buy private insurance on the Affordable Care Act Marketplace – will hit our state harder than anywhere else in the country.

Going back to the drawing board, lawmakers must realize what’s at stake by not firming up a deal that revives these credits: higher health care costs, poorer health outcomes, and further destabilization of our health system.

Alternative ideas, like shifting dollars to health savings accounts, should be highly scrutinized for unintended consequences. Any erosion of individual coverage ultimately increases health care costs for all.

The enhanced credits are a lifeline for working Texas families. Stable coverage means more consistent access to their doctors and preventive care, healthier Texans, and healthier communities.

But it’s more than that. Renewing the credits is also the classically conservative, fiscally responsible thing to do.

The latest data show more than 4 million Texans are insured through ACA Marketplace plans. Before the enhanced premium tax credits, only a little over 1 million Texans could afford this coverage. These tax credits led to millions more Texans gaining affordable insurance.

It was estimated last year that if the credits were to lapse, average out-of-pocket premium payments will spike by an estimated 115% in Texas, compared to about 75% nationally. The steepest hikes hit older adults and middle-income families who do not qualify for traditional assistance.

For a typical Texas couple in their early 60s earning about $85,000 per year, their monthly premium bills would roughly rise by more than $18,000 a year. This is an impossible price tag that few families can absorb.

Once they become uninsured, they delay preventive care; they put off seeing their doctor and getting routine screenings. They might wind up in the hospital emergency department in a health crisis.

In addition to the patient suffering, everyone across the health care system loses.

More uncompensated care doesn’t vanish. Hospitals and physicians stretch to provide free care. Costs shift across the system – ultimately straining hospitals, increasing insurance premiums for employers, and cutting already meager payments for struggling physician practices.

These costs also lead to higher local tax burdens on businesses and families to keep hospital doors open. Texas hospitals already absorb billions of dollars in uncompensated care each year. Not renewing the enhanced credits will push those costs up for everyone.

The consequences will be felt in every community. Rural and border counties have the state’s highest rates of Marketplace enrollment and will face steep coverage losses. Texas’ five largest counties – Travis, Harris, Dallas, Tarrant and Bexar – could collectively see 350,000 or more newly uninsured.

This should not be a partisan fight. The credits help families buy private plans they choose, with networks they prefer. This is a market-based solution, not government-run coverage.

Texas health care leaders urge Congress to do three simple things: extend enhanced premium tax credits, keep program integrity and enrollment simple, and prioritize technical assistance for rural and border communities.

Some will argue that Congress cannot afford this. But Texans cannot afford the alternative. Without action, premiums spike for families who made no new choices. The people most likely to be hurt are the ones who embraced private coverage when it finally became affordable.

Texas families, employers, and communities are counting on Congress to extend this tax relief to keep health coverage affordable and Texans insured and healthy.

John Hawkins is President & CEO of the Texas Hospital Association. Jamie Dudensing is President & CEO of the Texas Association of Health Plans. Michael J. Darrouzet is CEO of the Texas Medical Association.

Note: An earlier version of this opinion piece originally ran in the Dec. 5, 2025, Austin American-Statesman.