Harrisburg, PA – Today, the Pennsylvania Insurance Department (PID) released the final Affordable Care Act (ACA) health insurance rates for 2026. New federal rules on enrollment put in place by the Republican budget bill and Congress’s failure to extend enhanced premium tax credits (EPTCs) before Open Enrollment that begins November 1 has resulted in significant price increases for Pennsylvanians. Without swift action in Washington, Pennsylvania families will face significant increases on their insurance premiums for plan year 2026.
PID and Pennie, the state’s official health insurance marketplace, have repeatedly urged Congress to extend EPTCs and have sent multiple letters outlining the consequences of inaction on families throughout the Commonwealth. For example, a 60-year-old married couple in York County with $82,000 in annual income will see their yearly premium skyrocket from $7,032 to $35,712 per year. Congress can act now to extend the EPTCs and immediately reduce insurance rates by three to five percent. PID and Pennie stand ready to update insurance rates if Congress chooses to extend the EPTCs, but time is running out.
“These increases are higher than in recent years, even after PID’s strong rate review process blocked a number of excessive increases that insurers requested. Soon, Pennsylvanians who purchase their own coverage will be receiving renewal letters from their insurers and from Pennie that will contain prices that will be shocking. Congress still has the ability to act to protect Pennsylvania families, as well families across the country,” said Pennsylvania Insurance Commissioner Michael Humphreys. “Now, more than ever, we encourage consumers to shop when Open Enrollment begins this November.”
Overall premiums will rise in both the individual market (for people who purchase coverage on their own) and the small group market (for small businesses). The rate adjustments reflect ongoing uncertainty at the federal level along with an increase in medical and drug cost trends and utilization.
The spikes in premium rates are being seen across the country. In addition to new federal regulations and Congress’ failure to extend EPTCs, Rising health care costs, increasing cost and use of prescription drugs – as well as the number of individuals using more services and higher-cost care than insurers originally expected – have contributed to these nationwide premium increases.
PID’s Rate Approval Process
During the rate review process, PID carefully reviewed rate requests submitted by health insurance companies to confirm that their assumptions used to determine the premiums are reasonable and properly supported. Through the rate review process, PID denied $50.1 million in unjustified insurance premium increases.
Approved Rates
Pennsylvanians who buy their own coverage will see an average aggregate weighted rate increase of 21.5% in the individual market. These increases will vary significantly based on plan type, region, and individual circumstances
During the rate review process, PID worked directly with insurers to correct their projections when the data didn’t match current conditions. PID reduced the small group average increase to 12.7 percent, down from initial requests that averaged 13.1%.
In some cases, insurers offering coverage in the individual market had to correct their rate filings to account for higher medical prescription drug costs and worsening health trends (morbidity) in their rating area due to new federal regulations and Congressional inaction on EPTCs.
Specifically, in the individual market:
- Ambetter Health of Pennsylvania, Inc.: Requested rate increase of 30.1%; approved rate 37.8% due to worsening morbidity;
- Capital Advantage Assurance Company: Requested rate increase of 26.0%; approved rate 24.6%;
- Geisinger Health Plan: Requested rate increase of 14.1%; approved rate 11.6%;
- Geisinger Quality Options: Requested rate increase of 16.2%; approved rate 13.8%;
- Health Partners Plans, Inc.: Requested rate increase of 7.3%; approved rate 16.7% due to worsening morbidity and medical/drug trends;
- Highmark, Inc.: Requested rate increase of 17.2%; approved rate 17.7%;
- Highmark Benefits Group: Requested rate increase of 17.9%; approved rate 18.4%;
- Highmark Coverage Advantage: Requested rate increase of 14.1%; approved rate 14.5%;
- Keystone Health Plan Central: Requested rate increase of 27.9%; approved rate 22.4%;
- Keystone Health Plan East: Requested rate increase of 23.5%; approved rate 22.0%;
- Oscar Health Plan of PA: Requested rate increase of 21.6%; approved rate 23.1%;
- Partners Insurance Company, Inc.: Requested rate decrease of 10.1%; approved rate -10.1%;
- QCC Insurance Company: Requested rate increase of 16.7%; approved rate 15.2%;
- UPMC Health Options, Inc.: Requested rate increase of 11.7%; approved rate 20.2% due to worsening morbidity and federal regulatory changes; and,
- UPMC Health Plan, Inc.: Requested rate increase of 16.3%; approved rate 24.8% due to worsening morbidity and federal regulatory changes.
What this means for Pennsylvanians
Despite rising premiums, Pennie will continue to offer a range of coverage options, along with financial assistance for those who qualify. No two circumstances are alike. One Pennsylvanian may see premiums decrease, while another may see an increase – even if both purchase coverage through Pennie. Factors such as age, location, household income, family size, and market competition all affect what someone pays and what level of subsidy they may receive.
"At Pennie, we’ve heard from Pennsylvanians in every county about how essential high quality, affordable health coverage is both for life-saving care and protection from medical bankruptcy. We know that the end of the enhanced premium tax credits will put many across Pennsylvania in extremely difficult positions,” said Devon Trolley, Executive Director of Pennie. “Throughout these changes, Pennie will be here to provide up-to-date information and support about plan costs and options for 2026. All current Pennie enrollees should update their information and review their 2026 plan options during Pennie’s Open Enrollment Period, starting this November."
Most Pennsylvanians will continue to find the lowest prices and financial savings through Pennie, the state’s official health insurance marketplace. Only Pennie offers financial assistance to help lower monthly premiums and out-of-pocket costs.
All plans on Pennie include important consumer protections:
- Coverage for pre-existing conditions;
- Essential health benefits like preventive care, prescriptions, and hospital visits;
- Limits on what you pay each year and protection against emergency care cost; and,
- Multiple plan levels (bronze, silver, gold, platinum) and network types (HMO, EPO, PPO) with different coverage options.
Pennie's upcoming Open Enrollment period is the only time of year to enroll in individual and family health coverage for 2026. Open Enrollment typically runs from November 1 to December 15 for coverage that starts on January 1, 2026. Outside of Open Enrollment, only individuals with life changes – such as losing coverage from Medicaid and family events – can enroll.
Pennie offers free help by phone and in-person across the state. Visit pennie.com or call 1-844-844-8040 for assistance.
Consumers with questions or complaints about their health insurance can visit pa.gov/consumer or call 1-866-PA-COMPLAINT (1-866-722-6675).
Visit PID's website for more details about the ACA rate filings.