S-2448-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Mark Kelly (D-AZ)
What it does
This bill would amend the TRICARE Young Adult Program (TYA) by removing an eligibility restriction that currently limits who qualifies as a covered dependent. It would also eliminate the separate premium that young adult dependents are currently required to pay to enroll in TYA. Together, these changes would broaden access to military health coverage for young adult children of service members and veterans at no direct premium cost to the enrollee.
Who benefits
Young adult children (generally ages 21–26) of active-duty service members, National Guard and Reserve members, and military retirees who were previously ineligible under the removed restriction or who were deterred by the separate premium cost. Military families broadly, who would face less financial pressure to maintain coverage for adult children. Lower-income military families in particular, for whom the premium elimination would have the greatest relative impact.
Who is hurt
The Department of Defense (DoD) and federal taxpayers would absorb the cost of covering additional enrollees and eliminating premium revenue that currently offsets program costs. Private health insurers may lose some young adult customers who shift to TYA. Military families whose premiums or cost-sharing could theoretically increase if DoD adjusts other TRICARE cost structures to offset new expenses.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that young adult dependents of military families face the same coverage gaps as their civilian peers, yet current TYA eligibility restrictions and premium requirements create barriers that do not exist in comparable civilian employer-sponsored plans. They contend that eliminating these barriers honors the commitment made to military families and brings TYA in line with the Affordable Care Act's dependent coverage standard, which allows young adults to remain on a parent's plan through age 26 at no separate premium in the civilian sector.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that eliminating the TYA premium shifts costs entirely onto DoD and taxpayers without a clear offset, adding to the already substantial and growing expense of military healthcare — which the Congressional Budget Office has previously identified as a major driver of long-term defense spending growth. They contend that the existing premium structure appropriately requires enrollees to share in the cost of coverage, and that removing it sets a precedent for further cost-shifting that could strain the overall TRICARE system for all beneficiaries.