S-2556-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance. (text: CR S4908)
Sponsored by Charles Schumer (D-NY)
What it does
This bill would permanently extend expanded premium tax credits that help people pay for health insurance purchased through the ACA marketplaces — credits that are currently set to expire after 2025. It would eliminate the income cap (previously 400% of the federal poverty level) that restricted who could qualify, and would lower the percentage of income enrollees must contribute toward premiums. The bill would also repeal several Medicaid, Medicare, and health-related tax provisions enacted by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, including new eligibility verification requirements, a shortened window for retroactive Medicaid coverage, and premium tax credit verification requirements.
Who benefits
Current marketplace enrollees who receive enhanced premium tax credits and would lose them after 2025 without this bill — estimated at over 20 million people. Middle- and higher-income individuals and families above 400% of the federal poverty level who became newly eligible under the temporary expansion. Lower-income enrollees who pay reduced premiums under the lowered applicable percentages. Individuals who gained or retained Medicaid coverage under the retroactive coverage window. Health insurers and hospitals that benefit from higher enrollment and reduced uncompensated care. States that administer Medicaid and would face fewer federal verification mandates.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers broadly, as permanently extending the credits would increase federal spending relative to current law after 2025. Higher-income households who pay more in taxes to fund the expanded credits. Fiscal conservatives and deficit-reduction advocates who supported the OBBBA provisions being repealed. Private insurers or employers who may face competitive pressure from more generous subsidized marketplace plans. Taxpayers who supported the OBBBA's verification requirements as a check on improper payments.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the expanded premium tax credits have produced record-high ACA marketplace enrollment — over 24 million people in 2024 — and that allowing them to expire would cause millions to lose coverage or face sharply higher premiums. They contend that the OBBBA provisions being repealed, including shortened retroactive Medicaid windows and new verification requirements, would create administrative barriers that disproportionately cause eligible low-income individuals to lose coverage they are legally entitled to, increasing uncompensated care costs borne by hospitals and state governments.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that permanently extending the enhanced credits without offsetting revenue adds hundreds of billions of dollars to the federal deficit, citing CBO estimates that the temporary extension alone costs over $300 billion over ten years. They contend that the OBBBA verification provisions being repealed are necessary safeguards against improper payments and that repealing them removes accountability measures designed to ensure that only eligible individuals receive federally subsidized benefits — a concern supported by federal audits documenting significant improper payment rates in ACA subsidy programs.