The passage of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), otherwise known as Obamacare, led to millions of Americans getting more access to health care coverage. And that health care access is more crucial than ever amid the coronavirus pandemic.
But the Supreme Court ruled in 2012 that a key component of Obamacare, the expansion of Medicaid in every state, was “unduly coercive” and left it up to the states to decide if they wanted to adopt that expansion.
Read more: How to file for Medicaid if you lose your job
That left a “coverage gap” of an estimated 4.8 million people uninsured in the 13 states without expanded Medicaid. And those Americans are particularly vulnerable if they’ve lost their employer-sponsored health care during the coronavirus pandemic and have such a low income that they cannot afford other types of coverage.
“That is a glitch we know well,” Jesse Cross-Call, a senior policy analyst at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, told Yahoo Finance. “They are in that position where for folks between the poverty line and 400% of the poverty line, they’re eligible for premium tax credits to purchase coverage. But folks with incomes below the poverty line, the vast majority of them are not eligible for Medicaid coverage or for premium tax credits.”
The coverage gap
The coverage gap mainly happens in states that haven’t expanded Medicaid, according to Robin Rudowitz, vice president for the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF).
“Where you have adults without dependent children, as well as parents above the current eligibility level for Medicaid and below poverty that have no other affordable options for coverage because they’re not eligible for subsidies in the marketplace and they’re not eligible for Medicaid,” she told Yahoo Finance.
The federal poverty levels are used to determine if someone is eligible for Medicaid or premium tax credits through the health care marketplace.
If someone’s income is between 100% and 400% of the federal poverty level, they qualify for premium tax credits that lower their monthly premium. If their income is below 138% of the FPL and their state has adopted the Medicaid expansion, they qualify for Medicaid. And if their income is below 100% of the federal poverty level, they likely won’t qualify for either income-based Medicaid or premium tax credits.
The premium tax credit is defined by the IRS as “a refundable tax credit designed to help eligible individuals and families with low or moderate income afford health insurance purchased through the health insurance marketplace.”
These credits, or subsidies, are determined by a sliding scale based on income. Those credits can be distributed in two ways — either through a tax credit when someone files their taxes for the year, or by having the marketplace pay the credit to the insurance company to lower the monthly premiums.