a mother and child in black and white
Rachel Rosekind of El Cerrito is so concerned about being able to afford high health insurance premiums that she's thought about leaving the state. Courtesy of Rachel Rosekind

Overview:

With the looming end of pandemic-era credits, families on Covered California health plans are seeing their premiums go up drastically.

Some say they're considering dropping health insurance โ€” a move that local officials say could end up increasing health care costs for everyone.

This month many of the 58,000 Contra Costa County residents who get health insurance through Covered California are experiencing sticker shock when they see how high their premiums will be in 2026.

โ€œI have a knot in my stomach every single day,โ€ said Rachel Rosekind, 49, an El Cerrito mother whose monthly premium will go from $0 to $2,500 a month for her family of four. 

Rosekind, a self-employed freelancer, told Richmondside she was fortunate during the pandemic to qualify for a $0 premium for a Kaiser high-deductible plan through the stateโ€™s health insurance exchange. Open enrollment began Nov. 1 and ends Jan. 31, 2026.

However, when she went to re-enroll this year, she discovered that they’re now facing a daunting monthly payment.

โ€œWe could not afford $30,000 a year in insurance without going into medical debt,โ€ Rosekind said.

Self-employed freelancer Rachel Rosekind of El Cerrito is scrambling to figure out how her family can afford to pay $2,500 a month for health insurance. Courtesy of Rachel Rosekind

She and her family are rushing to finish all of their preventative care under their existing plan by the end of the year. She got a mammogram earlier this month and booked well visits for her children in December.

Rosekind is the sole income-earner for her family. She and her husband have two daughters, who are 13 and 10. 

The rising premiums have โ€œโ€Šmotivated me to get everything that I can done by the end of the year because it is such a big question mark around what we’re going to do,โ€ Rosekind said. 

Why are health premiums going up in 2026?

The Covered California health exchange is a marketplace where Californians can shop for health insurance. It was created to offer subsidized Obamacare health insurance plans. 

โ€œWe are unique among marketplaces,โ€ said Jessica Altman, executive director of Covered California. Covered California spends โ€œa lot of our time negotiating with our health plans setting higher bars for our health plans across different areas of work, trying to improve quality, equity, access.โ€

Jessica Altman, executive director of Covered California, spoke to the media at a press conference earlier this month to discuss the enrollment process and health insurance issues the state will face in 2026. Courtesy of Covered California

Of the 58,000 Contra Costa County residents who buy insurance through Covered California, more than 54,000 people qualify for lower premiums due to pandemic-era subsidies, known as Enhanced Premium Tax Credits.

Whether or not these credits will be continued were at the heart of the federal government shutdown and while the shutdown is over, the issue hasnโ€™t been resolved. It remains unclear if the Republicans and the Trump Administration will extend those credits

For context, the American Rescue Plan Act authorized, and the Inflation Reduction Act extended tax credits for Obamacare health insurance plans during the pandemic during, providing California with $2.5 billion in subsidies, Altman said.ย 

During the pandemic, the federal government also eliminated income-based restrictions for financial assistance. Previously, people making more than 400% of the federal poverty level, or $65,000 a year, did not qualify for a subsidized plan. But pandemic-era regulations removed that income cap. No one was expected to pay more than 8.5% of their income toward healthcare premiums, she said.

โ€œNationally, enrollment in marketplaces more than doubled since doing so,โ€ Altman said. In California, โ€œthis has not just improved affordability, but it [has] gotten more people covered and we’re at a record-low uninsured rate.โ€ 

However, both the tax credits and income qualifications are set to expire at the end of this year

โ€œWithout an extension of the Enhanced Premium Tax Credits, monthly premiums are projected to rise by 97% on average for more than 1.7 million Californians enrolled and receiving financial assistance through Covered California,โ€ according to a Covered California press release issued Nov. 13.

Families are scrambling to figure out if they can afford higher premiums

Every year, Guillermo Jimenez helps more than 100 Contra Costa County families apply for health insurance through the Covered California Health Exchange. 

This open enrollment season, the Richmond-based insurance broker has seen sharp increases in his clientsโ€™ monthly premiums. For 2026, monthly premiums have increased by as much as 150% from 2025 rates.

Not all his clients can afford to pay this. Two clients have already dropped their health insurance altogether. 

Richmond insurance broker Guillermo Jimenez says he expects a number of his clients will drop their health insurance in 2026 due to rising premiums. His own health premiums are more than doubling for his family of four. Courtesy of Richmond Main Street Initiative

โ€œThey will go [through] 2026 without coverage, even when they know they have to pay a penalty on the taxes,โ€ Jimenez told Richmondside, referring to an annual state penalty thatโ€™s assessed against residents who donโ€™t have health insurance.

Jimenez expects that more of his clients will drop health insurance.

Rosekind is facing that exact decision. She doesnโ€™t want to give up health insurance, but she is unsure what to cut out of her budget to make room for insurance premiums. 

โ€œWe’re currently in a little bit of a fight (or) flight mode,โ€ she said, โ€œbecause we don’t really know what we’re going to do.โ€

For example, to afford the new health insurance premiums, Rosekind is considering cutting back on the healthy food she buys.

โ€œWe eat organic food and healthy food, which is one of the reasons we stay really healthy and don’t use as many health services,โ€ she said. โ€œBut that might be a choice I would have to revisit to start to understand what the impacts are of rising health costs.โ€

She is even thinking of moving away from the Bay Area to a place with a lower cost of living. But it would be difficult to continue her work if she moves.

โ€œI do a lot of really county-specific work that requires a lot of local knowledge and local connections that I’ve built up over the course of many years,โ€ Rosekind said. 

Altman acknowledged this is facing many on an individual level.

โ€œIt is a tragic, sort of rolling of the dice and hoping that you will not need healthcare, that you will be healthy,โ€ Altman said. But the systemic repercussions of this are even greater. 

Having more uninsured people burdens the whole healthcare system

This graphic showing the demographic breakdown of uninsured Californians points out that the majority of them are Latino. Courtesy of Covered California

Contra Costa County Board of Supervisors District 1 Supervisor John Gioia, who represents Richmond, said that an increase in the uninsured population could cause delays in care, increase the demand on already inadequate emergency room space and drive up healthcare costs systemwide.

โ€œThis will impact everyone, not just families enrolled in Covered California or Medi-Cal,โ€ Gioia told Richmondside.

In addition to helping others buy health insurance from Covered California, Jimenez buys his health insurance through the marketplace. He said he can get health insurance through his employer, but it was less expensive for him to buy coverage for his family of four through the health exchange. 

Jimenezโ€™s Covered California premium will increase 124% โ€” from $205 to $461 monthly. Like Rosekind, he currently has a Kaiser plan, liking itโ€™s easy access (it has a Richmond campus) and low cost. He estimates that 95% of his clients also choose Kaiser plans for the same reason.

Kaiser is also concerned about the expiring tax credits.



It is a tragic, sort of rolling of the dice and hoping that you will not need healthcare, that you will be healthy.”

โ€” Jessica Altman, executive director of Covered California, on the repercussions of more people going uninsured

โ€œThe scheduled expiration of the enhanced premium tax credits could increase out-of-pocket costs for enrollees. As a result, many may face higher costs, and some may struggle to keep their coverage,โ€ said Kaiser Permanente in a written statement to Richmondside.

โ€œSome individuals who are healthier and have lower health needs will likely drop coverage, leaving higher-risk individuals in the market and contributing to future rate increases,โ€ the statement continued. 

Altman said that one of the implications of a larger uninsured population is reduction of services and closing of rural clinics.

โ€œโ€ŠWhen you get to that point-of-access issues, the hospital serves everyone, not just covered California enrollees. And so those impacts are felt across the community,โ€ she said.

This holiday season, Rosekind, Jimenez, and many others will be tightening their belts.

 โ€œโ€ŠI won’t buy anything for the family,โ€ Jimenez said about Christmas gifts. He hopes to make it up to them another way.

Congress not extending the tax credits โ€œโ€Šforces me into an impossible position for me and my family,โ€ said Rosekind, โ€œas I’m sure it does for countless families across the country who are facing the same issues right now.โ€

I am a practicing pediatrician and journalist based in the Bay Area who writes about health, science, and health equity. My work has been published in outlets such as ABC News, Kaiser Health News, and the San Francisco Chronicle. I've practiced clinically in Oakland and in Navajo Nation via the Indian Health Services.

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