Health & Fitness

69,000 Drop NJ Marketplace Health Plans After Enrolling

"We are seeing the heartbreaking consequences of the federal government's failure to extend tax credits for tens of thousands."

April 23, 2026

Nearly 69,000 New Jerseyans dropped health insurance plans since obtaining them on the state marketplace in January in a flight driven by the expiration of federal subsidies that allowed many to obtain coverage for low prices, state regulators announced Tuesday.

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Since open enrollment on Get Covered New Jersey, the state’s marketplace, closed on Jan. 31, 68,830 enrollees who initially obtained exchange-traded health plans for 2026 have dropped their coverage, a 14% decline, and many of those who remained have moved to cheaper plans with higher out-of-pocket costs, according to the Department of Banking and Insurance.

“We are seeing the heartbreaking consequences of the federal government’s failure to extend the enhanced premium tax credits for tens of thousands across the Garden State,” said acting Banking and Insurance Commissioner Susan Ochs. “These individuals and families will now be at risk of forgoing important preventative care and left to rely on costly emergency services that they may not be able to afford.”

Find out what's happening in Across New Jerseyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The decline comes after congressional Republicans and the Trump administration declined to extend pandemic-era enhanced subsidies that allowed many to afford exchange-traded health plans.

Democrats pushed for the funding to be extended, but the two sides reached an impasse, prompting what was then the longest full federal government shutdown in U.S. History. The current shutdown — a partial shutdown affecting the Department of Homeland Security — is the third under Trump to become the longest in history.

Before the subsidies expired, 48% of enrollees who received financial assistance to obtain health insurance paid less than $10 a month for coverage, compared to 11% in the current plan year, the department said.

Many of the 440,362 who were enrolled in New Jersey exchange-traded plans on April 15 had downgraded their coverage, according to the department. The share of individuals enrolled in silver-level plans fell from 83% in 2025 to 68% this year, while enrollment in bronze plans nearly doubled, from 16% to 31%.

“Across the board, we are seeing costs skyrocket for New Jersey families as a direct result of the federal government’s mismanagement,” said Gov. Mikie Sherrill. “While New Jersey is committed to addressing health care costs, Washington has chosen to drive up health insurance prices.”

Permanent tax credits passed as part of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act under President Barack Obama are still available for taxpayers with household incomes not greater than 400% of the federal poverty line. That’s $62,600 for an individual or $128,600 for a family of four in 2026.

New Jersey offers subsidies for households whose incomes do not exceed 600% of the federal poverty line. Those cutoffs are $93,900 for an individual or $192,900 for a four-person household in 2026.


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