Obamacare customers are facing an average 7.5 percent price increase for a key benchmark health plan next year; But the average rate hikes will vary dramatically from state to state
But the figures will vary widely from state to state.
Obamacare
customers are facing an average 7.5 percent price increase for a key
benchmark health plan next year, according to limited data the Obama
administration released just days before the start of a challenging
enrollment season.
But the average rate hikes will vary
dramatically from state to state — skyrocketing more than 30 percent in
Alaska, Montana and Oklahoma while dropping 12.6 percent in Indiana.
The administration's analysis
looks at the second-cheapest "silver" plan available to customers when
open enrollment begins on Nov. 1. Those benchmark plans, which are among
the most popular sold on the law's health insurance exchanges, are
important because they're used to calculate how much federal support
low- and middle-income exchange customers will receive toward their
monthly premiums.
More than 70 percent of exchange customers chose
silver plans this year, which cover about 70 percent of medical costs.
Roughly 80 percent of Obamacare customers received subsidies, worth an
average monthly credit of $270.
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