ACA enrollment drops
According to numbers from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid, 22.8 million Americans selected an Obamacare plan in 2026, a drop of about 1.5 million people from last year’s 24.3 million sign-ups.
Each year, Westside Family Healthcare staff members act as navigators to help Delawareans who are eligible find ACA coverage. Tina Gaffney, associate director for enrollment services, said they’ve seen a 14% drop in enrollments this year.
Westside navigator Linda Domenech, who is assistant manager of enrollment services, said consumers who are still eligible for subsidies because they earn below 400% of the poverty level are also seeing premium prices increase, albeit by smaller percentages. She said clients saw, on average, individual premiums rise in the range of $100 to $200. But she said that increase could make the insurance completely out of reach for some Delawareans.
“We did have some families that were distraught over the increase,” Domenech said. “We had people that were very, very concerned about the increase, concerned on how they were going to afford food, clothing, shelter, the basic necessities of living. So we had encounters like that, where the increases went up way more than they could afford.”
Dave and Thea Roff said their daughter has generously offered to help pay the $1,800 premium for Thea’s insurance, even if they’d rather not accept the money.
“We might have an option because of my daughter,” he said. “If it weren’t for her, I don’t think we would.”