Understanding the Impact on Medicaid Enrollment

Understanding the Impact on Medicaid Enrollment

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed into law on July 4, 2025, includes sweeping changes to Medicaid including work requirements, cost-sharing, eligibility verification, and federal funding reductions.

Its projected effect is a substantial decline in Medicaid enrollment—estimated at 7.8–10.9 million individuals—and a major reshaping of how states administer and fund the program.

Medicaid Provisions in the Bill

Key Medicaid-oriented provisions include:

  • New work requirements: able-bodied adults aged 19–64 in expansion states must work, volunteer, or attend school ≥ 80 hours/month.
  • Increased cost-sharing: slapping up to $35 per service for enrollees between 100–138 percent of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL).
  • Eligibility bureaucratization: requiring six-month eligibility checks rather than annual reviews and tougher verification.
  • Reduced federal funding tools: cuts to provider taxes, restrictions on spreads and safety-net hospital funding, plus tighter rules for green‑card holders, undocumented immigrants, and services like gender‑affirming care or abortion-related care.
  • $50B rural hospital fund created to cushion the blow, though far lower than the broader funding cut.
Projected Enrollment Impacts

Analyses from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) offer sobering estimates, including the following:

  • 7.8 million fewer Medicaid recipients by 2034 due to eligibility rules alone according to Reuters.
  • 10.9 million Americans losing health coverage overall, including Medicaid, per CBO according to AP News.
  • KFF forecasts that federal Medicaid funding drops by 6–21 percent across states, potentially disenrolling millions.
  • AP News cautions nearly 12 million could become uninsured, with 5.2 million directly pushed off Medicaid by work hurdles and 1.4 million losing state-level care.
 Enrollment Trends vs. Historical Patterns

Comparisons with earlier Medicaid reforms illustrate the reversal:

  • Under the Affordable Care Act (2014), expansion boosted enrollment by ~9 percent in FY2014 and 7 percent in FY2015 according to KFF.
  • KFF’s 2019 review of 324 studies linked expansion to better coverage, improved health outcomes, reduced uncompensated care, and economic gains for states/providers.
  • The new bill’s rollback sharply departs from these positive trends, signaling a drastic policy shift.
Mechanisms Behind Enrollment Decline

Multiple bill features contribute to disenrollment:

  • Work mandates: Experience from Arkansas shows work requirements in Medicaid can drive up uninsured rates due to administrative lapses—not actual job loss according to Reuters.
  • Cost-sharing burdens: Even small fees ($35/service) have been proven to deter low-income individuals in using services or continuing coverage.
  • Frequent eligibility checks: Biannual audits create new paperwork strain and risk inadvertent expulsion.
  • Restricted provider funding: States may be forced to cut provider rates or scale back services, reducing program attractiveness.
  • Immigrant provisions: Harsh language on green-card holder wait-times and undocumented coverage likely shrinks overall enrollment.
State-Level and Healthcare System Impacts
  • State budgets: With federal funding reduced by $626 billion to over $1 trillion, states must shoulder more costs or shrink programs .
  • Rural hospitals: Already vulnerable, they face closure risk without Medicaid revenue despite the smaller $50B fund.
  • Administrative strain: Medicaid offices, especially understaffed ones, will be burdened by new verification and compliance loads .
  • Switch to emergency care: Fear of losing coverage may drive patients to delay care until emergencies occur, increasing uncompensated costs.
Public & Political Reception
  • Both Republicans and Democrats are raising alarms: Democrats warn of widespread disenrollment and rural closures, Republicans defend cuts as targeting “waste and fraud.”
  • Public polling: 64 percent oppose the bill per KFF.
  • Legal implications: Advocacy groups have already initiated lawsuits, such as against the one-year ban on funding Planned Parenthood .
Conclusion

The One Big Beautiful Bill marks the most significant contraction of Medicaid in history:

  • Enrollment could shrink by 8–11 million people nationwide due to tandem effects of work mandates, enhanced eligibility checks, cost barriers, and funding cuts.
  • States and healthcare systems, especially rural providers, could face major financial strain as federal funds dwindle.
  • Public health implications include deteriorating access to preventative and chronic care, heightened financial instability for low-income households, and increased uncompensated emergency care burden.
  • These shifts directly contradict the gains achieved with Medicaid expansion under the ACA and may reverse years of progress in health coverage, outcomes, and economic security.

Overall, the Big Beautiful Bill’s Medicaid clause is projected to significantly shrink enrollment, amplify administrative burdens, and potentially harm both patients and providers. The full extent of its impacts will unfold over the next decade, with sharp declines anticipated as early as 2027 and enduring systemic effects reverberating through state budgets and public health.

EDITOR’S NOTE:

The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views or opinions of MedLearn Media. We provide a platform for diverse perspectives, but the content and opinions expressed herein are the author’s own. MedLearn Media does not endorse or guarantee the accuracy of the information presented. Readers are encouraged to critically evaluate the content and conduct their own research. Any actions taken based on this article are at the reader’s own discretion.

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Timothy Powell, CPA, CHCP

Timothy Powell is a nationally recognized expert on regulatory matters, including the False Claims Act, Zone Program Integrity Contractor (ZPIC) audits, and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Inspector General (OIG) compliance. He is a member of the RACmonitor editorial board and a national correspondent for Monitor Mondays.

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