Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 157— - QUALITY, AFFORDABLE HEALTH CARE FOR ALL AMERICANS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - AVAILABLE COVERAGE CHOICES FOR ALL AMERICANS › Part Part D— - State Flexibility To Establish Alternative Programs › § 18051
Lets the federal health secretary set up a "basic health program" that a state can use to offer one or more standard health plans to people who can’t get Medicaid, instead of those people buying plans through the Insurance Exchange. The state must get the secretary’s OK by showing that: the monthly premium for a person and their dependents won’t be higher than what that person would pay for the second-lowest-cost silver plan in their area; cost-sharing (like copays and deductibles) won’t be higher than what a platinum plan would require for people with income up to 150% of the poverty line and won’t be higher than a gold plan for others; and the plans cover at least the required essential health benefits. The state must run a competitive process to pick plans, negotiate premiums, cost-sharing, and any extra benefits, encourage care coordination and prevention, set quality standards and public performance reporting, try to offer more than one plan, and coordinate with Medicaid, CHIP, and other state programs. Standard health plan: a plan only for eligible people that covers the essential benefits and, if sold by an insurer, has at least an 85% medical loss ratio. Eligible individual: a state resident under age 65 who is not eligible for Medicaid, whose household income is over 133% and at or below 200% of the poverty line (with a special rule for some lawfully present immigrants at or below 133%), who lacks other minimum coverage or has an unaffordable employer plan. Each year the secretary will review state programs for eligibility checks, correct use of federal funds, and quality. The secretary will send the state money equal to 95% of the premium tax credits and cost-sharing reductions those people would have gotten through an Exchange; the state must put that money in a trust and use it only to lower premiums or cost-sharing or to add benefits, and the payment rules are adjusted if earlier calculations were wrong.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 18051
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73