The complete guide to PA health insurance — Medicaid, CHIP, Pennie Marketplace plans, Blue Cross, Geisinger, UPMC, and more — with real prices, income limits, free application contacts, and plain answers to every question Pennsylvanians ask.
Enhanced premium tax credits (EPTCs) that reduced costs since 2021 expired December 31, 2025 because Congress did not renew them. On average, Pennie premiums doubled for 2026. A 60-year-old married couple earning $82,000 in York County saw premiums rise from $7,032 to $35,712 per year (PA Insurance Department, Oct 2025). Over 130,000 Pennsylvanians have dropped coverage. If your income is low, check Medicaid and remaining tax credit eligibility first — these programs were not eliminated and may cover you at little or no cost.
Pennsylvania operates its own state health insurance marketplace called Pennie — the only place to access premium tax credits (subsidies) that reduce your monthly cost. With 14 insurers participating and four plan tiers (Bronze, Silver, Gold, Platinum), Pennie offers options for most residents. However, the most important first step is to check whether you qualify for free or near-free coverage through Pennsylvania Medicaid (Medical Assistance) or CHIP before purchasing any marketplace plan. In 2026, Medical Assistance serves over 3.5 million Pennsylvanians and requires no asset test for most applicants under age 65. Free enrollment help is available statewide through Pennie Certified Assisters, Brokers, and the PA Health Access Network.
-
1
What is the cheapest health insurance in Pennsylvania? Medicaid (free if income ≤$22,029/yr single); Pennie Bronze plan from ~$412/mo without subsidy; Jefferson Health Plans cheapest on Pennie ($488/mo avg)The cheapest health coverage in Pennsylvania is Medicaid (called Medical Assistance), which is free or nearly free for individuals earning up to approximately $22,029 per year (138% of the Federal Poverty Level), or roughly $44,058 for a family of four — with no asset test. Apply at COMPASS.state.pa.us or call 1-866-550-4355. For those who don’t qualify for Medicaid, Jefferson Health Plans offers the lowest average premium among Pennie carriers at $488/month for a 40-year-old — 30–38% below the statewide average — according to MoneyGeek’s April 2026 Pennsylvania analysis. Partners Insurance Co. (now rebranding as part of Jefferson Health Plans) saw a 10.1% rate decrease for 2026 — the only carrier to receive a decrease — making it the lowest-cost option in its service area. Bronze HMO plans are the cheapest tier on Pennie; UPMC Bronze starts around $219/month for 18-year-olds in their service areas.
-
2
Does Pennsylvania have free or low-income health insurance? Yes — Medicaid (Medical Assistance) is free for those who qualify; CHIP is free or low-cost for children; apply any time at COMPASS.state.pa.usPennsylvania has robust free and low-cost health insurance programs. Medicaid (Medical Assistance) is free for qualifying Pennsylvanians — unlike Pennie plans, you can apply for Medicaid any time, not just during Open Enrollment. Income limits: adults 19–64 earning up to 138% FPL (about $22,029/year single) qualify with no asset test. SSI recipients are automatically eligible. Children are covered up to 319% FPL through Medicaid or CHIP (Children’s Health Insurance Program) at chipcoverspakids.com or 1-800-986-5437. CHIP charges sliding-scale premiums only for households above 235% FPL. Pregnant women qualify at up to 220% FPL with 12 months of postpartum coverage. Pennsylvania’s 2026 FPL is $15,960/year for one person ($1,330/month). Apply online at mycompass.pa.gov, by phone at 1-866-550-4355, or in person at your County Assistance Office at dhs.pa.gov.
-
3
What is Pennie and how do I apply for health insurance in Pennsylvania? Pennie is PA’s official state marketplace — the only place to get federal premium tax credits; enroll at pennie.com or call 1-844-844-8040; free Certified Assisters statewidePennie is Pennsylvania’s official, state-run health insurance marketplace and the only source of federal premium tax credits (subsidies) that reduce your monthly premium. It replaced the federal Healthcare.gov exchange in Pennsylvania. Fourteen insurers offered plans through Pennie for 2026. Standard Open Enrollment typically runs November 1 to January 15 each year for coverage beginning January 1 or February 1. Open Enrollment for 2026 closed January 31, 2026 — if you missed it, you can still enroll through a Special Enrollment Period (SEP) if you’ve had a qualifying life event (job loss, marriage, birth, moving, losing Medicaid, turning 26). If you lose Medicaid coverage, that triggers an SEP to enroll in Pennie with no gap. Pennie’s “Path to Pennie” easy enrollment program also allows uninsured residents to begin the process through their state tax return. Free help is available: Pennie Certified Assisters and Brokers can guide you at no cost — find one at pennie.com/get-help. The PA Health Access Network (PHAN) helpline is 877-570-3642.
-
4
What are the income limits for Medicaid in Pennsylvania? Adults 19–64: up to $22,029/yr (138% FPL) — no asset test; Seniors/disabled: different income and asset rules; Children up to 319% FPLPennsylvania’s 2026 Medicaid income limits by category: ACA Expansion adults (19–64, no disability): income up to 138% of FPL = approximately $22,029/year ($1,835/month) for one person; no asset test — savings, home, or car do not count. Family of four: approximately $44,058/year. Children (Medicaid and CHIP): up to 319% FPL (approximately $49,759/year for a family of four). Pregnant women: up to 220% FPL. SSI recipients: automatically eligible regardless of income level. Seniors 65+ and disabled (ABD Medicaid): income limit $1,016.10/month for one person and $1,524.30 for a couple; asset limit $2,000 (single) and $3,000 (couple) — home and one vehicle are exempt. For nursing home care or Community HealthChoices Waiver: gross monthly income limit $2,982/month (300% of SSI Federal Benefit Rate), asset limit $8,000. Medically Needy spend-down: those with income above the ABD limit may qualify by “spending down” to $425/month. The 2026 Federal Poverty Level is $15,960/year for one person ($1,330/month).
-
5
What is welfare health insurance in Pennsylvania? Medicaid (Medical Assistance) is Pennsylvania’s public health insurance program — covers doctor visits, hospital stays, prescriptions, and long-term care for qualifying residentsPennsylvania’s public health insurance program for low-income residents is formally called Medical Assistance (MA) — commonly called Medicaid. It is administered by the Pennsylvania Department of Human Services (DHS) and serves over 3.5 million Pennsylvanians in 2026. Medical Assistance covers doctor visits, hospital stays, prescription drugs, lab tests, preventive care, mental health and substance use services, and long-term care. Children receive comprehensive dental and vision benefits; adults receive emergency dental only. Coverage is delivered through managed care organizations (MCOs) under the HealthChoices program. Behavioral health is handled separately through Behavioral HealthChoices. Pennsylvanians who qualify for both Medicare and Medicaid (called “dual eligibles”) may be enrolled in Community HealthChoices (CHC) — a managed care program that combines services and may include adult day care, personal care, home health, and home modifications. To apply for Medical Assistance, go to mycompass.pa.gov or call 1-866-550-4355.
-
6
What is Blue Cross health insurance in Pennsylvania and how does it compare? Independence Blue Cross (Philadelphia region) and Capital Blue Cross (central PA) are the main Blue Cross carriers; Highmark is the Blue Cross Blue Shield insurer for western/central PAPennsylvania has three distinct Blue Cross Blue Shield-affiliated carriers: Independence Blue Cross (and its HMO subsidiary Keystone Health Plan East) serving the Philadelphia metro area — Bucks, Chester, Delaware, Montgomery, and Philadelphia counties. Capital Blue Cross (Capital Advantage Assurance Company) serving central Pennsylvania. Highmark Inc., a Blue Cross Blue Shield plan serving western and south-central Pennsylvania. For 2026, Independence Blue Cross increased rates by 22.0–22.4% (Keystone HMO) and 15.2% (QCC PPO). Capital Blue Cross increased by 32.95% — the largest rate increase among any PA carrier. Highmark increased by 17.7%. Despite rate increases, ValuePenguin’s 2026 analysis names Highmark the best health insurance in Pennsylvania overall for its combination of affordable rates, strong customer service, and coverage quality. Blue Cross Blue Shield Silver plans in Pennsylvania averaged $651/month for a 40-year-old — $33 below the statewide average. Coverage areas are strictly county-specific; contact each carrier directly to confirm availability in your ZIP code.
-
7
What is the cheapest insurance in Pennsylvania overall? Free: Medicaid (Medical Assistance) for qualifying low-income residents; Catastrophic plans from ~$219/mo (under-30 or hardship exemption); Bronze HMO from $412/moIn order of lowest premium cost: (1) Free: Medicaid (Medical Assistance) for income ≤138% FPL and CHIP for children ≤319% FPL. (2) Catastrophic plans: typically $9,200 deductible, very low monthly premiums — only available to adults under 30, or those with a hardship exemption. UPMC Advantage Catastrophic, Highmark Major Events EPO Catastrophic, Geisinger Marketplace All-Access Value, and Capital Blue Cross Catastrophic PPO 9200 are available in their respective service areas. (3) Bronze HMO plans: the lowest-premium standard ACA tier. Jefferson Health Plans Bronze from $219/month for 18-year-olds; UPMC Bronze and Highmark Bronze EPO plans start around $300–$412/month for a 40-year-old. (4) Silver plans: cost more upfront but unlock Cost-Sharing Reductions (CSRs) that can dramatically lower deductibles and co-pays for lower-income households — making Silver often cheaper overall than Bronze for those earning up to $39,125/year individually. Always compare total annual cost (premiums + expected out-of-pocket), not just the monthly premium.
-
8
Which is the best health insurance company in Pennsylvania? Highmark (best overall per ValuePenguin 2026); Jefferson Health Plans (cheapest rates); UPMC (widest PA geographic coverage); Geisinger (central/northeast PA quality)Different carriers lead in different categories. Highmark is rated the best health insurance company in Pennsylvania overall by ValuePenguin’s 2026 analysis — for its combination of affordable rates, customer service quality, and plan coverage depth. It is the dominant carrier in western Pennsylvania (Pittsburgh area). Jefferson Health Plans (formerly Partners Insurance) offers the lowest average premiums statewide and received the only rate decrease for 2026 (–10.1%), making it the best value in its service area. UPMC Health Plan provides the widest geographic coverage — available in more Pennsylvania counties than any other carrier — and offers 24/7 video appointments at $0 copay on most plans. Geisinger Health Plan and Geisinger Quality Options are the leading carriers in central and northeast Pennsylvania with strong quality ratings and integrated health system access. For Medicare Advantage (65+): UnitedHealthcare holds the only 5-star CMS-rated plans in Pennsylvania for 2026. UPMC for Life and Geisinger Gold also hold 4.5-star ratings.
-
9
Is pancreatitis covered by health insurance in Pennsylvania? Yes — pancreatitis treatment is covered as an “essential health benefit” under all ACA-compliant plans on Pennie; Medicaid also covers itUnder the Affordable Care Act, all Pennie marketplace plans in Pennsylvania must cover 10 categories of “essential health benefits” — including hospitalization, emergency services, prescription drugs, and laboratory services. Pancreatitis (inflammation of the pancreas) typically requires hospitalization, IV fluids, pain management, and possibly surgery or specialist care — all of which fall under the covered essential health benefit categories. Both acute pancreatitis (sudden attack) and chronic pancreatitis (ongoing condition) are medical conditions covered under standard ACA plans. Pennsylvania Medicaid (Medical Assistance) similarly covers hospital stays, prescription drugs, and specialist visits related to pancreatitis. Preventive services are covered at 100% with no cost-sharing under all Pennie plans. If you have pancreatitis as a pre-existing condition: the ACA prohibits all Pennie marketplace plans from denying coverage or charging higher premiums based on pre-existing conditions — including chronic pancreatitis, diabetes, or liver disease related to pancreatitis.
-
10
What is the PA health insurance marketplace and how is it different from Healthcare.gov? Pennie is Pennsylvania’s state-run marketplace — independent of Healthcare.gov; it is the only place to get PA-specific subsidies and 14 PA carrier optionsPennsylvania operates its own fully state-based marketplace called Pennie, separate from the federal Healthcare.gov exchange. Pennie was created under Pennsylvania law and handles enrollment, eligibility, customer service, and tax credit administration specifically for PA residents. Key differences from Healthcare.gov: Pennie has Certified Assisters and Brokers trained specifically for Pennsylvania plans and programs; provides free in-person help statewide; and is the only gateway to remaining premium tax credits for Pennsylvania residents. For 2026, new federal rules require all state-run exchanges (including Pennie) to end Open Enrollment by December 31 starting with the fall 2026 enrollment period — meaning coverage selection for 2027 will close December 31, 2026. All plans selected during Open Enrollment start January 1. Pennie is also working with state lawmakers to fund the State Health Insurance Exchange Affordability Program — once funded, this could restore additional premium assistance for eligible Pennsylvanians. Always enroll at pennie.com — not Healthcare.gov — for Pennsylvania coverage.
Sources: Pennie.com Apr 9 2026 (14 insurers 2026; peak 500K enrollees 2025; EPTC expired Dec 31 2025; premiums doubled on avg; 85K left OE 2026; total 462,751 as of Apr 9; 130K+ cancelled; OE closed Jan 31 2026; SEP; Path to Pennie; State Affordability Program authorized; fall 2026 OE Dec 31 deadline; pennie.com 1-844-844-8040); PA Insurance Dept Oct 14 2025 (York County couple $7,032→$35,712; rate changes by carrier; Partners -10.1%; Capital Blue Cross +32.95%; Cigna NOT offering 2026); MoneyGeek.com Apr 2026 (Jefferson Health Plans $488/mo #1; Partners $549; UPMC $619; PA avg $714/mo; $412–$863/mo 40yr; Bronze HMO cheapest; Silver PPO most expensive); ValuePenguin Feb 2026 (Highmark best PA overall; Medicaid ≤$22K single ≤$44K family 4; Bronze avg $509; Silver avg $750; Gold avg $679; benchmark $478 KFF; Silver better CSR low income; max OOP Exchange $10,600); Medicaid PA 2026 (DHS pa.gov; FPL $15,960/yr $1,330/mo; expansion adults ≤138% FPL $22,029/yr no asset test; family 4 $44,058; CHIP ≤319% FPL; pregnant ≤220% FPL; ABD $1,016/mo single $2K assets; nursing home $2,982/mo $8K assets; spend-down $425/mo; MAWD 250% FPL; mycompass.pa.gov 1-866-550-4355 M-F 8:30AM–4:45PM); PA Insurance Dept carrier coverage areas 2026 (Jefferson/SE PA; UPMC widest counties; Geisinger central/NE; Highmark western PA; IBC/Keystone Philadelphia metro)
Sources: Pennie.com Apr 2026 (130,000+ total cancelled; 85,000 at OE close; premiums doubled avg); PA Insurance Dept Oct 2025 (rate changes); MoneyGeek Apr 2026 ($714/mo avg all types; $412–$863 40yr; Jefferson $488 cheapest); ValuePenguin Feb 2026 (Bronze $509 Silver $750 Gold $679); KFF 2026 (benchmark $478/mo PA); DHS pa.gov (Medicaid ≤$22,029 single; 3.5M+ served; no asset test); checkmedicaid.com (FPL $15,960/yr 2026; children ≤319% FPL $49,759 family 4); CHIP chipcoverspakids.com 1-800-986-5437
Before comparing Pennie marketplace plans, check if you qualify for Medicaid (Medical Assistance) at mycompass.pa.gov or by calling 1-866-550-4355. Medicaid is free and can be applied for at any time — you don’t need to wait for Open Enrollment. If you earn around $22,000 or less as a single adult ($44,000 for a family of four), Medicaid is your best option. Your plan availability depends on your county — use pennie.com to compare plans in your ZIP code.
Sources: PA DHS pa.gov + mycompass.pa.gov (Medicaid 3.5M+ served; free; apply anytime; 1-866-550-4355; CHC/PACE seniors; ABD $2K assets; spend-down $425); CHIP chipcoverspakids.com 1-800-986-5437 (≤319% FPL $49,759 family 4; dental vision; apply anytime); Pennie.com 1-844-844-8040 (14 carriers; Certified Assisters; SEP; Path to Pennie; State Affordability Program; fall 2026 OE Dec 31); PA Insurance Dept Oct 2025 (Jefferson/Partners -10.1%; Capital Blue +32.95%; UPMC +20.2%; Highmark +17.7%; Geisinger GHP +11.59% GQO +13.8%; IBC Keystone East +22.0%; Oscar +23.1%; Cigna not 2026); MoneyGeek Apr 2026 (Jefferson $488/mo #1; Partners $549; UPMC $619 2nd cheapest; avg $714; Jefferson 30–38% below avg; UPMC widest coverage; $0 video visits 24/7 nurse line); ValuePenguin Feb 2026 (Highmark best overall PA; benchmark $478 KFF; BCBS Silver $651 avg; Silver better CSR ≤$39,125); PA Insurance Dept coverage areas 2026 (all carrier county lists); NerdWallet Medicare 2026 (MA avg $22.99/mo; UHC 5-star only; UPMC 4.5-star; Geisinger Gold 4.5-star; Highmark 4.5-star; ~1-in-5 PA residents 65+; PA MEDI 1-800-783-7067)
The cheapest health insurance in Pennsylvania depends on your income and household situation. If you earn approximately $22,000 per year or less as a single adult (or $44,000 or less as a family of four), Pennsylvania Medicaid (Medical Assistance) is free and covers virtually all medical needs — apply at any time at mycompass.pa.gov or call 1-866-550-4355. For children in households earning up to $49,759/year (family of four), CHIP at chipcoverspakids.com covers kids at little or no cost. If you don’t qualify for Medicaid, Pennie marketplace plans with remaining premium tax credits are the next option — the lowest-premium carrier in 2026 is Jefferson Health Plans at $488/month average for southeastern PA. Bronze HMO plans from UPMC, Highmark, and Geisinger start lower. For adults with a hardship or under 30, catastrophic plans with $9,200 deductibles are available at the lowest monthly premiums. For seniors 65+, Medicare Advantage plans averaged just $22.99/month in Pennsylvania — use PA MEDI (1-800-783-7067) for free counseling before selecting a plan.
Yes — Pennsylvania has multiple programs for low-income residents. Medicaid (Medical Assistance): free for adults 19–64 earning up to $22,029/year (138% FPL) — apply at mycompass.pa.gov or 1-866-550-4355 any time. CHIP: covers children in households earning up to $49,759/year (family of four) — apply at chipcoverspakids.com or 1-800-986-5437 any time. Premium tax credits through Pennie: people who make around $62,600/year or less as a single person (about $84,600 for a couple) may still qualify for some premium assistance through Pennie in 2026 (reduced from prior years). Cost-Sharing Reductions (CSRs): available on Silver plans through Pennie for lower-income households — these can dramatically reduce deductibles and co-pays beyond just premium reductions, often making Silver plans cheaper overall than Bronze. For seniors with income and assets below certain limits, Medicaid also pays for Medicare premiums and out-of-pocket costs through Medicare Savings Programs. Free help is available from Pennie Certified Assisters at pennie.com/get-help or the PA Health Access Network at 877-570-3642.
Applying through Pennie is free and can be done online, by phone, or with in-person help. Step 1: Go to pennie.com or call 1-844-844-8040. If it’s outside Open Enrollment (which closed January 31, 2026 for 2026 coverage), you can still enroll if you’ve had a qualifying life event — including losing a job, losing Medicaid, moving, getting married, having a baby, turning 26, or getting divorced. Step 2: Enter your ZIP code and household information to see available plans and whether you qualify for premium tax credits. Step 3: Compare plans by monthly premium, deductible, out-of-pocket maximum, and whether your current doctors and medications are in-network. Step 4: Enroll in the plan that fits your budget and needs. For free in-person help in your county: visit pennie.com/get-help to find a Certified Assister near you. The PA Health Access Network (PHAN) can help you determine eligibility at any time — call 877-570-3642. Pennie also offers an “Easy Enrollment” Path to Pennie program that allows uninsured residents to begin the process through their state tax return.
The right plan depends on four personal factors: how often you use medical care, your income, which doctors and hospitals you want to keep, and your budget for monthly premiums vs. out-of-pocket costs. Key rules: (1) If you rarely see a doctor and can handle a large bill if something happens: Bronze HMO plans offer the lowest monthly premiums. Jefferson Health Plans ($488/mo avg) and UPMC Bronze are the lowest-premium options. (2) If you earn less than $39,125/year (single) or $80,375/year (family of four): choose a Silver plan through Pennie — Cost-Sharing Reductions available only on Silver plans can make them cheaper overall than Bronze despite higher premiums, by dramatically lowering your deductible and co-pays. (3) If you see doctors regularly or take prescriptions: Gold plans often cost less in total annual expenses than Bronze despite higher premiums. Compare the total annual cost (12 × monthly premium + expected out-of-pocket) not just the monthly rate. (4) Always verify your specific doctors and prescriptions are in-network BEFORE enrolling — network restrictions differ between HMO, EPO, and PPO plans. Call the carrier or use their online provider directory. For western PA, Highmark; central/northeast PA, Geisinger; Philadelphia metro, Independence Blue Cross or Jefferson Health Plans; statewide, UPMC.
Sources: Pennie.com (pennie.com 1-844-844-8040; pennie.com/get-help; SEP events; Path to Pennie; tax credits ≤$62,600 single ≤$84,600 couple); PA DHS (mycompass.pa.gov 1-866-550-4355; Medicaid $22,029 single $44,058 family 4); CHIP (chipcoverspakids.com 1-800-986-5437; ≤$49,759 family 4); PA Health Access Network PHAN (877-570-3642; healthinsurance.org/medicaid/pennsylvania Feb 2026); ValuePenguin Feb 2026 (Silver CSR ≤$39,125 single; Silver usually cheaper vs Bronze lower income); MoneyGeek Apr 2026 (Jefferson cheapest; lower premium = higher deductible caveat; Silver vs Bronze total annual cost); KFF 2026 ($478 benchmark PA); PA Insurance Dept Oct 2025 (rate changes; Geisinger +11.59%; Jefferson -10.1%)
Tap any button to find Pennie Certified Assisters, County Assistance Offices, Geisinger, Highmark, or UPMC offices near you. All enrollment help through Pennie Assisters is free and available in every PA county.
- Step 1 — Check Medicaid eligibility first, before anything else. If your household income is at or below 138% of the Federal Poverty Level — approximately $22,029/year for one person, $44,058 for a family of four — you likely qualify for Pennsylvania Medicaid (Medical Assistance) at no cost. Go to mycompass.pa.gov, call 1-866-550-4355, or visit your local County Assistance Office. Applications are typically decided within 30 days. You can apply for Medicaid at any time — there is no open enrollment period. For children in households earning up to $49,759/year (family of four), check CHIP eligibility at chipcoverspakids.com or 1-800-986-5437 regardless of whether parents qualify. SSI recipients should know they are automatically eligible for Medicaid.
- Step 2 — If you don’t qualify for Medicaid, check whether you qualify for premium tax credits through Pennie. Go to pennie.com or call 1-844-844-8040 and enter your household size and income. For 2026, premium tax credits remain available for individuals earning below approximately $62,600/year (about $84,600 for a couple). Cost-Sharing Reductions — available only on Silver plans through Pennie — can dramatically lower your deductibles and copays if your income falls below $39,125/year (individual). These reductions make Silver plans genuinely cheaper overall than Bronze for many lower-income households, despite higher monthly premiums. Use Pennie’s comparison tool to calculate your total annual estimated cost — not just the monthly premium.
- Step 3 — If you missed Open Enrollment, check whether you qualify for a Special Enrollment Period (SEP). Open Enrollment for 2026 coverage closed January 31, 2026. However, qualifying life events open a 60-day Special Enrollment Period: losing any job-based health coverage; moving to a new Pennsylvania address; getting married or divorced; having a baby or adopting; turning 26 and losing parental coverage; losing Medicaid or CHIP eligibility. If you lost Medicaid, your SEP starts the day your coverage ends — you can enroll in Pennie with no gap in coverage. Contact Pennie at 1-844-844-8040 or visit a free Certified Assister (pennie.com/get-help) to confirm your eligibility and begin enrollment.
- Step 4 — Compare plans using total annual cost, not just monthly premium. A low monthly premium often comes with a high deductible — meaning you pay more out-of-pocket each time you use health care. Calculate total annual cost: 12 × monthly premium + your expected annual medical spending (prescriptions, doctor visits, specialist care). For healthy individuals who rarely see a doctor: Bronze plans and catastrophic plans minimize monthly cost. For those with regular prescriptions or health conditions: Silver or Gold plans often cost less in total, especially with Cost-Sharing Reductions on Silver. Always verify that your current doctors and preferred hospitals are in-network before enrolling — call the carrier or use their online provider directory. Networks differ significantly between HMO, EPO, and PPO plans.
- Step 5 — Use free help — Pennie Certified Assisters, PHAN, and PA MEDI are all free. Navigating health insurance options is complex, and Pennsylvania offers extensive free guidance. Pennie Certified Assisters are trained, state-certified enrollment helpers available in every county at no cost — find one at pennie.com/get-help. The PA Health Access Network (PHAN) provides free counseling for all PA health insurance questions at 877-570-3642. For Medicare questions (age 65+), PA MEDI offers free, unbiased Medicare counseling at 1-800-783-7067 — call before enrolling in any Medicare Advantage or Medigap plan. The Pennsylvania Consumer Assistance Program helps resolve problems with existing health coverage at 1-877-888-4877 (PA only). All of these services are completely free to Pennsylvania residents.
This guide is independently researched for informational purposes only. Health insurance prices, income limits, eligibility requirements, carrier participation, and federal or state program rules change frequently. Always verify current information directly with Pennie (pennie.com / 1-844-844-8040), the Pennsylvania Department of Human Services (dhs.pa.gov / 1-866-550-4355), or a free Pennie Certified Assister before enrolling. This page does not constitute legal, medical, or financial advice. Plan availability, pricing, and subsidy eligibility depend on your specific county, ZIP code, household size, and income.
Primary sources: Pennie.com Apr 9 2026 (462,751 enrolled; 130,000+ cancelled; 85,000 OE 2026; OE closed Jan 31 2026; EPTC expired Dec 31 2025; premiums doubled avg; 500K peak 2025; 14 carriers; Path to Pennie; State Affordability Program; fall 2026 OE Dec 31; pennie.com 1-844-844-8040); PA Insurance Dept Oct 14 2025 (York County couple $7,032→$35,712; all carrier rate changes; Jefferson/Partners -10.1%; Capital +32.95%; Cigna not 2026; Geisinger GHP +11.59% GQO +13.8%; Highmark +17.7%; IBC Keystone +22.0%; Oscar +23.1%; UPMC +20.2%); MoneyGeek.com Apr 2026 (Jefferson $488/mo #1; Partners $549; UPMC $619; avg $714/mo; 40yr $412–$863; Jefferson 30–38% below avg; $219/mo Catastrophic EPO 18yr; UPMC $0 video 24/7 nurse; no-deductible Gold plans; PA avg $714; Blue Cross Silver $651); ValuePenguin Feb 2026 (Highmark best PA; Medicaid ≤$22K ≤$44K 4; Bronze $509 Silver $750 Gold $679; benchmark $478 KFF; Silver CSR ≤$39,125 individual ≤$80,375 family 4; max OOP Exchange $10,600; 50%+ enrollees ≤$37,650; 1 new:2 cancelled ratio); Pennie affordability page 2026 (85K left OE; 45K additional dropped post-OE; total 130K; primary reason EPTC loss cost); PA Insurance Dept coverage areas 2026 (all 14 carrier county lists); DHS pa.gov (Medicaid 3.5M+ served; Medical Assistance; CHC/PACE; ABD $1,016/mo $2K assets; expansion ≤138% FPL no asset test; mycompass.pa.gov 1-866-550-4355); checkmedicaid.com / snapeligibilitycalculator.com Feb 2026 (FPL $15,960/yr $1,330/mo; expansion $1,799/mo; CHIP $3,913/mo family 4; MAWD 250% FPL $3,325; spend-down $425/mo; nursing home $2,982 $8K assets; ABD $1,016 $2K; postpartum 12 mo; GLP-1 stopped weight loss 2026; Dec 2026 renewals every 6 mo); healthinsurance.org Feb 2026 (CHIP apply anytime; expansion Jan 1 2015; 1.1M+ expansion by 2023; COMPASS phone in-person); NerdWallet Medicare 2026 (MA avg $22.99/mo PA vs $24.26 2025; UHC 5-star only; UPMC 4.5 Geisinger Gold 4.5 Aetna 4.5 Highmark 4.5; ~1-in-5 PA 65+; D-SNP); PA MEDI 1-800-783-7067; PHAN 877-570-3642; PA Consumer Assistance 1-877-888-4877; PA Insurance Dept 1-877-881-6388; CHIP 1-800-986-5437 chipcoverspakids.com