Logo

Jooish News

LatestFollowingTrendingGroupsDiscover
Sign InSign Up
JBizNews

Medicaid’s New Work Rules Land, and Health Insurers Brace for the Fallout

Jun 2, 2026·5 min read

By JBizNews Desk

June 2, 2026

WASHINGTON — The biggest change to Medicaid eligibility in years officially arrived Monday as the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released long-awaited rules requiring certain Medicaid recipients to work, attend school, participate in job training, or perform community service to maintain coverage.

The new policy, mandated under the Working Families Tax Cut Act (Public Law 119-21) signed by President Donald Trump on July 4, 2025, establishes an 80-hour monthly work requirement for many adults enrolled through Medicaid expansion programs and could reshape enrollment, insurance-company revenue, hospital finances, and state healthcare systems across the country.

CMS Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz said the policy is designed to encourage workforce participation while preserving access to healthcare for vulnerable Americans.

“This rule helps Americans build skills, strengthen communities, and move toward greater independence through work, education, training, or service,” Oz said in announcing the regulation.

The deadline was set by Congress, leaving CMS little flexibility. The agency was required to issue the rule by June 1, and Monday’s release starts the countdown toward implementation across much of the country.

Under the new requirements, most non-pregnant adults ages 19 to 64 enrolled through Medicaid expansion programs must either complete 80 hours per month of qualifying activities or earn income equal to at least 80 times the federal minimum wage, roughly $580 per month under current standards.

Qualifying activities include employment, education, job-training programs, apprenticeships, and approved community-service work.

The rule applies primarily to adults enrolled through the Medicaid expansion population created under the Affordable Care Act. Currently, 43 states and the District of Columbia cover this group and will be required to implement the new standards.

Most states are expected to begin enforcement by January 1, 2027.

CMS attempted to soften some concerns by providing broad exemptions.

Individuals classified as medically frail, pregnant women, and certain other vulnerable populations will not be subject to the requirements. States will also be permitted to accept initial self-attestation for some exemptions before requiring additional documentation.

Medicaid Director Dan Brillman said the agency worked extensively with state officials to reduce administrative burdens and minimize disruptions for eligible beneficiaries.

The healthcare industry is already preparing for significant financial consequences.

Medicaid is not simply a government benefit program—it is a major business line for some of America’s largest health insurers.

Companies including UnitedHealth Group, Elevance Health, CVS Health’s Aetna, Centene Corp., and Molina Healthcare receive fixed monthly payments from states for each Medicaid member they cover.

If enrollment declines, so does revenue.

That is why investors and analysts have spent months focusing on the potential impact of work requirements.

The Congressional Budget Office estimates the new law could reduce Medicaid expansion enrollment by approximately 7 million adults over the next decade. Additional coverage losses among children and other adult populations could push the total significantly higher.

Among publicly traded insurers, Molina Healthcare and Centene appear particularly exposed because Medicaid represents a larger share of their business compared with diversified competitors.

Molina executives have already told investors they expect enrollment declines among expansion members once the requirements take effect.

The financial implications extend beyond insurance companies.

Hospitals, particularly rural hospitals and safety-net systems, are closely monitoring implementation plans because reductions in insurance coverage often translate into increases in uncompensated care.

When uninsured patients seek treatment, hospitals frequently absorb part of the cost.

That burden tends to fall most heavily on facilities already operating with thin margins.

The rule also creates a new business opportunity.

Millions of beneficiaries will need to document work hours, training participation, educational enrollment, or exemption status.

States must build systems capable of tracking and verifying that information.

Technology firms, Medicaid contractors, data-management providers, and eligibility-verification companies are already positioning themselves to help states manage the administrative workload.

For many vendors, implementation of work requirements could generate years of new contracts and recurring revenue.

Several states are moving ahead quickly.

Nebraska began enforcement efforts earlier this year, while Arkansas plans to begin a soft-launch process in July that will monitor compliance before formal penalties take effect.

States are expected to begin extensive beneficiary outreach programs during the summer and fall to educate recipients about the new requirements.

The political debate remains intense.

Supporters argue the rules encourage workforce participation, reduce dependency, and help preserve Medicaid resources for the most vulnerable populations.

Critics contend that paperwork and reporting requirements—not a lack of work—are the primary risk.

Previous state-level experiments with Medicaid work requirements found that many individuals who lost coverage were already working or otherwise eligible but failed to complete required documentation.

Healthcare advocates warn that administrative barriers could cause coverage losses even among people who satisfy the rules.

Regardless of where the debate ultimately lands, the operational reality is now clear.

The regulation has been issued.

States have begun preparing.

Insurers are modeling enrollment losses.

Hospitals are assessing financial exposure.

And millions of Medicaid beneficiaries now face a new set of requirements that could determine whether they remain covered after January 2027.

The next seven months will determine how smoothly one of the largest healthcare policy shifts in recent years unfolds—and how many Americans ultimately remain in the Medicaid system when the transition is complete.

Healthcare & Policy — JBizNews Desk

© JBizNews.com All Rights Reserved. Reproduction or distribution without written permission is prohibited.

View original on JBizNews
LatestFollowingTrendingDiscoverSign In