The Open Enrollment Period for CY2026 is here.
So, you’ve probably seen the magnitude of your clients' premium hikes – whether they are eligible for subsidies or not.
Most customers probably aren’t happy with them. So, what’s an individual/family agent to do? Here are four paths you might explore:
Some cynics (or realists, however you’d like to define yourselves) might be reading the political situation and figure there’s no extension of enhanced premium tax credits on the way.
Sure, that might price some consumers out of the market, but there’s still plenty of help for those with incomes between 100% and 400% of FPL. And, anyone newly ineligible for a subsidy can take advantage of a new catastrophic exemption to at least secure some coverage.
If you’re in this camp, you’re likely beginning your Open Enrollment Period as usual. Time to start updating consent forms, gathering doctors and drugs, and helping customers bite the bullet and enroll.
Where there are problems, there are opportunities.
Your clients might not like their new premiums, which means they’ll likely opt for Bronze, Expanded Bronze, or Catastrophic coverage (again, go check out that new exemption). 
They’ll see a little bit of premium relief – but they’ll also see a lot of exposure in deductibles and out-of-pocket maximums. The fact that those bronze and catastrophic plans will all be HSA-eligible in PY2026 may not be much consolation.
If they can stomach just a little more in premium, you can help them offset those costs with accident and critical illness policies. That will help prevent them from having to meet that $18,000 deductible all at once – and make you look like a knight in shining armor.
There will undoubtedly be a portion of your clients who are priced out of the Marketplace, or may even be newly ineligible for coverage. But, they’ll still need something to protect their finances in the worst-case scenarios.
A few options to consider here:
And, like ACA-compliant plans, any of these products can be paired with supplemental insurance to further protect your clients' finances.
You can’t do this one forever, obviously. Customers who want a January 1 effective date must enroll by December 15; those seeking a February 1 effective date must enroll by January 15.
But, as of this writing, there is a non-zero chance that Congress will come to some agreement extending or modifying enhanced premium tax credits. That could relieve at least some of the sticker shock your clients are seeing – and make enrolling more palatable.
So, you could spend all of November checking in: gathering consent, doctors, and drug lists, hoping the storm blows over. Then, you’d be running full steam ahead to help clients apply for their chosen effective dates.
Probably, there’s no one strategy here that fits like a glove. And, there are surely other ways to crack this chestnut. Your clients making over 400% FPL may be better suited for catastrophic plans or ACA alternatives. They could also benefit from that wait-and-see approach.
Your clients who are still in that 100%-400% sweet spot may be able to confidently enroll now, albeit with a higher premium. They might look forward to some ancillary benefits to offset their out-of-pocket costs, though.