This is a timely update about benefits many people treated as automatic. Starting in early 2026 and tied to a key date at the end of 2025, some non-medical credits and premium help will shift. That means you might see reduced monthly credits, higher premiums, or new eligibility rules depending on your plan type. The article focuses on two policy drivers. First, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services plans to end the VBID model that let some Medicare Advantage D‑SNP plans offer extra benefits like healthy food, utility support, and over‑the‑counter credits in 2026. Second, enhanced marketplace tax credits lapse after Dec. 31, 2025, which can raise costs for people who buy coverage on the exchange.
If you rely on monthly credits or ACA subsidies, expect changes that may feel similar even though they follow different timelines. Read on to learn what the change could cost you, why it is happening, and practical next steps to consider.
Key Takeaways
- You may lose or pay more for benefits once treated as included in your plan.
- Medicare Advantage D‑SNP extras tied to VBID end in 2026.
- Enhanced ACA subsidies lapse after Dec. 31, 2025, raising some premiums.
- Not covered does not always mean services vanish; costs or eligibility can change.
- If you use credits for food, utilities, or OTC items, review plan notices now.
- Learn more about federal rules and consumer protections at regulation of private health insurance.
What’s changing after January and why it matters to your health insurance
You face a two-part change: one alters marketplace aid and the other tightens extra benefits for some Medicare plans. The first lane is the end of enhanced marketplace tax credits. Those subsidies expire Dec. 31, 2025, and KFF estimates average premium increases of about 114% for people who depended on that help. That can raise your monthly premiums and make some plans unaffordable. The second lane is CMS ending the VBID model in 2026. Many D‑SNP plans must follow new rules for extra benefits. Some members may still get monthly credits, but limits can restrict spending on items such as healthy food or utility support unless you meet qualifying criteria and SSBCI rules apply.
The practical impact on your bills
What "not covered" may look like:
- Higher monthly premiums on renewal notices.
- Fewer or narrower credits for extras.
- New limits on categories you can use credits for.
- Higher co-pays or bigger deductibles that increase out-of-pocket costs.
"Watch plan notices and renewal letters closely so you can avoid surprise costs."
Next you’ll see which specific items change, how D‑SNP rules work in 2026, how marketplace costs may shift, and practical steps you can take to protect your family’s budget and coverage.
U.S After January, These Common Health Items Are No Longer Covered by Insurance
Many plans will keep a monthly credit, but the rules on where you can use it will shift in 2026 for many D‑SNP members.
Healthy food credits: qualifying conditions now matter
What changes: carriers like UnitedHealthcare say members will still see a credit, yet spending on food often requires a qualifying chronic condition in 2026. If you don’t meet that condition, your card may show a balance but block food purchases at checkout.
Utility bill credits: tied to SSBCI eligibility
Utility support was possible under VBID flex rules. With that model ending, SSBCI criteria now decide if credits can apply to utilities. That means some members lose utility spending options unless they meet the stricter eligibility test.
OTC items and how spending may shift
Over‑the‑counter benefits typically remain available. The change is mainly how you allocate the credit across categories.
Wellness alternatives plans mention
Plans note other programs: select fitness items, weight‑management counseling, and in‑home support such as The Helper Bees for caregiver relief.
Practical tip: review your 2026 Evidence of Coverage or Annual Notice of Change and check the spending categories tied to your member account.
Medicare Advantage D-SNP updates: how the end of VBID changes your benefits in 2026
When CMS ends the VBID program, your plan must change how it offers extra, nonmedical perks. VBID was a CMS pilot that let plans test added benefits like meal credits, utility help, and flexible OTC spending. With VBID ending, carriers must shift those offers into other Medicare rules for 2026.
What CMS ending the Value-Based Insurance Design model means for your plan’s “extra benefits”
VBID allowed experimentation. Now plans will rework benefit delivery under standard Medicare authorities. That may mean more verification and narrower eligibility for nonmedical credits.
How plans are continuing benefits through Special Supplemental Benefits for the Chronically Ill
Many carriers will use the Special Supplemental Benefits for the Chronically Ill (SSBCI) program to keep food and utility supports for members who meet chronic‑illness criteria.
What “industry-wide change” means if you’re not with UnitedHealthcare
This is an industry-wide change. UnitedHealthcare/medicare made clear® notes the same shift applies across D‑SNP carriers. Expect similar verification steps and condition lists even if you’re with another company.
What you can still keep even if you don’t qualify for food and utility spending
You can remain enrolled in your D‑SNP plan and often still receive the full monthly OTC credit. Wellness supports—like select fitness items and The Helper Bees services—may also continue for many members.
"Check your carrier’s qualifying‑condition list and 2026 plan documents to learn what you can use your credit for."
Do you qualify to use credits for healthy food and utilities in 2026?
Eligibility now rests on documented chronic conditions. Before relying on nonmedical credits, verify whether your diagnosis and records match what your plan accepts.
Typical qualifying conditions include:
- Diabetes
- Cardiovascular disease
- Chronic high blood pressure
- Chronic high cholesterol
- Chronic heart failure
Why the list can differ by plan and state
Each carrier, D‑SNP contract, and state may define qualifying conditions differently. That means one plan’s accepted diagnoses might not match another’s.
Documentation rules also vary. Plans often check claims, clinical notes, or a physician's confirmation. Self-reporting alone usually won’t be enough.
| Factor | How it affects eligibility | What you should provide |
| Carrier policy | Defines accepted conditions and verification steps | Plan-specific diagnosis list or portal confirmation |
| State rules | May limit or expand what SSBCI-like benefits can cover | Local enrollment or contract notes |
| Clinical documentation | Confirms diagnosis via claims or physician notes | Medical records, lab results, or provider attestation |
What to do now: find your carrier’s qualifying-condition list, keep your provider contact and records ready, and check the benefit changes FAQ for updates.
What you need to do next if you’re a current or new D-SNP member
First, confirm whether your plan can validate qualifying diagnoses using records it already has. UnitedHealthcare says current members generally do not need to take action right away. Your carrier will try to verify conditions from claims and notes on file.
If you’re already enrolled
What may happen: the plan may verify automatically. If verification works, you should get a confirmation letter or email.
What to watch for
Why it matters: letters and emails can be time-sensitive. Missing a notice may delay your ability to use a monthly credit for restricted categories.
If your condition can’t be confirmed
You may be asked to self-indicate a condition and allow physician assistance to verify your diagnosis. Plans often request a release so your provider can confirm treatment details.
If you’re enrolling for the first time
New enrollees typically complete an Additional Benefit Verification Form. It asks for your qualifying condition, treating physician contact, and a verification release to support eligibility decisions.
Where to check verification status
Check progress in the member portal or app so you can fix issues before you try to spend credits on restricted items.
| Action | Who it applies to | Typical timing |
| Automatic verification | Current members | Within weeks of plan review |
| Self-indication + physician release | If records are incomplete | After plan request |
| Additional Benefit Verification Form | New enrollment | At or soon after enrollment |
Budget tip: even if your monthly credit stays, allowed spending categories may change—plan ahead for food and utility bills if you’re unsure about eligibility.
ACA marketplace changes: how the expired tax credits can raise your premiums and costs
The loss of extra premium help reshaped how many households calculate plan costs. With enhanced premium tax credits expired on Dec. 31, 2025, the affordable care act marketplace no longer offers the same subsidy levels many shoppers used to rely on. What changed: enhanced subsidies ended, so your monthly payment and out-of-pocket math may shift when you renew or shop plans.
What happened to the ACA tax credits after Dec. 31, 2025
Enhanced premium tax credits expired at year-end 2025. That reduced financial help for many who buy coverage on the exchange. How big premium increases could be without subsidies
KFF estimates the average premium jump is about 114% for enrollees who relied on those subsidies. In practice, a plan that felt manageable could become unaffordable quickly.
What the Congressional Budget Office projects for coverage through 2034
The CBO (2024) projects uninsured totals would rise by an average of 3.8 million people each year from 2026–2034 if credits are not extended. That means more gaps in coverage nationwide.
Why higher deductibles and co-pays can change care-seeking behavior
As premiums rise, many people switch to cheaper plans or drop coverage. Others keep insurance but accept higher cost-sharing.
Higher deductibles and co-pays can push you to delay routine care. That raises the chance problems get worse and lead to emergency-room visits.
"When costs rise, people often delay prevention — a short-term saving that can cause long-term bills."
| Impact | What you may see | Action step |
| Premium shock | Average 114% increase for subsidy-reliant enrollees | Re-check plans and budgets on the exchange |
| Coverage loss | ~3.8M more uninsured per year (CBO projection) | Compare alternatives and explore financial help |
| Higher cost-sharing | More deductible and co-pay exposure | Consider plan metal tier and provider networks |
| Care delay | Increased ER use and worse outcomes | Prioritize preventive care and review benefits |
Reader checkpoint: if you’re shopping now, update your marketplace application and compare options. For guidance linked to the affordable care act marketplace, see Affordable Care Act marketplace guidance.
How these coverage and cost changes could affect your family’s health decisions
Rising plan costs push real decisions: change tiers, go without, or find short-term aid. You’ll weigh monthly savings against future exposure and make choices that shape your family’s care.
What households do in practice:
- Switch metal tiers to lower premiums but accept bigger out-of-pocket risk.
- Drop coverage and rely on local charity or hospital relief for urgent care.
- Seek short-term financial aid or payment plans from health systems.
Silver to bronze: premium relief vs higher pocket costs
Example: Robert Myers switched to a bronze plan for immediate relief. He now pays lower premiums but faces $80 co-pays and an $8,000 deductible. This tradeoff cuts monthly bills but raises your pocket costs when you need care. Experts warn high deductibles can delay care and increase emergency visits.
Timing matters for pregnancy, chronic conditions, and emergencies
Kassidy Hooter, coping with a high-risk pregnancy, forgone coverage and sought three months of aid from a local medical center. Stacy Kanas considered going uninsured after seeing a roughly $2,500 monthly quote. If you have an expected pregnancy or chronic care needs, a coverage gap can be costly and risky.
"Being one catastrophic event away from financial disaster is a common fear."
Practical steps: estimate best-case and worst-case yearly spending (premium + deductible + co-pays) before you switch. Contact providers about financial assistance or sliding-scale programs if you face a short-term crisis.
| Decision | Short-term effect | Risk to family |
| Switch to bronze | Lower premium, immediate relief | Higher deductible, larger pocket costs if care is needed |
| Drop coverage | No monthly premium | High financial risk from hospitalization or pregnancy |
| Seek local aid | Temporary help for bills | May not cover long-term or catastrophic care |
Conclusion
Policy moves this season change how nonmedical credits work and how much many people pay for coverage. Two shifts matter most: D‑SNP extra benefit rules tighten for 2026, and enhanced ACA subsidies ended at year‑end 2025. That can mean a different price or a different way you may spend a monthly credit — not always a total loss of benefits. If you have a D‑SNP plan, check the qualifying‑condition list, watch verification notices, and confirm your member portal for credit access. If you buy on the marketplace, re-run your application, compare plans, and total your yearly cost (premium + deductible + co‑pays). For context, KFF estimated about a 114% average rise in premiums for subsidy‑dependent enrollees, and the CBO projects roughly 3.8 million more uninsured per year without extensions. Act soon: enrollment windows often fall in mid‑month, so missing a deadline can leave you uninsured for days or weeks. Next steps: keep records ready, contact your insurer or marketplace assisters, and ask providers about financial assistance if costs threaten your care. Stay current on plan notices and official guidance to protect your coverage and budget through the year.
