Thursday, June 18, 2026

They’re uninsured after Obamacare became too costly. And they’re far from alone.

They’re uninsured after Obamacare became too costly. And they’re far from alone.

https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2026/6/18/800056763/news/theyre-uninsured-after-obamacare-became-too-costly-and-theyre-far-from-alone/ 

They’re uninsured after Obamacare became too costly. And they’re far from alone.

Rebecca and Ross Tobiassen, who own an auto shop in the North Carolina mountains, canceled their Affordable Care Act insurance last year when it became too expensive. (Andrew Jones/KFF Health News)
Andrew Jones/KFFRebecca and Ross Tobiassen, who own an auto shop in the North Carolina mountains, canceled their Affordable Care Act insurance last year when it became too expensive.

Some families have decided the price is too great of a financial burden and canceled their coverage.

By Andrew Jones for KFF


SUGAR GROVE, N.C. — Year after year, Ross and Rebecca Tobiassen saw their healthcare costs rise, having relied on the Affordable Care Act for federally subsidized health insurance since its start in 2014. Year after year, the couple in western North Carolina kept their coverage, believing the peace of mind was worth the cost.

But in December, that changed. The Tobiassens decided to cancel their insurance when Rebecca saw the cost of their monthly premiums would jump from $130 to more than $550.

“It makes no sense,” she said. “It’s not worth it anymore.”

The couple own and are the only employees of a small auto shop just west of Appalachian State University in the North Carolina mountains. Rebecca worries about her husband, whose work as a mechanic can be dangerous. A spring once shot a metal ball joint into their garage wall like a gun. A heavy object crushed Ross’ thumb. In 2020, Ross became mostly blind in one eye after repeatedly getting metal shards in it and developing an infection in his cornea.

The Tobiassens are among the Americans who canceled their ACA coverage after Congress allowed enhanced tax credits that helped pay for insurance plans to expire at the end of 2025. The Tobiassens benefited from those tax credits — like millions of other enrollees expected to drop or be dropped from their coverage as the year progresses, unable to keep up with the higher costs.

Clay Bennett/Tribune Content Agency

Established by the Biden administration’s American Rescue Plan Act during the covid pandemic, the expanded subsidies reduced monthly premiums for many families and prompted a tidal wave of new sign-ups, doubling ACA enrollment to about 24 million.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is expected to soon release complete data on how many people are no longer covered under the ACA, but an early analysis from KFF, citing Wakely Consulting Group research, showed enrollment could drop from over 22 million at the end of 2025 to as low as 16.5 million in 2026. 

In North Carolina, individual ACA sign-ups for 2026 were down 22% compared with the year before, a greater drop than any other state, amounting to a decrease of more than 213,000 people, according to enrollment data. While the Tobiassens’ two teenage daughters remain on Medicaid, Rebecca said the new prices showed that the federal government doesn’t care about families like hers.

“We’ve known that you don’t care about us,” she said, “but you’re making it plain and simple now.”

Ross Tobiassen became mostly blind in his left eye after repeatedly getting metal shards in it while at work in his auto shop and developing an infection in the cornea.
Andrew Jones/KFFRoss Tobiassen became mostly blind in his left eye after repeatedly getting metal shards in it while at work in his auto shop and developing an infection in the cornea.

The couple’s insurance hadn’t helped them cover all their medical needs. When the pain from Ross’ eye infection worsened five years ago, Rebecca insisted he go to a specialist, who told them that fixing the eye through cornea replacement surgery would cost them up to $30,000 and require Ross to take six months off.

Ross chose a less expensive treatment to kill nerves in the eye instead.

The couple know they’re taking a risk by not being insured. If something were to happen, they could face an enormous medical bill.

Ross, 47, said the blindness in the one eye doesn’t significantly affect his job. He works long hours, sometimes into the night to keep up with demand.

“I try not to think about it too much,” he said. “I just work.”


Rebecca Tobiassen, 44
Rebecca Tobiassen/KFF

Uninsured, With No Backup Plan, After Obamacare Became Unaffordable

Rebecca Tobiassen, 44  
Sugar Grove, North Carolina 

Rebecca Tobiassen owns a small auto repair shop with her husband, Ross, in the western North Carolina mountains. She says their family could no longer afford Affordable Care Act insurance after tax credits expired last year and their monthly premiums shot up from $130 to more than $550. They have no immediate plans to sign up for coverage elsewhere and are saving up for out-of-pocket expenses instead. “We just need to be able to afford to get help when we seriously hurt ourselves,” she said of the U.S. healthcare system. 


Katie Alexander oversees volunteers for Pisgah Legal Services, a western North Carolina nonprofit that helps low-income people secure health insurance. Alexander has helped North Carolina and Tennessee residents try to get ACA marketplace plans since Obamacare’s launch. She said she’s never seen anything like this year. 

Nearly 100 Pisgah clients, out of about 700 that Alexander’s team worked with during open enrollment, decided to drop insurance this year, and many others chose cheaper ACA plans with less coverage, Alexander said. 

Alexander said the people who have dropped their coverage include Lyft and Uber drivers. They’re trying to start their own businesses. They are artists and people who can work only part-time, because they’re chronically ill. Some are unable to get insurance through their employers, or they make too much to be on Medicaid.

“Even for folks who don’t have chronic illnesses,” Alexander said, “there’s just this nagging at the back of your mind, kind of constantly, of: ‘Don’t get hurt. Don’t get sick. Because you can’t afford that.’”

ACA premiums and deductibles steadily increased for years starting in 2022, then spiked during the enrollment period for 2026 plans, according to data analyzed by KFF. The Tobiassens have seen every dip and rise in plan costs since 2014 when the plans launched. They joined immediately and paid about $30 a month, Rebecca Tobiassen said.  

Ross Tobiassen built his auto shop, which he owns with his wife, next to his home on his property in western North Carolina.
Andrew Jones/KFFRoss Tobiassen built his auto shop, which he owns with his wife, next to his home on his property in western North Carolina.

“You actually felt like you were benefiting,” she said.

But through the years as the marketplace became more expensive, the couple made concessions, switching at one point from a silver plan — historically the most popular — to a bronze. The plan mostly provided for the couple’s basic needs.

As they saw their deductibles and premiums rise over more than a decade, Rebecca feared the day would come when they could no longer afford even the cheapest plan.

“Plans are unaffordable, no matter how you cut it,” said Risha Gidwani, a healthcare policy researcher at the University of Colorado Anschutz School of Medicine. “It’s just who is shouldering the unaffordability.” 

Gidwani and health economist Cheryl Damberg, in a study published earlier this year, found that most bronze plans, the cheapest ACA options for many, would be unaffordable without subsidies for the average person using the federal healthcare coverage.

Without subsidies, many families using these plans don’t make enough to afford premiums or deductibles, Gidwani’s research shows.

Ross Tobiassen says his job as a mechanic can be dangerous — he works late into the evenings sometimes to keep up with demand.
Andrew Jones/KFFRoss Tobiassen says his job as a mechanic can be dangerous — he works late into the evenings sometimes to keep up with demand.

People who drop health insurance also change what’s known as the “risk pool,” Gidwani said, when a group of people share financial hazards. 

If healthier people drop out of the risk pool, fewer people subsidize the people who get sick, Gidwani said. That means premiums for the people who get sick will increase again in the future, she added.

“That becomes what we call a death spiral,” Gidwani said.

Even if the subsidies hadn’t expired, taxpayers would have borne an estimated $350 billion burden over the next decade to cover them, Gidwani’s study noted.

After dropping coverage they’d relied on for 11 years, the Tobiassens have no plans to return to the ACA marketplace. They looked into alternative options through a faith-based healthcare organization but decided to go without.

For now, they don’t have a plan B. They’ve set aside some money for a medical emergency. And if their savings run out, Rebecca Tobiassen said, they have a couple of last resorts to lean on: credit cards or family members.

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All comments are subject to our Community Guidelines. The views expressed in comments are those of the individual authors and don't necessarily reflect the views of Daily Kos.

All Comments

  1. Comment by LowAndSlow.

    ACA was as good a system you could have and still have private insurance companies and it penciled out to be stable and self sustaining. If Republican voters hadn’t allowed it to be weakened by the GOP, it wouldn’t have needed subsidies to make it affordable during the pandemic. It’s insane that working class people vote for Republicans.

  2. Comment by Brian3.

    a lot of people didn’t care but Kamala

  3. Comment by MDGluon16.

    So for 2% of the bloated killing machine (Department of Waaaaaar fighters) we could have health care for millions of Americans.

    And the GrOPer party refuses to do this….why would any working American vote for the GrOPer party is beyond my understanding at this point.

    Must be a religious thing.

  4. Comment by NoFreeRide.

    Not healthcare, health insurance. The continued gaslighting of the American public. When your deductible rises, it's your payment towards your healthcare. It means your health insurance is not covering the cost of your healthcare. That healthcare cost may be going up, but it's nothing compared to what your insurance is going to bill you.

    Mix this is with the nonsensical bills that list the medical costs in the thousands of $'s but your health insurance means you pay hundreds. No, you were never going to have to pay the thousands if you didn't have health insurance. It's a shell game to make the insurers look better. Medicare for All would do this too. But the real solution is a Western European style healthcare provision. The increase in taxes is a percentage of the increase in health insurance, and your cutting out the middle man fees.

    • Reply by Nailbanger.

      Also, they have contrived pricing to ensure you pay more for your healthcare. When the price under insurance for an MRI is double the cash price, you pay the cash price which means you haven't made progress towards your deductible. I dont believe that is an accident.

  5. Comment by Blue Boomer.

    Note that this guy blames "the federal government", not Trump or the Republican Congress. So instead of voting for a Democrat who'll try to fix the problem, he'll vote for the next Republican who stokes his anger and puts the blame on people of color and immigrants.

  6. Comment by JustinQ78.

    Aaaaaaaand... Cue the schadenfreude! The article makes no mention of how the Tobiassens voted in 2024, which must have been extremely disappointing to the leopards eating faces crowd, eager to place the blame on this couple for their own situation.

  7. Comment by Digler.

    I have this discussion with Trump supporters all the time about why everyone should have health care, even those that can't afford it. Their arguments are usually along the lines of "let them pay for it themselves". Yep...that's the republican way. But paying for a disastrous war in Iran. Republicans were all for it...until they weren't. That's their priorities?

    Sorry this couple is struggling. I vote Democratic party to change this. Most on Kos do too, I believe. Those that don't vote for our US people health care are just being played by the republican party. They don't mind that this couple (yes I guess they probably voted for Trump) don't have health insurance. While I don't understand that I still hope they get health insurance.

  8. Comment by ericfreedom.

    Why hasn't the Democratic Party made "Medicare for All including mental health, dental, vision, and hearing" a top agenda item of the Democratic Party Platform?

    It would radically reduce health care costs as a % of GDP and one rational, compassionate change might even result in a commitment to feed and house people. There was no visible homelessness in the US until after 1980 and "trickle down economics".

    • Reply by juliabliss.

      Unfortunately, I think you answered your own question.

      The D party has a lot of corporate sponsors. Insurance companies have been enjoying record numbers of customers, and pushing M4A would cut back on those profits. The boon is ending, so the ACA is likely to be discontinued if things don't change.

      M4A is only expensive when you discount the cost of covering uninsured under the current system, and the monthly savings to most taxpayers. Yes some taxes would go up, but no monthly premiums, no additional bills for using the insurance. The net expense to the vast majority of people would be lower.

  9. Comment by Milwrob.

    Since 1968 North Carolina has voted rethuglican in 13 of the 15 Presidential contests. Including the 2020 election that expanded access. Guess they got what they have always wanted, conservative Christian government!

  10. Comment by LeMoJoust.

    Kamala Harris warned you, you wouldn't listen.

    • Reply by JustinQ78.

      I didn't see any mention in the article how the Tobiassens voted.

  11. Comment by TFinSF.

    Just to check, I searched the text for the words "republican" and "trump". No hits.

    Something tells me this article isn't really getting to the bottom of why their premiums rose so sharply....

    • Reply by juliabliss.

      True. Also no mention of McConnell, or the pre-emptive caving from D leaders that earned them 0 GOP votes. They could have left the public option in the bill. It would have still passed, and stood as an example of good government. Instead it was watered down for no reason, which allowed for all sorts of legitimate criticism ... and here we are.

      I wish the moderate Ds would learn their lesson.

    • Reply by TFinSF.

      Fair point -- I was just referring to letting ACA subsidies expire, but your point is also true.

  12. Comment by De veritas.

    Thank you for writing about this challenge to so many people. We haven't had near enough diaries about "Obamacare" and related health insurance issues for a long time.

    • Reply by @Loca Grienga.

      It's time to call it by it's official name, "Affordable Care Act" not names republicans created to insult the real "Obama Caring" as he cared about the country and all the people by providing ACA. Many of those who need it the most don't want non-existing "Obama Care" yet want the "Affordable Care Act" since republican propaganda likes to nickname anything good for the people with confusing language. Language matters, especially in government, not the twisted nonsense and lies by the current president and his cult.

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