Date

Fact Sheets

Marketplace 2022 Open Enrollment Period Report: December National Snapshot

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) reports that 13.8 million Americans have signed up for or were automatically re-enrolled in 2022 individual market health insurance coverage through the Marketplaces since the start of the 2022 Marketplace Open Enrollment Period (OEP) on November 1. This includes 9.7 million plan selections in the 33 states using the HealthCare.gov for the 2022 plan year, through December 15, 2021, the deadline for January 1 coverage. Also, 4.1 million plan selections in the 17 states and the District of Columbia with State-based Marketplaces (SBMs) that are using their own eligibility and enrollment platforms, through December 25, 2021, which is past the deadline for January 1 coverage in half of the SBMs.[1]  Total nationwide plan selections include 2.0 million consumers (15% of total) who are new to the Marketplaces for 2022, and 11.8 million returning consumers (85% of total) who have active 2021 coverage and made a plan selection for 2022 coverage or were automatically re-enrolled.

Definitions and details on the data are included in the glossary.

Marketplace and Consumer Type

Cumulative 2022 OEP Plan Selections[2]

Total: All States

13,816,264

New Consumers

2,028,276

Returning Consumers[3]

11,787,988

Total HealthCare.gov States

9,724,251

New Consumers

1,612,068

Returning Consumers

8,112,183

Total SBM States[4]

4,092,013

New Consumers

416,208

Returning Consumers

3,675,805

 

2022 Marketplace Open Enrollment Period Plan Selections by State

 

State

Platform

Cumulative 2022 OEP Plan Selections

Alaska

HealthCare.gov

21,818

Alabama

HealthCare.gov

205,407

Arkansas

HealthCare.gov

81,947

Arizona

HealthCare.gov

187,651

California

SBM

1,732,996

Colorado

SBM

182,273

Connecticut

SBM

105,193

Delaware

HealthCare.gov

30,612

District of Columbia

SBM

15,881

Florida

HealthCare.gov

2,592,906

Georgia

HealthCare.gov

653,990

Hawaii

HealthCare.gov

21,789

Idaho

SBM

73,359

Iowa

HealthCare.gov

69,293

Illinois

HealthCare.gov

310,489

Indiana

HealthCare.gov

149,369

Kansas

HealthCare.gov

102,573

Kentucky

SBM

72,057

Louisiana

HealthCare.gov

94,635

Maine

SBM

65,005

Maryland

SBM

171,447

Massachusetts

SBM

262,167

Michigan

HealthCare.gov

293,476

Minnesota

SBM

117,039

Missouri

HealthCare.gov

241,982

Mississippi

HealthCare.gov

132,432

Montana

HealthCare.gov

49,413

North Carolina

HealthCare.gov

638,309

North Dakota

HealthCare.gov

28,849

Nebraska

HealthCare.gov

97,169

Nevada

SBM

96,243

New Hampshire

HealthCare.gov

51,058

New Jersey

SBM

299,589

New Mexico

SBM

42,505

New York

SBM

208,891

Ohio

HealthCare.gov

247,269

Oklahoma

HealthCare.gov

185,873

Oregon

HealthCare.gov

142,783

Pennsylvania

SBM

358,792

Rhode Island

SBM

32,308

South Carolina

HealthCare.gov

282,882

South Dakota

HealthCare.gov

39,292

Tennessee

HealthCare.gov

257,778

Texas

HealthCare.gov

1,711,204

Utah

HealthCare.gov

245,285

Vermont

SBM

26,069

Virginia

HealthCare.gov

296,257

Washington

SBM

230,199

Wisconsin

HealthCare.gov

205,991

West Virginia

HealthCare.gov

21,435

Wyoming

HealthCare.gov

33,035

Glossary

HealthCare.gov States: The 33 states that use the HealthCare.gov platform for the 2022 coverage year, including the Federally-facilitated Marketplace and State-based Marketplaces that use the federal platform (HealthCare.gov). For 2022, Kentucky, Maine, and New Mexico transitioned to state Marketplace platforms and are not included in the 33 states using HealthCare.gov for 2022. The 33 states for 2022 include: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.

State-based Marketplace (SBM) States: The 17 states and the District of Columbia with Marketplaces that operate their own eligibility and enrollment platforms. The 18 SBMs for 2022 are California, Colorado, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Idaho, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington. Generally, the data metric definitions provided here are applicable to the SBM metrics, with some exceptions. Please contact the SBMs for additional information on their metrics.

Cumulative Plan Selections: The cumulative metric represents the total number of people who have submitted an application and selected a plan, net of any cancellations from a consumer or cancellations from an insurer that have occurred from November 1, 2021, through the end of the reporting period. Plan selections include those consumers who are automatically re-enrolled into their current plan or another plan with similar benefits. To have their coverage effectuated, consumers generally need to pay their first month’s health plan premium. This release does not report the number of effectuated enrollments.

New Consumers (HealthCare.gov States): A consumer is considered to be a new consumer if they did not have 2021 Marketplace coverage through December 31, 2021, and made a 2022 plan selection.

New Consumers (SBM States): A consumer is considered to be a new consumer if they did not have 2021 Marketplace coverage in a SBM that uses its own platform, and made a 2022 plan selection on or after November 1, 2021.

Returning Consumers (HealthCare.gov): A consumer is considered to be a renewing consumer if they have 2021 Marketplace coverage through December 31, 2021, and either actively selected the same plan or a new plan for 2022, were automatically re-enrolled into their 2021 plan, or were signed up for January 1 coverage in a suggested alternate plan.

Returning Consumers (SBM States): A consumer is considered to be a returning consumer if they have 2021 Marketplace coverage through December 31, 2021, and either actively selected the same plan or a new plan for 2022, were automatically re-enrolled into their 2021 plan, or were signed up for January 1 coverage in a suggested alternate plan.

###

 

[1] Nine SBMs (Colorado, DC, Idaho, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington) had deadlines for January 1, 2022, coverage that occurred within the SBM reporting period, November 1 – December 25, 2021. The remaining SBMs (California, Connecticut, Kentucky, Maryland, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Rhode Island, and Vermont) had a December 31, 2021, deadline for January 1 coverage.

[2]  For states using the HealthCare.gov platform, cumulative data include plan selections from November 1 – December 15, 2021. Cumulative data for SBMs include plan selections from November 1 – December 25, 2021, except Idaho which ended its OEP on December 22, 2021.

[3] The returning consumers metric in this report includes both consumers who have returned to their respective Marketplace through the reporting date and selected a plan for 2022 coverage, and consumers who have been automatically re-enrolled in their 2021 plan or a suggested alternate plan.

[4] In addition to reported plan selections, New York and Minnesota have a Basic Health Program (BHP), which provides coverage to consumers with incomes below 200 percent of the FPL, who are not eligible for Medicaid or CHIP and otherwise would be eligible for a QHP.  From November 1 – December 25, 2021, New York had a total of 948,917 individuals enroll in a BHP.  Minnesota’s data was unavailable at the time of this report.