News

New York will end its Essential Plan health insurance program, which covers 1.7 million low- and middle-income New Yorkers, ...
The move theoretically averts the loss of zero-premium health coverage for around 1.3 million New Yorkers who are low-income ...
Nearly half a million low-income New Yorkers will lose access to zero-premium health insurance next summer due to federal ...
NY's Department of Financial Services approved the 2026 health insurance rate hikes, which are part of national trend driving ...
New York is seeking to shrink enrollment in a government-funded health insurance plan for low-income individuals, stating ...
Consumers who buy health insurance through the New York State-run Affordable Care Act marketplace could face double-digit percentage rate hikes next year. That's because health insurers in New York ...
In late August, the New York State Department of Financial Services approved individual and small group requested rate ...
Excellus BlueCross BlueShield will raise its premiums by about 20% next year for individuals who buy coverage through New ...
Electricity isn't the only thing New Yorkers will be paying more for. Health insurance is about to get more expensive, too.
Central New York’s largest private insurance company was approved for the second-largest rate increase among insurers ...
Aetna, Emblem Health and United Health Care told Newsday they would pay for fully insured members who want to receive the ...
Gov. Kathy Hochul said the New York State Department of Financial Services sent a letter to insurance companies to encourage ...