Government Shutdown and Why it Matters for Healthcare and Open Enrollment.

What happened (and why it matters)

- The federal government is in a shutdown after Congress failed to pass FY-2026 appropriations. Health care is at the center of the standoff—particularly whether to extend the enhanced ACA premium tax credits (expanded APTCs) that made Marketplace plans cheaper since 2021 and were extended through 2025.
- HHS and CMS released contingency plans: roughly 53% of CMS staff are retained to keep “excepted” and already-funded activities running; others were initially furloughed.
- As the shutdown dragged into late October, CMS recalled furloughed staff specifically to support Medicare and ACA Open Enrollments (funded via user fees), so enrollment operations can proceed.
Key Open Enrollment dates (unchanged as of today)
- Medicare (for people 65+ and certain disabilities): Oct 15 – Dec 7, 2025 (national). CMS is bringing staff back to support this window despite the shutdown.
- ACA/Individual & Family: Nov 1, 2025 – Jan 15, 2026 in most states.
- Georgia Access (state-based marketplace): Window shopping opened Oct 1; Open Enrollment starts Nov 1; Dec 15 deadline for Jan 1 effective dates; Jan 15 last day overall.
What’s affected—and what isn’t
Individuals & Families (Marketplace/ACA)
What continues
- Online plan shopping, eligibility determinations, and enrollments on federal and state marketplaces continue; Georgia Access will open on Nov 1 as scheduled.
- Eligibility rules and 2025 plan designs remain intact.

What may be slower or constrained
- Consumer assistance/call centers and outreach could be strained due to staffing limits, even with CMS recalls. Some ancillary federal functions can be delayed.
- IRS support (e.g., questions around Form 8962/1095-A reconciliation, identity verification, or premium-tax-credit issues) may be slower because the IRS is operating under a lapse plan that furloughed a large share of workers.
Small Groups & Employers
What continues
- Issuers can quote and bind small-group coverage; carriers are open. ERISA plans continue normal operations.
What may be slower or constrained
- Regulatory guidance/EBSA responses and certain enforcement/interpretation questions at the U.S. Department of Labor can be delayed under DOL’s lapse plan. That can slow answers on niche compliance issues (e.g., some Form 5500 or wrap-plan questions).
- Public health programs and research (CDC/NIH grants, data updates) face significant slowdowns; these don’t stop group plans, but they can ripple through vendor capacity and community health resources.
Medicare
What continues
What may be slower
- Certain survey & certification activities proceed only if they meet “excepted” criteria tied to immediate safety; other non-critical surveys pause. That does not stop enrollment or claims. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services+1
The subsidy question: what’s at stake and plausible scenarios
Scenarios to watch
- Short CR, then extension of enhanced APTCs into 2026-2027.
- No extension—enhanced APTCs sunset after 2025.
- CBO and researchers estimate several million could lose coverage; average net premiums rise, with the steepest increases above 400% FPL (who would lose eligibility entirely). Expect higher churn back to uninsured or to employer mini-med/limited plans.
- Targeted compromise.
Georgia note: Georgia Access follows federal subsidy rules; whatever Congress decides will flow through to Georgia consumers during or after this OE (with notices if mid-year changes occur). Georgia Access
Will the shutdown delay Open Enrollment?
Strategically-Crafted Benefit Plans
- 2025: Not at this time. CMS has specifically recalled staff to keep both Medicare AEP and ACA Open Enrollment on track. Georgia Access confirms Nov 1 is the start.
- Past example (2013): During the Oct 1–16, 2013 shutdown, ACA enrollment still began on time (even as Healthcare.gov had major technical issues unrelated to appropriations). Multiple contemporaneous sources reported the government closure did not stop Marketplace sign-ups, though it complicated coordination.
Practical guidance by audience
For Individuals & Families (Georgia Access / ACA)
- Shop early (Nov 1–Nov 15) to avoid bottlenecks and secure Jan 1 start dates (Dec 15 deadline for 1/1 coverage in GA).
- Update your income carefully; save docs. If IRS assistance is delayed, accurate applications reduce reconciliation headaches later.
- If you’re above ~400% FPL, model both with- and without-enhanced-subsidy scenarios so you’re prepared if Congress acts late.
For Small Employers (2–20 employees)
- If your 2026 renewal looks high, compare ICHRA + Georgia Access vs. level-funded vs. traditional small-group now; ICHRA can offload risk and leverage Marketplace choice—especially if enhanced APTCs are extended. If APTCs expire, reevaluate the math: group may pencil better for some. (We can model both ways for you.)
- Plan for slower federal responses on nuanced ERISA/EBSA questions; aim for state-level or carrier confirmations when possible, and document interim compliance positions.
For Medicare Beneficiaries
- Do your plan review now (Drug lists, network, premiums, and MOOP). With staffing just recalled, expect call centers to be busy—use plan finders and brokers to compare options.
For Providers & Group Plan Admins
Quick FAQ
Does the shutdown stop my current Medicare or Marketplace coverage?
No. Benefits and claims continue; enrollment windows are open. Support services may be slower.
What should Georgia residents do right now?
Window-shop plans, update accounts, and be ready to enroll Nov 1; aim for Dec 15 to start Jan 1.
How Emergent Financial Group can help (fast)
- Rapid ICHRA vs. level-funded vs. traditional group comparisons customized to your census and renewal.
- Household ACA subsidy modeling under all three scenarios (extend, sunset, partial).
- Medicare AEP reviews (drug and provider network checks) with documentation you can save for 2026 taxes and appeals.
- Download Our 2026 Benefit Budget Planner – HERE
Need help getting started? Explore how Emergent Financial Group partners with Retirement Plan providers to bring you flexible, tax-smart options tailored for your business.
Please don’t hesitate to contact us here

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