April 22, 2026

New Jersey Gov. Sherrill Blames President for 76,000 Enrollment Decrease in State Healthcare Marketplace

Trenton, NJ – Between 69,000 and 76,000 people in New Jersey did not re-enroll in marketplace health plans for 2026 after federal subsidies expired, though the state has not released demographic data explaining who left coverage or why.

Gov. Mikie Sherrill pointed to rising premiums following the expiration of enhanced Affordable Care Act tax credits as the primary cause, but her office has not provided a breakdown of those affected, including income levels, employment status, or immigration status. Today, she’s blaming President Trump for the decrease in enrollment after the President announced that illegal immigrants would no longer qualify for federal healthcare subsidies and others in the system would face more scrutiny and responsibility to get free state-provided healthcare.

At the same time, broader federal policy changes—including upcoming Medicaid work requirements and eligibility restrictions—are expected to reshape coverage access, though they are not directly tied to the 2026 marketplace enrollment drop.

What the data shows—and what it doesn’t

The enrollment decline follows the December 31, 2025 expiration of enhanced federal subsidies that had reduced monthly premiums for many Get Covered NJ users.

State and federal summaries confirm premiums increased for 2026 plans. However, no publicly cited dataset in the release or supporting materials details:

  • how many of those who dropped coverage did so purely for cost
  • whether they transitioned to other plans
  • or what share, if any, were non-citizens affected by separate eligibility rules

Sherrill attributed the losses to federal decisions, writing that tens of thousands “dropped their affordable coverage,” but that claim reflects a policy interpretation rather than a fully detailed statistical breakdown.

Separate policy changes affecting Medicaid

Other healthcare policy changes are moving forward on a different track.

Federal rules will:

  • require certain Medicaid recipients to work, volunteer, or attend school starting in 2027
  • require eligibility renewals every six months
  • limit coverage eligibility for non-citizen immigrants beginning in late 2026

These policies affect NJ FamilyCare (Medicaid), not the ACA marketplace directly. Their long-term impact on total coverage in New Jersey remains uncertain.


Key Points
• 69,000–76,000 residents did not re-enroll in 2026 NJ marketplace plans
• State attributes drop to higher premiums after subsidy expiration
• No demographic breakdown released explaining who lost coverage or why

Political claims vs. verified facts

The debate over responsibility reflects a broader political divide.

State officials, including Sherrill, argue that ending enhanced subsidies made coverage unaffordable for many residents. Federal policy changes, meanwhile, have focused on reducing subsidy spending and expanding lower-cost plan options.

Without detailed enrollment data, it is not possible to independently verify how much of the decline is tied to cost alone versus other factors such as plan changes, eligibility shifts, or personal choice.

What remains unknown

Key unanswered questions include:

  • income brackets of those who dropped coverage
  • how many obtained insurance elsewhere
  • how future Medicaid rule changes will affect overall uninsured rates

Those gaps limit definitive conclusions about who was most affected and why.

What comes next

New Jersey agencies have not yet released a full demographic or behavioral analysis of the enrollment drop, and additional data may clarify the drivers behind the decline.

For now, the confirmed facts are limited: subsidies expired, premiums rose, and tens of thousands fewer residents enrolled—while the precise reasons and populations involved remain only partially explained.