CheapestACA Plans

Pennsylvania

Cheapest ACA plans in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania for 2026

Plan year 2026, last refreshed 2026-04-19T08:08:55.462Z.

Philadelphia is in Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania. 6 carriers sell 2026 ACA plans on Pennie for residents of Philadelphia County, and the cheapest Bronze plan a 40-year-old can enroll in starts at $297/month before any subsidy. Carriers are licensed and rated at the county level, so the plans below cover everyone in Philadelphia County, including Philadelphia.

Cheapest plans by metal tier

Lowest 2026 monthly premium for a single 40-year-old in Philadelphia (Philadelphia County), on-exchange, before any subsidy. Per-age figures derived from the CMS QHP Landscape file using the HHS standardized age-rating curve (45 CFR 147.102).

TierCheapest age 40 monthlyPlans in Philadelphia County
Bronze$2972
Expanded Bronze$30918
Catastrophic$3932
Gold$40624
Silver$45520

The actual cheapest Bronze plan in Philadelphia

Jefferson Health Plan Jefferson Health Plans + Value + Bronze + HMO

$297/mo
BronzeDeductible $10,000MOOP $10,000HSA-eligible

For a family of four (two 40-year-olds and two kids under 14): Jefferson Health Plan Jefferson Health Plans + Value + Bronze + HMO at $950/month before subsidies.

Carriers selling 2026 plans in Philadelphia

6 carriers sell 2026 plans on Pennie for Philadelphia County residents. 91 plans total in Philadelphia County.

CarrierOn-exchange plans
Highmark Benefits Group14
Ambetter12
Keystone Health Plan East12
Oscar Health Plan of Pennsylvania, Inc.10
Jefferson Health Plan9
QCC Insurance Company, Inc.9

What you'll actually pay in Philadelphia

Estimated monthly net premium for the cheapest Bronze plan above ($297/mo before subsidy) on Pennie, after federal APTC. APTC is computed against the Philadelphia Countybenchmark Silver per 26 USC §36B. Approximate; exact net varies by plan's EHB% and child-rate structure.

Single 40-year-old

Annual incomeFPL %Federal APTCCheapest Bronze net
$25,000160%$372/mo$0/mo
$40,000256%$182/mo$115/mo
$60,000383%$0/mo$297/mo
$100,000639%$297/mo

Family of 4 (two 40-year-olds, two children)

Annual incomeFPL %Federal APTCCheapest Bronze net
$40,000124%Medicaid likely
$80,000249%$938/mo$12/mo
$130,000404%$950/mo
$200,000622%$950/mo

FPL = Federal Poverty Level. APTC = Advance Premium Tax Credit (the federal subsidy). Off-exchange and Catastrophic plans are not APTC-eligible. Enter your real income on the home page to see plan-specific net premium with the per-plan EHB-percent cap applied.

Frequently asked questions

What is the cheapest ACA plan in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania for 2026?

The cheapest Bronze plan a 40-year-old can enroll in is Jefferson Health Plan Jefferson Health Plans + Value + Bronze + HMO at $297 per month before subsidies. Plans sell through Pennie. Philadelphia is in Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania; carriers are licensed and rated at the county level. Data refreshed 2026-04-19T08:08:55.462Z.

How does Philadelphia's 2026 ACA pricing compare to other Pennsylvania cities?

Cheapest Bronze for a 40-year-old in Philadelphia is $297 per month before subsidies. For comparison: Pittsburgh at $308/mo. Different cities can have different cheapest plans because plans are sold per county and carrier participation varies by jurisdiction.

Why does Pennsylvania have its own marketplace instead of HealthCare.gov?

Pennsylvania ran on HealthCare.gov through 2020, then launched Pennie as a state-based exchange for plan year 2021 under Act 42 of 2019. Running its own exchange lets Pennsylvania keep user-fee savings in-state, which funds the Pennsylvania Reinsurance Program.

What is the Pennsylvania Reinsurance Program and does it lower my 2026 premium?

Yes, indirectly. Since 2021, Pennie has run a §1332 waiver reinsurance program that reimburses carriers for a share of high-cost claims, historically reducing gross individual-market premiums by about 5%. You do not apply for it; the savings are already baked into premiums posted on Pennie.

Does Pennsylvania have a state premium subsidy on top of the federal APTC?

Not in 2026. The state legislature authorized a State Health Insurance Exchange Affordability Program in the 2024-2025 budget, but it has not been funded. Pennie enrollees rely on federal Advance Premium Tax Credits only, and the enhanced (ARPA/IRA) credits expired at the end of 2025.

More Pennsylvania pricing

Sources

Plan year 2026, last refreshed 2026-04-19T08:08:55.462Z. Full pricing pipeline + regulatory references at methodology; ACA terminology in the glossary.