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Finalized federal rule reduces total duration of short-term health plans to 4 months

HHS rule applies to short-term limited duration insurance (STLDI) plans sold or issued on or after September 1, 2024

Final federal rule regarding STLDI short-term limited duration insurance

A finalized federal rule announced by the Departments of Treasury, Health and Human Services, and Labor in March 2024, has imposed new nationwide duration limits on short-term limited duration insurance (STLDI) plans.

The rule – which applies to plans sold or issued on or after September 1, 2024 – limits new STLDI plans to three-month terms, and caps total duration – including renewals – at no more than four months.

A “renewal” includes a new policy issued by the same insurer (or another insurer in the same controlled group, meaning they’re treated as a single employer) within 12 months of the effective date of the first policy. So a person will not be able to purchase multiple consecutive policies – a practice known as “stacking” – from the same insurer or an affiliated insurer. This part of the rule helps to avoid scenarios in which consumers enroll in multiple STLDI policies without realizing that it isn’t comprehensive coverage.

Why did the federal government implement this rule?

The changes are designed to ensure that short-term coverage is used to fill a temporary gap between two comprehensive policies, rather than serving as a long-term coverage solution. Federal-level consumer protections for STLDI enrollees are limited, since STLDI is “excluded from the definition of individual health insurance” and is thus not regulated by federal rules such as the Affordable Care Act, the No Surprises Act, the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, etc.

The rule is also intended to make it easier for consumers to distinguish between ACA-compliant individual/family health insurance and STDLI and thus reduce the number of people who inadvertently purchase short-term coverage when trying to buy comprehensive coverage.

STLDI plans sold on or after Sept. 1, 2024 must include an updated and comprehensive disclosure notice that highlights the major differences between STLDI and ACA-compliant individual/family health insurance sold through the Marketplace.

The disclosure, which is illustrated on page 102 of the final rule, must be displayed on the first page of the policy/contract and any associated marketing or enrollment materials.

How does the rule affect STLDI plans that were already in effect?

Under the new rules, there was no change to STLDI policies that were already in effect, or policies that were sold and issued before Sept. 1, 2024. The previous rules continue to apply to those policies.

This means policy durations of plans that were sold and issued before Sept. 1, 2024 are up to the states and the insurers as long as the policies don’t have initial terms of more than 364 days or total duration of more than 36 months.

How are state regulations affected by the rule?

As has been the case with previous federal rules for STLDI, states can impose stricter rules but not more lenient rules regarding STLDI duration.

So for example, a state can limit STLDI to a duration of under four months (or ban them altogether, as some states have already done) or prohibit the sale of a second STLDI policy within 12 months – even if it’s issued by a different insurer.1

In another three statesDelaware, Maryland, and Oregon — short-term health insurance is available but was already limited to three months in duration, so the new federal rules didn’t change anything about STLDI durations in those states. (Virginia also limits initial terms to three months but allowed the total duration to extend to six months.2 So plans in Virginia were further limited by the new federal rules.)

How many people have short-term health insurance?

It’s difficult to pin down the exact number of enrollees, as data reporting of STLDI coverage is not consistent across states. The final rule cites a 2023 report from the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, which indicated that 235,775 people were covered by short-term health plans at the end of 2022.3

But, as noted in the final rule, that doesn’t include people who had STLDI for only part of the year, nor does it include people with association-based STDLI coverage, which is a significant portion — likely the majority — of the market.4

The final rule (see page 163) also notes that the Congressional Budget Office and the Joint Committee on Taxation had previously estimated that as many as 1.5 million people might be enrolled in STLDI. But the rule also clarified that was before the ACA’s premium subsidies were enhanced by the American Rescue Plan and Inflation Reduction Act – legislation that made Marketplace coverage more affordable and perhaps reduced the number of people who opted for STDLI.

Will people with STLDI have a special enrollment period to switch to individual/family coverage?

No. The final rule (page 68) notes that while there is already a special enrollment period (SEP) for group health insurance when an STLDI policy terminates, there is no similar SEP for individual/family health coverage. That will continue to be the case under the new rule.

States that operate their own health insurance Marketplaces are allowed to establish SEPs that differ from those available through the federally run Marketplace, HealthCare.gov. But HealthCare.gov, the Marketplace platform in 32 states (31 states as of the 2025 plan year), will continue its current protocol of not allowing a SEP due to the termination of a short-term health insurance policy.

However, as we’ll discuss below, the timing of the new rule is designed to ensure that people can purchase a STLDI plan that can continue through the end of 2024 (assuming they’re healthy enough to enroll in STLDI and assuming that insurers in their state offer STLDI with the maximum allowable four-month duration). By then utilizing the open enrollment period for ACA-compliant coverage, the consumer would be able to transition without interruption in coverage to an individual-market policy that starts on January 1, 2025, if they choose to do so.

What can people do when their short-term policy terminates?

The maximum duration limit for policies that were sold or issued before September 2024 varies by state, and insurers could further limit their short-term policies beyond what state or federal rules allowed. (An insurer could, for instance, cap total policy durations at six months, even when state and federal rules allowed for 36 months.)

If a person enrolls in a new STLDI plan on or after September 1, the plan will be allowed to cover them through the end of 2024, as that will be no more than four months away. But again, four months is the maximum allowable duration, not the required duration. For example, some insurers are now offering only a three-month policy that isn’t renewable. For this reason, consumers need to be well-informed about their policy details.

Assuming a person purchased a policy with a four-month duration that started on September 1, it will continue through the end of the year, and they will be able to select a non-temporary major medical plan for calendar year 2025 during open enrollment for individual/family coverage which will be effective as early as January 1, 2025. Open enrollment begins on November 1, 2024. This will allow them to avoid having a coverage gap.

If a person chose to purchase or renew an existing longer-term STLDI policy before the end of August 2024, their plan termination date will vary depending on the plan they chose. For example, a policy purchased before September 2024 might last for six months (i.e., potentially into early 2025) or it might last for 36 months. This is where consumers will need to be vigilant in understanding the implications of what they’re purchasing.

If they bought a six-month, non-renewable short-term policy that took effect on August 15, 2024, it will terminate in mid-February 2025. At that point, open enrollment for ACA-compliant 2025 individual/family coverage will be over.

The person will not be able to switch to an ACA-compliant plan unless they have a qualifying life event that triggers a special enrollment period (note here that some special enrollment periods are only available if the person had prior minimum essential coverage, and STLDI is not considered minimum essential coverage.)

Under the terms of the final rule, consumers will still be able to buy another STLDI policy from a different insurer after their policy ends, assuming multiple issuers are offering short-term plans in their area. But this will also depend on their health status, as the new insurer will be able to use medical underwriting.

Marketplace coverage is available

More than 21 million people enrolled in Marketplace plans during the open enrollment period for 2024 coverage. About 92% of them qualified for advance premium tax credits that reduced their average monthly premiums to just $74/month.5

These Marketplace policies cover the ACA’s essential health benefits without any annual or lifetime caps on how much the plan will pay. They have caps on out-of-pocket costs, cover pre-existing conditions, and don’t base premiums on gender or medical history, unlike STLDI policies.

History of federal short-term insurance rules

From the late 1990s until October 2018, short-term limited-duration health insurance was allowed to have a contract length of “less than 12 months” unless a state imposed stricter limits.6

New regulations took effect in 2017, limiting short-term plan durations to 90 days and prohibiting renewal of short-term policies.7

Under regulatory changes finalized in 2018, the allowable initial term of a short-term plan was lengthened to 364 days. And insurers could offer policy renewals that would keep a policy in force for up to three years, as long as this didn’t conflict with stricter rules imposed by a state.8

The rule change for policies issued on or after September 1, 2024 was largely a reversal of the 2018 rule. But it didn’t revert entirely to the rule that took effect in 2017, as it allows for renewals and a total policy duration of up to four months, instead of the three-month limit and renewal ban that took effect in 2017.


Louise Norris is an individual health insurance broker who has been writing about health insurance and health reform since 2006. She has written dozens of opinions and educational pieces about the Affordable Care Act for healthinsurance.org.

Footnotes

  1. States Step Up to Protect Insurance Markets and Consumers from Short-Term Health Plans” Commonwealth Fund. May 2, 2019 
  2. Short-Term Limited-Duration Plans in Virginia” Virginia.gov. Accessed April 1, 2024 
  3. Private Health Insurance: Limited Data Hinders Understanding of Short-Term Plans’ Role and Value During the COVID-19 Pandemic” GAO.gov. May 31, 2022 
  4. Short-Term Health Plans Sold Through Out-of-State Associations Threaten Consumer Protections” The Commonwealth Fund. Jan. 31, 2019 
  5. 2024 Marketplace Open Enrollment Period Public Use Files” state-level public use file – Column AJ (19,743,689) divided by Column H (21,446,150). CMS.gov. Accessed April 1, 2024 
  6. Short-Term Limited-Duration Insurance” U.S. Departments of Treasury, Labor, and Health & Human Services. Aug. 3, 2018 
  7. Excepted Benefits; Lifetime and Annual Limits; and Short-Term, Limited-Duration” U.S. Departments of Treasury, Labor, and Health & Human Services. Oct. 31, 2016 
  8. Short-Term Limited-Duration Insurance” U.S. Departments of Treasury, Labor, and Health & Human Services. Aug. 3, 2018 
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