The final snapshot for the Open Enrollment Period on HealthCare.gov and ten state-based exchanges is in. We're almost done, though eight SBEs are still open. Already, enrollment in marketplace plans is up 21% over OEP 2021, to a record-breaking 14.5 million nationally, well above the previous high of 12.7 million in 2016.
Two caveats. First, when the Trump administration cut OEP in HealthCare.gov to six weeks (Nov. 1 - Dec. 15) and gutted advertising and enrollment assistance in HealthCare.gov states, while plan selection in OEP dropped, attrition also dropped -- that is, the percentage of people who never paid their first premium went way down. Early effectuated enrollment went from 85% of OEP plan selections in 2016 to 94% in 2021. A longer OEP and heavier outreach apparently attracts more marginal enrollees -- though with benchmark silver plans now free up at incomes up to 150% FPL and cheaper at all incomes, attrition may not drop to pre-2017 levels.
Second, the steep premium hikes of 2017 and 2018 decimated off-exchange enrollment in ACA-compliant plans, which dropped from 5.0 million in Q1 2016 to 2.1 million in Q1 2019, by KFF's estimate. All told, individual individual market enrollment may be about where it was at the 2016 peak.