Report
The High Cost of Living: What Working Families Pay For Health Care
Report
Since at least the mid-1980s, the price of health care has been rising much faster than the economy-wide average (Figure 1). As health care costs have risen, employers have shifted more and more of the burden for health care spending onto their employees through co-pays, deductibles, co-insurance, and excluding some forms of care from coverage. Private insurance policies and even some government-provided health insurance plans that fill the insurance gap for those without employer-sponsored coverage have taken similar measures.
This combination of rising underlying costs and cost-shifting has left a large share of working families burdened with high levels of health care expenses.
Using the most recent Census Bureau data, covering the calendar year 2024, we find that the typical working family (a family with at least one worker between the ages of 18 and 64) spent $3,960 per year on health care (calculated as their share of insurance premiums plus any additional out-of-pocket expenses).
Ten percent of working families with the highest levels of expenditures paid more than $14,800 out-of-pocket for their health care. And more than one of every eight workers (13.3 percent) are in families that spent greater than ten percent of their annual income on health care.
These figures are almost certainly conservative estimates of the health care cost burden facing working families in 2026 and beyond. While we don’t yet have complete data for the calendar year 2025, industry experts expect the premiums for employer-sponsored insurance will have increased faster than overall inflation in 2025 and will do so again in 2026. A comparable rise in the policies available on Affordable Care Act (ACA) exchanges, combined with the expiration at the end of 2025 of COVID-19 related tax subsidies for ACA coverage, will raise rates for the 24 million people currently covered by ACA policies.1 Various changes to the Medicaid eligibility requirements under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act will raise health care costs for a portion of the ten percent of workers who currently have health coverage through Medicaid.
As in two earlier related reports on health care for US workers,2 we analyze data from the Annual Social and Economic Supplement (ASEC) of the Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey (CPS).
The first report documented that over the six year period between 2018 and 2023, on average, one of every ten workers between the ages of 18 and 64 went without health insurance throughout the entire calendar year before they were interviewed.
The second report in the series examined where those workers who did have health insurance obtained it. About 70 percent of workers had employer-sponsored coverage, 10 percent had coverage through Medicaid, and 10 percent had coverage through a variety of other sources, including the Affordable Care Act (ACA) exchanges, military-related insurance, and non-ACA private policies. The remaining 10 percent had no coverage at all.
In this report, we use the ASEC data to examine how much working families pay each year for their health care. In order to provide the most up-to-date cost picture, we limit our analysis to only the most recent available year of ASEC data, released to the public in September 2025 and covering the full calendar year 2024.3,4
Our measure of family health care expenditures is the sum of each family’s total outlay for health insurance premiums, excluding any employer contribution in the case of employer-sponsored insurance, and any additional out-of-pocket expenses not covered by the family’s insurance.5 These additional out-of-pocket expenses may include co-pays, deductibles, co-insurance, uncovered services, denied claims, and other direct payments to health care providers.6 We report families’ annual expenditures both in 2024 dollars and as a share of their family income.7
An important difference between these two earlier reports and this analysis is that the ASEC records health insurance coverage at the individual level, but records health care expenditures at the family level. In our previous reports, we focused on health insurance coverage for individual workers. Here, we analyze both expenditures and income at the family level for “working families,” which we define as families that have at least one worker between the ages of 18 and 64.8 We focus on workers between 18 and 64 because workers 65 and older are almost universally covered by Medicare.
In 2024, the median working family spent $3,960 on health care-related expenses (see the first column of Table 1).9 In what follows, we generally refer to the median family as the “typical” family since half of all families spent less than the median and half spent more.10
Typical health care expenditures, however, vary strongly with income. Working families in the lowest income quintile11 typically spent $650 per year in 2024, an amount that increases substantially as family income increases: $1,895 in the second quintile, $3,800 in the middle quintile, $5,925 in the fourth quintile, and $7,700 in the top quintile.
Many factors contribute to the strong positive correlation between income and expenditures. At the most basic level, lower income families are much less likely than middle and higher income families to have health insurance.12 Paying regular premiums, even with partial subsidies from employers, significantly raises family health care expenditures. Lower wage workers are also more likely to obtain coverage through Medicaid, which provides health care coverage at little or no direct cost to workers.
Other factors related to family size and composition also contribute to the positive relationship between family income and expenditures on health care. Higher income families are more likely than lower income families to be made up of older workers. Older workers generally earn more than younger workers and, on average, spend more on health care. Older workers are also: more likely to be in jobs that have employer-sponsored health insurance plans (and therefore more likely to make employee contributions to employer-sponsored plans); more likely to qualify for employer plans when offered; more likely than younger workers to feel that they can afford their employer plans; and more likely to believe that they are in worse health than when they were younger and therefore have more incentive to pay for coverage.
Older workers also pay more than younger workers for identical coverage. The Affordable Care Act allows insurers to charge older policy holders up to three times more than younger policy holders for the identical policy.13 As a result, even when younger workers participate in employer plans or buy health insurance on ACA exchanges, their family costs are lower than for older workers.
Families with the highest incomes are also more likely to have more than one worker in the family. All else constant, having more workers in a family is associated with a large family size and, as a result, is associated with higher health care expenses.
All of these factors contribute to the strong positive relationship between total family income and family health care expenditures. But, it is also the case that better-off families pay more for health care simply because they are receiving more, and likely better, health care. As we documented in earlier research, only about 3 percent of workers in the top fifth of the wage distribution lack health insurance, compared to about 8 percent of middle-wage workers, and about 20 percent of low-wage workers.14
Not surprisingly, the strong correlation between income and the level of health care expenditures is mirrored across demographic characteristics that are themselves strongly correlated with income.
Most obviously, health care expenditures vary tightly with the education level of workers in the family. Families with a worker who has an advanced degree typically spent $5,700 on health care, more than the $4,600 for families with a worker with a college degree, $4,000 for families with a worker with some college but not a four-year degree, $2,880 for families with a worker with a high school degree, and $1,575 for families with a worker who has less than a high school degree.
Working families’ health care expenditures also mirror racial and ethnic differences in family incomes. Working families with a white worker typically spend substantially more ($4,800) than working families with a Black ($2,650), Hispanic ($2,500), or Asian ($4,215) worker.
Families with workers between the ages of 18 and 25 spend less ($2,550) than families with workers between 26 and 50 ($3,865) and only about half of what families with workers 51 to 64 pay ($4,950).
Citizenship status, which is a strong predictor of income and of eligibility for government-sponsored insurance, is also a strong predictor of health care expenditures. Families with immigrant workers who have become US citizens and families with US-born workers (who as of current writing are automatically US citizens) typically spend similar amounts on health care ($4,200 to $4,300), a level that is more than twice that of immigrants who are not citizens ($1,900).
Marital status, another important predictor of family income and family size, is also associated with much higher median expenditures on health care. The median working family with at least one married worker spends more than twice as much ($5,846) as the median working family with no married worker ($2,300). Part of this difference reflects the greater likelihood of the presence of children in families with a married worker. Working families where a child is present, for example, typically spend $5,150 per year, compared with $3,200 per year for working families with no child present.
Typical health care expenditures differ little across three of the categories in Table 1.
Families with at least one working adult man spend almost an identical amount at the median ($3,900) as families with at least one working adult woman ($4,000). This small difference partly reflects both the composition of working families, which include a large share of two-earner households where both women and men work outside the home, and partly reflects the ACA’s explicit prohibition against charging women more than men for health insurance coverage, a common practice before passage of the ACA.15
Families with a working veteran ($4,410) spend only slightly more than families with no veterans in the workforce ($3,980).
Typical health care expenditures for rural families ($3,900) are almost identical to typical expenditures in urban and suburban areas ($3,990).16 But, as we shall see later, because rural incomes are generally lower, the same level of expenditure means a greater financial burden for working families in rural areas.
The estimates of health care expenditures so far have all referred to spending by families whose expenditures fall exactly in the middle (the 50th percentile) of the payments made by working families. Half of families in each category paid less than the expenditures reported in the first column of Table 1 and half paid more. The nature of illnesses, accidents, and aging, however, means some working families pay far more than the typical figure.
The second column of Table 1 shows the annual health care expenditures at the 90th percentile for working families. The families at the 90th percentile paid more for their health care than 90 percent of all working families in the same category, but less than the amount paid by 10 percent of working families in the same category.
In 2024, the 90th percentile working family paid $14,800 per year on health care, more than three-and-a-half times more than the typical working family at the 50th percentile. A similar pattern — much higher expenditures for the top ten percent of families than for the typical family — is true across all demographic groups in Table 1.
The difference between typical health care expenditures (the median) and high-end expenditures (the 90th percentile) is particularly large for groups with lower incomes. Working families in the bottom 20 percent of family income that have the highest health care bills paid almost eight times more ($5,100) than the typical family in the same income range ($650). Black families with high expenses ($11,566) paid more than four times what the typical Black family paid ($2,650). For Hispanic families, the ratio is five times ($12,600 versus $2,500 at the median).
The preceding discussion of family expenditures on health care focused exclusively on the dollar amounts that working families spend each year. Those numbers in isolation, however, don’t tell us how those expenditures relate to the corresponding family incomes.
Following earlier research, we classify families that spend more than ten percent of their before-tax family income on health care as being “cost burdened.”17 The last column of Table 1 shows that more than one of every eight working families (13.3 percent) spent more than ten percent of their before-tax annual income on health care in 2024.
Among the lowest-income working families (those in the bottom quintile of the family income distribution), more than one of every five (22.1 percent) faced a health care cost burden of ten percent or more. One of every six families in the second income quintile (16.9 percent) and middle income quintile (17.0 percent) paid ten percent or more of their income on health care. Even in upper-middle-income households – those in the fourth quintile – more than one of every ten households (11.2 percent) paid more than ten percent of their annual income on health care.
Working families in rural areas face a particularly high burden. Almost one in five (18.8 percent) rural families spent more than ten percent of their total income on health insurance. Given that the median and the 90th percentile expenditures in rural areas are almost identical to expenditures in urban and suburban areas, this suggests that the main driver of the higher financial burden is lower incomes in rural areas.
With only two exceptions, every working family demographic group in Table 1 had health care expenses that took up more than ten percent of total family income; in the two exceptions, the rates were 9.4 percent (Advanced Degree) and 9.0 percent (Asian).
The data analyzed here on annual expenditures as a share of income are the most recent available snapshot of the extent of health care burdens, but they almost certainly underestimate the true extent of health care burdens. A recent longitudinal study published in JAMA Internal Medicine, which followed the same individuals over a four-year period through 2022 (rather than the one-year period analyzed here), found that almost three times more individuals experienced health care burdens at some point if the window of analysis was expanded from one year to four years. If the same ratio holds when using the ASEC data, more than one-third of working families would experience a financial health care burden over the longer, four-year period.18
The ASEC data demonstrate that insurance premiums plus co-pays, deductibles, co-insurance, claims denials, and fees for uncovered health care services represent a substantial portion of many workers’ family incomes. The magnitude of these expenses relative to family incomes have a direct and immediate impact on the financial well-being – and ultimately, the health – of working families.
According to a recent KFF Health Tracking Poll, the high “costs and the prospect of unexpected medical bills … rank as the top financial worries for adults and their families.”19 Whether they are unexpected (as a result, for example, of a serious accident or a sudden illness) or they are longstanding (as is the case with many chronic health conditions) health care expenses can represent a significant financial burden, even for better-off working families.20 The KFF poll also found that 44 percent of adults reported it was “very difficult” or “somewhat difficult” to afford health care costs, including 49 percent of Black and 55 percent of Hispanic respondents, as well as 53 percent of all respondents with annual household incomes below $40,000. Almost half of respondents (49 percent) said that they would not be able to pay an unexpected $500 medical bill in full or would have to go into debt to cover it. For women, the share was 57 percent (versus 39 percent for men); for households with annual income below $40,000, the share was 79 percent; for non-Hispanic Black households, 75 percent; for Hispanic households, 66 percent; and for White households, 39 percent.21
High health care expenses can also lower consumer credit scores, reduce access to credit, increase the cost of credit, and even drive families into bankruptcy. According to the 2022 KFF Health Care Debt Survey, 24 percent of adults reported that they had “medical or dental bills that are past due or that they are unable to pay” and 17 percent said that they “owe[d] a bank, collection agency, or other lender” money “used to pay medical or dental bills.” In the extreme, health care expenses regularly lead to bankruptcy. A study published in the American Journal of Public Health analyzing a sample of all US bankruptcy filers between 2013 and 2016 concluded that there were about 530,000 medical-related bankruptcies each year over the period.22
The high cost of health care and related medical debt also has a direct impact on the utilization of health care services, putting family health at risk. More than one-third of the KFF Health Tracking Poll respondents (36 percent) said that they had “skipped or postponed getting health care they needed because of the cost,” including 75 percent of those who were uninsured. One in five (21 percent) said that they had “not filled a prescription for a medicine” due to cost. Another 15 percent reported that they “cut pills in half or skipped doses of medicine.”23 A separate Commonwealth Fund survey found that even insured adults “delayed or skipped needed health care or prescription drugs [in the past 12 months] because they couldn’t afford it,” including 29 percent of those with employer-sponsored coverage and 37 percent of those with ACA marketplace or individual-market plans.24,25 Financial barriers may pose particular problems for people with chronic illnesses such as diabetes.26
The harms are not limited to the individual working families who skip or postpone seeking health care for financial reasons. Delays in seeking health care can lead to treating illnesses after they have progressed or, in the case of contagious diseases, after they have been passed on to others. These delays can raise the societal costs of health care through contagion effects or because those who postpone coverage may ultimately need to resort to more expensive emergency room treatment or require more costly medical procedures to deal with later stages of an illness.
The estimates here are almost certainly conservative descriptions of the situation that will face working families in 2026 and beyond.
As Figure 1 showed, the prices of health care services and prescription drugs have been rising faster than prices in the rest of the economy for decades. Every indication is that this pattern will continue.
A key reason is the rising cost of employer-sponsored coverage. Business-aligned groups that study health care benefits estimate that premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance increased about 6 percent in 2025 (the year after the data analyzed here) and they expect premiums to increase in a similar range, or higher, in 2026.27
Separately, KFF projects that the termination as of January 2026 in COVID-19-related premium tax credits for ACA marketplace policies will raise overall ACA premiums by 26 percent in 2026 relative to 2025.28 KFF estimates that average increase for those who had been receiving tax credits will be 114 percent.29,30
Large projected declines in Medicaid coverage through 2034 will leave an additional 7.5 million facing the choice of either paying for more expensive private policies or going without health coverage.31
The typical worker is in a family that pays almost $4,000 a year out-of-pocket for health care (insurance premiums plus other out-of-pocket expenses). Ten percent of workers are in families that pay almost $15,000 per year in health care related expenses. One in eight workers is in a family that spends more than ten percent of their total before-tax income each year on health care. Expenditures at these levels place substantial strain on family finances, leading some families to postpone or forgo acute and preventive care, imperiling their own and the nation’s financial and physical health.
Figure 1: Consumer Price Index, All Goods and Services versus Medical Care
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics
Table 1: Financial burden of healthcare expenditures for working families, by demographics, 2024
| Total working family expenditures on health insurance and out-of-pocket expenses (2024$) | Share of workers in families that spend more than 10% of total family income on health insurance and out-of-pocket expenses | |||
| Typical burden (50th percentile) | High burden (90th percentile) | |||
| All working families | $3,960 | $14,800 | 13.3% | |
| Income quintile | ||||
| Lowest | $650 | $5,100 | 22.1% | |
| Second | $1,895 | $8,200 | 16.9% | |
| Middle | $3,800 | $13,160 | 17.0% | |
| Fourth | $5,925 | $17,000 | 11.2% | |
| Top | $7,700 | $20,500 | 4% | |
| Women | $4,000 | $14,700 | 14.0% | |
| Men | $3,900 | $14,900 | 12.6% | |
| White | $4,800 | $16,085 | 14.1% | |
| Black | $2,650 | $11,566 | 13.8% | |
| Hispanic | $2,500 | $12,600 | 12.3% | |
| Asian | $4,215 | $14,600 | 9.0% | |
| Other race/ethnicity | $3,200 | $13,000 | 12.3% | |
| 18-25 | $2,550 | $14,300 | 12.8% | |
| 26-50 | $3,865 | $14,320 | 12.7% | |
| 51-64 | $4,950 | $16,148 | 14.9% | |
| Unmarried | $2,300 | $11,200 | 13.1% | |
| Married | $5,846 | $17,060 | 13.4% | |
| No children | $3,200 | $13,250 | 12.8% | |
| Children present | $5,150 | $16,500 | 13.8% | |
| Less than HS | $1,575 | $10,852 | 15.7% | |
| HS degree | $2,880 | $13,260 | 15.6% | |
| Some college | $4,000 | $14,900 | 15.5% | |
| College | $4,600 | $15,230 | 10.6% | |
| Advanced | $5,700 | $17,000 | 9.4% | |
| US born | $4,200 | $15,152 | 13.7% | |
| Foreign-born, citizen | $4,300 | $15,440 | 12.4% | |
| Foreign-born, non-citizen | $1,900 | $11,200 | 10.4% | |
| Not a veteran | $3,980 | $14,898 | 13.4% | |
| Veteran | $4,410 | $14,300 | 11.4% |