WASHINGTON â Twannetta Weaver felt like she made the responsible choice when she enrolled in a high-deductible health insurance plan through her employer, an option that avoided high premiums and allowed her to save for retirement.
Then, in 2025, she slipped a disk in her back, requiring medication and physical therapy. Suddenly, the medical bills were so overwhelming that Weaver, an adult learner working toward a leadership degree on the side, had to delay graduation by a year.
âI had to start calculating, am I going to be able to afford to pay my tuition, as well as my books, as well as my living expenses, and continue to care for my family?â the 43-year-old in Sanford, Florida, said in an interview. âIt makes you feel powerless as a consumer.â
Weaverâs experience is familiar to a growing number of Americans, according to new data from the West Health-Gallup Affordability Index , which shows only about half of U.S. adults could afford their health care and had access to quality care last year. Concerns about affording health care in the year ahead were at a record high since tracking began in 2021, signaling that many were feeling anxious about rising health care costs as 2025 ended.
The new findings published Thursday draw on a survey conducted from October to December 2025 â before major recent changes to health policy, like Congressâ Medicaid cuts or its decision not to extend Affordable Care Act subsidies, took effect. It demonstrates how the countryâs fraught health care system is increasingly straining Americans at a time when inflation is driving high costs and affordability concerns are top of mind as midterm elections approach.
Americans are worried they wonât be able to pay for care
The index used the responses from multiple questions to place Americans into three categories depending on their access to quality care and ability to pay for care and medicine. In the new data, 49% of U.S. adults were considered âcost secure,â meaning that they had access both to high-quality, affordable care and they had recently been able to afford the care and medicine they needed. In 2021, when the measurement began, 56% of U.S. adults were âcost secure.â That rose to 61% in 2022 but has been falling ever since.
In the survey, about three-quarters of U.S. adults said health care costs were a âmajorâ or âminorâ financial burden for them and their family. Only about 3 in 10 said theyâre not a burden.
Meanwhile, about half of respondents were âextremely concernedâ or âconcernedâ that their household would be unable to pay for needed health care services in 2026, up from 42% who said that in 2022.
Inger Perez, 59, from Encino, Texas, is one of those worried Americans. She has a family history of diabetes, high blood pressure and cancer. She said she did blood work recently, and while she wants to know the results, sheâs bracing herself for what they could show.
âI literally was crying last night because Iâm nervous about what Iâm going to find out and how much care that is and how much money that is,â she said in an interview. âIâm terrified that Iâll start a plan of treatment but wonât be able to afford to keep up with it.â
More than half of survey respondents said the cost of health care contributes âa lotâ or âsomeâ to stress to their daily lives. Thatâs compared to about 3 in 10 who said these costs contribute âvery little stressâ and about 2 in 10 who said they contribute âno stress at all.â
Perez said she is also frustrated by the quality of the care she receives, in part because she lives in a rural area about an hour from a doctorâs office. To fit her budget, she had to choose a lower-cost Affordable Care Act marketplace plan with a limited network of covered providers, creating another obstacle to finding good care.
Health care affordability is declining across demographics
Younger adults, older adults and women were among several groups of Americans that saw drops in health care affordability and access in 2025, according to the findings.
Among Americans under 30, only about one-third were categorized as âcost secure,â down from 46% in 2021. Women were already less likely to be âcost secureâ than men, but the gap widened last year. About 57% of men were âcost secureâ in the 2025 survey â down from a high of 67% in 2022 â compared to 42% of women.
Older Americans, most of whom are covered by the governmentâs Medicare health insurance program, are generally more likely to be âcost secure.â However, this group saw meaningful decreases as well, falling from 73% in 2021 to 61% in 2025.
Patients make sacrifices to pay the bills
Several survey respondents who talked to The Associated Press discussed things they have had to give up to pay their health bills.
About 2 in 10 U.S. adults in the 2025 poll said there had been a time in the prior three months when they or a member of their household was unable to pay for medicine or drugs that a doctor had prescribed because of costs. About 3 in 10 saâŠ
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