The Big Budget Bill’s Impact on Utah’s Health System: More Utah Residents Uninsured, Higher Health Care Costs, and More Consequences of the Many Cuts to Care - Families USA Skip to Main Content
06.25.2025 / Press Release

The Big Budget Bill’s Impact on Utah’s Health System: More Utah Residents Uninsured, Higher Health Care Costs, and More Consequences of the Many Cuts to Care

New Families USA Analysis Details How Steep Cuts Will Hurt Utah Residents

SALT LAKE CITY, UT – A new fact sheet from Families USA details how the pending budget bill, set to be voted on by the Senate in the next week or so, will harm Utah’s health system, including cutting off coverage for at least 180,000 Utahns, making it harder for people to get and maintain coverage, and taking away crucial patient protections for children. The bill also drives up costs for those buying insurance through the Marketplace, skyrocketing premiums and increasing out-of-pocket costs while taking away crucial premium tax credits.

“The cuts to Medicaid and the ACA will have devastating and dramatic impacts on health coverage, care, and costs for American families, and in many ways, especially in Utah. The cuts will not just mean that tens of thousands of Utah residents lose coverage. Still, federal cuts will force state budgets into crisis, forcing states to drastically scale back services, leading to closures of rural hospitals and community clinics,” said Anthony Wright, executive director of Families USA. “Senator Curtis must stand up to the party bosses and the billionaires who want more tax cuts and side with patients and health providers and plans who oppose this bill that harms access and affordability of health care for so many Utah working families.”

“The current Senate budget bill threatens to undermine Utah’s health care system and roll back progress toward a more accessible, affordable health system,” said Matt Slonaker, executive director of the Utah Health Policy Project. “We urge Senator Curtis to stand with Utahns — patients, families, and communities — and work against policies that put health coverage and care out of reach. Utah working families deserve a budget that prioritizes our health and affordability of care.”

The proposed cuts are in opposition with the voters when 82% of adults nationwide — including 67% of Republicans want Congress to maintain or increase Medicaid spending.

The Utah Medicaid program covers 336,000 children and adults, including:

  • 1 in 4 Utah residents.
  • 172,000 children — 42% of all children in Utah.
  • 53,000 seniors and people with disabilities in Utah.
  • 60,000 rural residents in Utah.

Marketplace coverage, available for individuals and families who do not qualify for Medicaid but also do not have employer-sponsored coverage, serves:

  • 421,000 Utah residents.
  • 16,000 small business owners in Utah and 30,000 self-employed Utah residents.
  • About 96% of enrollees in the state received an advanced premium tax credit to help them pay their premiums.

Families USA, the longtime health consumer advocate, is organizing with the Utah Health Policy Project and other groups in Utah and across the nation to protect against care cuts that would force Americans to face increased costs and the loss of health coverage. The Families USA website has a plethora of materials on how its partners are working to defend Medicaid, and has facts sheets on the overall importance of Medicaid to people, the economy, and the health care system, how work reporting requirements would undermine access to Medicaid, and how cuts harm families and communities.