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One-Third of Americans Cut Back on Other Expenses to Cover Healthcare in 2025, Survey Shows

March 12 (Reuters) – Roughly one-third of Americans cut ⁠back ⁠on food, utilities or other ⁠daily expenses to pay for healthcare last year, research from ​the West Health-Gallup Center showed on Thursday, as steeper prices and rising living costs hit ‌households.

A nationally and state-representative survey ‌of nearly 20,000 U.S. adults in all 50 states and in the District ⁠of ⁠Columbia, conducted from June to August 2025, found that 33% of ​respondents had made at least one trade-off in daily expenses to pay for healthcare.

This was far more common among Americans who do not have health insurance, with 62% of ​those surveyed saying they have made at least one sacrifice to pay for ⁠healthcare, ⁠including 32% who had to ⁠borrow ​money and 24% who had prolonged their current medication.

Among those with insurance, close to ​three in 10 have ⁠made at least one sacrifice, the survey found.

Most Americans with private health insurance are paying higher premiums and steeper out-of-pocket costs in 2026, including millions of people in the government-subsidized Affordable Care Act plans in which extra COVID pandemic-era subsidies ⁠have expired.

“We’re actually finding that people are reporting higher incidences of metabolic ⁠disease or depression and anxiety. We’re not getting healthier as a society, we’re actually getting sicker, and the healthcare cost is going up on top of it,” said Timothy Lash, president of West Health Policy Center, a nonprofit organization focused on healthcare and aging.

In another survey of 5,660 U.S. adults, collected primarily through Gallup’s panel between October and December last year, Americans reported having delayed a life event or change within ⁠the past four years due to healthcare costs, such as buying a new home or taking a vacation.

Nearly 9% of the respondents of this survey, also released on Thursday, postponed their retirement due to healthcare costs, ​whereas twice as many reported delaying a job change.

(Reporting by Sriparna Roy ​in Bengaluru; Editing by Sahal Muhammed)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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