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1 1 (June 14, 2024)

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Updated June 14, 2024
Medicaid Coverage for Former Foster Youth Up to Age 26

Children are removed from families and placed into foster
care due to incidents of abuse, neglect, or other family
crisis. During FY2022, nearly 570,000 children spent at
least a day in foster care. Out of more than 201,000 young
people who exited foster care that year, over 18,000
emancipated (or aged out). In this context, emancipation
means reaching the state legal age of adulthood or end of
foster care-typically age 18 or an older age, up to 21, if
the state extends care-without having been reunited with
family or placed in a new permanent family.
Young people who age out of foster care can have
significant health needs. For example, in survey research,
13% and 18% of former foster youth at ages 23 or 24,
respectively, reported having a health condition or disability
that limited their daily activities, compared to 5% or 6% of
their same-age peers in the general population, respectively.
Former foster youth also have some elevated mental health
needs (e.g., post-traumatic stress disorder) and are more
likely to experience pregnancies compared to their peers.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA, as
amended; P.L. 111-148) required states, as of January 1,
2014, to provide Medicaid coverage to most emancipated
youth up to their 26th birthday, provided they continued
living in the state in which they had been in foster care. The
Substance Use-Disorder Prevention that Promotes Opioid
Recovery and Treatment for Patients and Communities Act
(SUPPORT Act; P.L. 115-271) extended eligibility to
emancipating youth who turn age 18 on or after January 1,
2023, regardless of their current state of residence, among
other changes.
Medicaid eligibility for former foster care children (FFCC,
or former foster youth) is intended to provide necessary
health coverage in the years immediately after the youth
age out of foster care. It parallels another ACA requirement
that private health insurers provide dependent coverage up
to age 26. A recent, federally overseen longitudinal survey
of youth who were in foster care at age 17-thus, at risk of
aging out of care-found that by age 21, 72% reported
having Medicaid and 17% reported having some other
health insurance coverage.
The Medcaid and Foster Care Programs
Medicaid, authorized in Title XIX of the Social Security
Act (SSA), is a federal-state program that jointly finances
medical and related services to a diverse low-income
population. To be eligible for Medicaid, individuals
generally must meet both categorical (e.g., elderly, children,
or pregnant women) and financial (e.g., income, assets)
criteria in addition to requirements regarding residency, and
immigration status or U.S. citizenship (hereinafter,
otherwise-eligible). For some eligibility groups or

pathways, state coverage is mandatory, while for others it is
optional. States and territories (hereinafter, states) must
submit a state plan to the federal government to describe
how they will carry out their Medicaid programs within the
federal statute's framework. States that wish to make
changes beyond what the law permits may seek U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid (CMS) approval to waive certain
statutory requirements to conduct research and
demonstration waivers under SSA Section 1115.
The Foster Care, Prevention, and Permanency program,
authorized in Title IV-E of the SSA, is a federal-state
program that, among other things, jointly finances foster
care for children who a state determines cannot safely
remain in their homes and who meet federal eligibility rules
(e.g., entered foster care from a low-income household).
The program also provides some support for services to
assist older children in foster care, and those who age out,
in making a successful transition to adulthood. The HHS,
Administration for Children and Families (ACF)
administers the Title IV-E program. As of May 2023, HHS
had approved Title IV-E plan amendments allowing 37
states and 7 tribal nations to extend the maximum age of
federally funded foster care beyond age 18, up to 21.
While in foster care, nearly all children are eligible for
Medicaid under mandatory eligibility pathways. This means
that states must provide coverage because these Medicaid
applicants receive assistance under the Title IV-E foster
care program, are disabled, low income, or meet other
Medicaid eligibility criteria. Under the Title IV-E program,
states must inform foster youth within 90 days prior to
emancipation about their future options for health care.
Title IV-E also directs states to provide these youth with
health information and official documentation that they
were previously in foster care. Such documentation may be
necessary to determine eligibility for some former foster
youth who later apply for Medicaid.
Medicaid for mandpated Youth
Under federal law as amended by the SUPPORT Act, states
are required to cover otherwise-eligible youth who fulfill
certain criteria under the Medicaid FFCC category. The
criteria vary based on whether a youth reaches age 18
before January 1, 2023, or on or after that date (Table 1).
In all cases, the FFCC eligibility group continues to be
limited to youth who are under age 26 who were enrolled in
Medicaid (under a state plan or Section 1115 waiver) when
they aged out of foster care. Unlike most pathways, there is
no income or resource test for the FFCC group. In addition,
those who meet the eligibility requirements for both the
FFCC group and the ACA Medicaid expansion (i.e.,

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