Insurance Coverage Among People Below Age 19 and Between 50% and 99% of Poverty, by Insurance Type and State, 2023
StateHealth Insurance Coverage by Type
With InsuranceEmployer-BasedDirect MarketMedicareMedicaid/Means-Tested Public CoverageWithout Insurance
Alabama95.8%12.7%4.2%83.0%4.2%
Alaska91.7%14.4%81.5%8.3%
Arizona87.8%15.2%2.4%74.1%12.2%
Arkansas94.2%11.8%4.3%84.8%5.8%
California96.6%11.3%4.6%1.4%85.5%3.4%
Colorado95.6%15.2%4.2%80.3%
Connecticut92.7%87.2%
Delaware95.9%83.5%
District of Columbia100.0%100.0%
Florida91.3%12.0%8.8%1.5%74.8%8.7%
Georgia92.1%12.4%5.2%1.3%77.6%7.9%
Hawaii98.1%19.0%75.3%
Idaho94.6%19.0%78.2%
Illinois95.6%10.8%2.8%1.1%87.4%4.4%
Indiana93.9%14.2%2.7%83.4%6.1%
Iowa94.9%9.1%85.0%5.1%
Kansas93.5%14.7%4.9%80.8%6.5%
Kentucky94.5%12.4%2.5%1.7%84.2%5.5%
Louisiana96.7%10.0%4.0%88.9%3.3%
Maine94.7%8.5%83.7%
Maryland91.2%8.0%4.6%83.6%8.8%
Massachusetts96.0%15.2%5.4%83.4%
Michigan95.0%17.5%3.4%83.7%5.0%
Minnesota95.4%14.5%5.4%85.8%4.6%
Mississippi93.9%9.2%6.5%81.9%6.1%
Missouri94.3%16.1%4.2%80.9%5.7%
Montana91.6%81.8%
Nebraska87.6%15.8%7.1%72.5%
Nevada92.6%19.4%81.8%7.4%
New Hampshire93.0%80.9%
New Jersey92.3%10.8%3.9%80.5%7.7%
New Mexico93.3%6.8%86.8%6.7%
New York97.0%11.8%9.4%0.9%88.1%3.0%
North Carolina92.1%10.7%4.6%1.9%79.8%7.9%
North Dakota93.3%74.6%
Ohio95.8%13.1%3.5%85.6%4.2%
Oklahoma92.7%10.1%3.4%2.0%81.4%7.3%
Oregon96.7%13.7%6.3%84.7%3.3%
Pennsylvania93.5%14.2%5.1%82.0%6.5%
Puerto Rico97.6%11.5%6.9%83.1%2.4%
Rhode Island94.9%37.1%72.9%
South Carolina92.0%11.6%3.6%2.1%80.6%8.0%
South Dakota88.8%70.1%
Tennessee92.9%12.3%5.2%79.0%7.1%
Texas85.1%10.7%4.5%1.0%72.9%14.9%
Utah86.9%32.5%10.2%51.8%13.1%
Vermont97.1%94.4%
Virginia94.9%14.2%3.4%79.0%5.1%
Washington94.6%14.4%4.4%81.3%5.4%
West Virginia97.9%11.0%90.6%
Wisconsin90.7%11.7%4.2%82.4%9.3%
Wyoming92.2%67.0%
US93.0%12.5%4.9%1.3%81.1%7.0%
Source: 2023 American Community Survey data, Table B27016.
Note: Since people can have multiple types of insurance, the percentages do not add to 100%. We do not show health insurance coverage rates where the margin of error for the number of people with a particular type of insurance (or no insurance) is more than half as large as the estimated number of people in that insurance category.
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