Growth in Medicare Advantage enrollment has slowed and plans are performing more poorly in quality ratings than in other recent years, according to a recent report.
After several years of rapid expansion, enrollment in Medicare Advantage has slowed in 2025, according to a recent report from Chartis. A majority of new beneficiaries have opted for plans administered by for-proft payers. Overall, about three-quarters of MA beneficiaries are in plans run by for-profit payers while the rest are split between non-profit Blue plans, other non-profit plans, and provider-sponsored plans.
Check out more numbers from the report below, or read HealthLeader's full coverage.
Luke Gale is the revenue cycle editor for HealthLeaders.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
More beneficiaries are enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans than in traditional Medicare.
Approximately three-quarters of Medicare Advantage beneficiaries are in plans run by for-profit payers.
Plans are performing more poorly in quality ratings than in the previous year.