January 22, 2026

Latest Florida Anti-Immigrant Proposal Would Delay Access to Medicaid and CHIP for Certain Immigrant Youth

A special thanks to Florida Health Justice Project for providing analysis on HB 693 that helped inform this blog post.

Florida lawmakers are considering legislation to undo health care access for certain immigrant youth.

House Bill (HB) 693 would ban lawfully residing children from the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) and Medicaid for five years, reversing a measure passed in the Florida Legislature with bipartisan support roughly a decade earlier.

Florida House Seeks to Roll Back Children’s Health Coverage for Certain Immigrants Under Guise of Aligning State and Federal Law

In 2016, Florida enacted legislation allowing lawfully residing children under 19 access to Medicaid and CHIP with no five-year waiting period.[1] (An earlier federal law[2] gave states the option of providing such coverage to both lawfully residing immigrant children and pregnant women.) This was an important step toward removing historical barriers to health coverage that immigrants face and helping ensure that more young Floridians could access medical care without delay.

Still, HB 693 would repeal Florida’s 2016 law ensuring that certain immigrant youth can access Medicaid and CHIP without an onerous five-year delay, even though Congress did not require such a repeal under H.R. 1.

Almost 10 years later, in advance of the 2026 state legislative session, the Florida House introduced a bill (HB 693) that would — according to a press release from the House Speaker — “ensure state law is fully aligned with new federal standards for Medicaid, CHIP, and SNAP.” Recent federal legislation, H.R. 1, substantially limits to three categories the immigrants with lawful status who states can cover in Medicaid and CHIP with federal funds — states are now limited to covering only permanent residents (after a five-year waiting period), Cuban/Haitian entrants, and Compacts of Free Association residents. However, the measure rightly preserves states’ rights to opt out of the five-year Medicaid and CHIP ban otherwise in place for many lawfully residing children.[3]

Still, HB 693 would repeal Florida’s 2016 law ensuring that certain immigrant youth can access Medicaid and CHIP without an onerous five-year delay, even though Congress did not require such a repeal under H.R. 1. Specifically, the Florida House proposal would limit coverage for immigrant children with lawful status in a way identical to how H.R. 1 limits coverage for adults to the three categories listed above.

Legislation Would Prevent Florida Kids from Accessing Critical Health Coverage

Florida already has among the highest rates of uninsured children in the nation. According to 2024 data from the U.S. Census Bureau, 8.5 percent of Floridians under age 19 do not have health care coverage.

The legislation being considered by the Florida House, HB 693, is the latest in a string of recent anti-immigrant proposals being advanced in Florida. The bill would go a step further than the harmful policy changes already implemented under H.R. 1 — federal legislation that includes massive cuts to health care — by preventing Florida children from accessing needed medical care and putting their health at risk.

 

 

Notes

[1] This option is currently codified in Fla. Stat. 409.811(16), 409.814(5)(c), 409.904(8), and 624.91(3)(b). The 2016 legislation, HB 5101, added a definition of lawfully residing child to the Florida Kidcare Act: “‘Lawfully residing child’ means a child who is lawfully present in the United States, meets Medicaid or Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) residency requirements, and may be eligible for medical assistance with federal financial participation as provided under s. 214 of the Children's Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of 2009, Pub. L. No. 111-3, and related federal regulations.”

[2] The Immigrant Children's Health Improvement Act (ICHIA)/Children's Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act gave states the option of providing such coverage to both lawfully residing immigrant children and lawfully residing pregnant women.

[3] H.R. 1 also preserves states’ rights to opt out of a five-year Medicaid ban otherwise in place for lawfully residing immigrant pregnant women.

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