Nebraska Medicaid Work Requirement & Coverage Retention Tracker
Applies Last updated 2026-06-03 · confidence: confirmed
Nebraska is subject to federal Medicaid community-engagement/work-requirement implementation beginning January 1, 2027, unless modified by future federal or state guidance.
Key exemption categories to monitor
- Parent/caretaker of a child age 13 or younger (NE applies the under-14 federal-framework category at age 13-and-under)
- Pregnant or up to 12 months postpartum
- Disabled / medically frail / serious medical condition (incl. blind, SUD, mental health conditions)
- American Indian / Alaska Native / Urban Indian / California Indian / IHS-eligible
- Already meeting SNAP or TANF work requirements
- Compliant via 80 hrs/mo work, education, apprenticeship (half-time+), or volunteering — or earning at least $580/month
Short-term hardship exemptions to track
ADOPTED (per NE DHHS): hospitalization or nursing-facility stays; travel for medical care not available locally; federal emergency/disaster declaration in the member's county; county unemployment at 8% or 1.5x the national rate. Additional NE categorical exemptions beyond the federal baseline: under-26 aged out of foster care; veterans with a total disability rating; caretaker of a person with a disability; qualified drug/alcohol treatment program; recently incarcerated (released within 90 days); inmates of a public institution.
Member communication risk
High. As the first state live and running a "soft start," NE faces significant procedural-disenrollment risk: ~28,000 must act, advocates and CCF warn "large numbers will not successfully self-declare," and state staffing is described as "already insufficient," which can cause administrative delays and unintended terminations even where members actually qualify. The lenient soft start masks substantial coverage loss (~25,000 projected, ~35% of expansion).
What MCOs & state partners should do now
- Run member data matches NOW against the May-1 live ruleset to flag HHA Expansion members ages 19-64 lacking a verified exemption or 80-hr/$580 compliance, prioritizing the first cohort with coverage periods ending July 31, 2026.
- Drive members to iServe self-attestation before each 6-month checkpoint with proactive multilingual outreach (Spanish first, plus Vietnamese/Arabic/Kurdish/Karen), and pre-fill likely exemptions (parent of child <=13, pregnant/postpartum, medically frail, AI/AN, SNAP/TANF-compliant).
- Stand up assisted-reporting support (phone navigation, in-person help) to offset insufficient state staffing and prevent procedural terminations of eligible members within the 30-day response window.
- Build a 'lost-for-procedural-reasons' re-enrollment recovery workflow to recapture members terminated for paperwork rather than ineligibility, and monitor the 90-days-post-incarceration and disability-rating exemptions that are easy to miss.
- Coordinate with NE DHHS and CMS on the verification/data-match pipeline so verified work, SNAP/TANF, and earnings ($580/mo) data auto-satisfy compliance without member action.
Operating in Nebraska?
Complete a Coverage Retention Readiness Audit before member notices begin — we build CMS-compliant, plain-language, multilingual outreach to keep eligible Nebraska members enrolled.
Request a Coverage Retention AuditFrequently asked
Who is subject to Medicaid work requirements in Nebraska?
Able-bodied adults ages 19-64 enrolled through Medicaid expansion (Heritage Health Adult / HHA Expansion, income up to 138% FPL) who are not pregnant, not disabled, and not enrolled in Medicare. ~112,600 are in the expansion population; the state's own conservative estimate is that up to ~28,000 members must act to demonstrate compliance, and ~25,000 are projected to lose coverage (~35% of the expansion group). Members with renewal/eligibility dates in May or June 2026 were NOT subject in the first wave.
When do Nebraska Medicaid work requirements start?
Federal enforcement begins January 1, 2027 (some states may implement earlier). Member notices are expected starting in the federally-required window of June 30–August 31, 2026.
What exemptions are available?
Federal baseline categories include parent/caretaker of a child under 14, pregnant/postpartum, disabled/medically frail, American Indian/Alaska Native, and those already meeting SNAP/TANF work rules. Short-term hardship exemptions and exact definitions are set by CMS rule and state implementation.
Sources
- https://dhhs.ne.gov/Pages/WorkRequirements.aspx
- https://dhhs.ne.gov/Documents/MLTC-WR-Requirements-FAQ.pdf
- https://ccf.georgetown.edu/2026/05/11/the-new-medicaid-work-reporting-requirements-are-here-dont-let-the-nebraska-soft-start-fool-you/
- https://nebraskapublicmedia.org/en/news/news-articles/nebraska-will-become-first-state-to-implement-medicaid-work-requirements/
This page tracks publicly available implementation information and is updated as Nebraska publishes guidance. State-specific rules are evolving. Not legal or eligibility advice.