Wisconsin Medicaid Work Requirement & Coverage Retention Tracker
Largely N/A Last updated 2026-06-03 · confidence: confirmed
Wisconsin 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 dependent child (federal framework — final age threshold set by CMS rule; broadly children under 14)
- Pregnant and postpartum individuals
- Individuals who are disabled / medically frail
- American Indian / Alaska Native (and other Indian Health Service-eligible)
- Individuals already meeting SNAP/TANF work requirements
- Individuals compliant via 80 hrs/mo work, education (at least half-time), job training, or community service/volunteering, or qualifying income
- Note: these are federal-framework categories; final definitions set by CMS interim final rule (CMS-2454-IFC) plus WI implementation
Short-term hardship exemptions to track
Pending state guidance. The federal framework provides for short-term exemptions (e.g., hospitalization/SNF admission, medical travel, disaster-declared counties, high-unemployment counties, recently incarcerated). WI has publicly confirmed only one specific exemption to date: individuals who are incarcerated or released from incarceration within the last 90 days. Adoption of the full menu of optional/short-term hardship exemptions is not yet detailed by DHS.
Member communication risk
Elevated. The monthly 80-hour proof requirement plus 6-month renewals and a 30-day cure window create meaningful procedural-disenrollment risk for the ~239,000 childless-adults waiver population, especially those with unstable work hours or limited digital access; reporting-channel details remain unpublished, increasing the chance of churn from administrative rather than substantive ineligibility.
What MCOs & state partners should do now
- Identify and segment the BadgerCare Plus childless-adults (19-64, <=100% FPL) members in your panel now, flagging likely exemption categories (medically frail, AI/AN, recently incarcerated) to prepare proactive outreach lists
- Stand up a member outreach campaign timed to the DHS fall-2026 notice wave to explain the 80-hr/mo requirement, the 30-day cure window, and how to report — in Spanish, Hmong, Somali, Arabic, and Chinese
- Build workflows to help members document/report compliance and gather exemption proof once DHS publishes the reporting channel (likely ACCESS/ForwardHealth); pre-draft member materials
- Coordinate with WI DHS on the still-pending implementation details (reporting method, self-attestation policy, full hardship-exemption menu) and feed member-impact data into the state's process
- Implement a retention/redetermination support program for the every-6-month renewal cadence to minimize procedural disenrollment, including reminders and assisted reporting for high-risk members
Operating in Wisconsin?
Complete a Coverage Retention Readiness Audit before member notices begin — we build CMS-compliant, plain-language, multilingual outreach to keep eligible Wisconsin members enrolled.
Request a Coverage Retention AuditFrequently asked
Who is subject to Medicaid work requirements in Wisconsin?
BadgerCare Plus members ages 19-64 in the childless-adults (partial-expansion waiver) group, at or below 100% FPL, unless exempt. DHS describes the subject group as "childless adults." State nuance: because WI covers only to 100% FPL (not 138%), the subject pool is narrower than a full-expansion state; parents/caretaker relatives and pregnant members are generally outside this waiver group.
When do Wisconsin 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://www.kff.org/medicaid/medicaid-work-requirements-tracker-overview/
- https://www.healthinsurance.org/medicaid/wisconsin/
- https://www.dhs.wisconsin.gov/medicaid/waiver-badgercare1115.htm
- https://wisconsinhealthnews.com/2025/09/09/badgercare-plus-work-requirements-expected-to-take-effect-january-2027/
This page tracks publicly available implementation information and is updated as Wisconsin publishes guidance. State-specific rules are evolving. Not legal or eligibility advice.