Medicaid in Nevada (2026): Eligibility and How to Apply

Income limits, eligibility requirements, and how to apply for Nevada Medicaid in 2026.

What Is Nevada Medicaid?

Medicaid is a joint federal-state health insurance program that provides free or low-cost coverage to people who meet income and eligibility requirements. In Nevada, the Medicaid program is called Nevada Medicaid. It is administered by the state but jointly funded by state and federal governments.

Nevada Has Expanded Medicaid

Nevada expanded Medicaid under the ACA, extending coverage to adults with household income up to 138% of the federal poverty level (approximately $21,597 for a single adult in 2026). This means non-disabled adults without children who meet the income threshold can now qualify for Nevada Medicaid — a major change from pre-expansion rules that limited Medicaid to narrow eligibility categories.

Nevada Medicaid Eligibility Categories

Beyond the general adult expansion (in states that expanded), Medicaid covers several other groups:

  • Children: All states cover children in families at much higher income thresholds than adult Medicaid, often up to 200-300% FPL or more through CHIP
  • Pregnant women: Covered at higher income thresholds (typically 185-250% FPL) in all states
  • People with disabilities: SSI recipients and people with qualifying disabilities are eligible in all states
  • Elderly adults: Adults 65+ with limited income and resources qualify through the Medicare Savings Programs

Marketplace as Alternative in Nevada

If you don’t qualify for Nevada Medicaid, the ACA marketplace is your primary option. Nevada marketplace carriers include: SilverSummit Healthplan, Ambetter from Nevada Health CO-OP, Aetna, Cigna, Oscar Health. ACA premium tax credits are available for households earning between 100% and 400% FPL (~$15,650–$62,600 for a single adult in 2026).

Not sure if you qualify for Medicaid in Nevada? We can help.

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