Many conservatives are angry that “illegal immigrants” are getting Medicaid, they think that the government is giving away free health care to these people. This is verifiably false. Federal law prohibits undocumented immigrants and some lawfully present immigrants from being eligible for federally funded Medicaid coverage. You can not apply for Medicaid without a Social Security number. You can not get a Social Security number without going through the immigration process. Getting one literally means that you have been “documented”.
What “some” undocumented immigrants DO qualify for is Emergency Medicaid. Emergency Medicaid reimburses hospitals for the costs of emergency care provided to immigrants who would qualify for Medicaid except for their immigration status, which hospitals are required to provide under federal law. I’ve written about this before. It is illegal for medical professionals to not treat a person in an emergency situation. Anyone that shows up to a hospital and needs medical attention must be treated. This is a good thing. It means no one is going to be searching for your ID to make sure YOU’RE an American citizen before they treat you for your heart attack.
Federal Medicaid funds are used to pay for emergency medical treatments for undocumented immigrants NOT to give them free stuff, but to make sure that the hospital does not lose money when they follow the law by treating people. The money paid actually goes to US Citizens – not undocumented immigrants. The scale of Emergency Medicaid spending is far smaller than political rhetoric suggests: • $3.8 billion in fiscal year 2023 – sounds like a lot • But that represents 0.4% of total Medicaid spending that year • Less than 1% of total Medicaid budget goes to emergency care for non-citizens • For context, total Medicaid spending was nearly $1 trillion in 2023
Much of this spending goes toward labor and delivery costs, since emergency childbirth is covered under EMTALA. The alternative would be forcing hospitals to deliver babies for free or turning away women in labor. So – the takeaway is: We spend less than 1% of the federal Medicaid budget to cover undocumented immigrants in emergency situations – and that money gets paid to US Citizens. If this Medicaid coverage was taken away – it would not hurt undocumented immigrants because the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) still exists. They would still HAVE to be treated – by law. It would hurt the medical professionals who treat them.
But wait! There’s more: Not all undocumented immigrants qualify for Emergency Medicaid. To get Emergency Medicaid reimbursement for their hospital bill, an undocumented immigrant must: 1. Have a qualifying emergency medical condition (life-threatening, could cause serious harm, etc.) 2. Meet the same income limits as regular Medicaid (typically around $20,000/year for an individual, varies by state) 3. Meet residency requirements for that state 4. Pass asset tests (in states that have them) 5. Meet any other eligibility criteria that apply to citizens getting Medicaid
Who DOESN’T qualify: 1. Higher-income undocumented immigrants – if you make $50,000/year, you’re too “rich” for Medicaid, so no Emergency Medicaid either 2. People who don’t meet residency requirements 3. People with too many assets (in states with asset tests) 4. People seeking non-emergency care – Emergency Medicaid only covers true emergencies The hospital still has to treat everyone under EMTALA regardless of income, but Emergency Medicaid will only reimburse them for patients who meet Medicaid’s poverty requirements.
What happens to the others? If a wealthy undocumented immigrant (remember many still file tax returns) has a heart attack, the hospital must still treat them (federal law), but: – No Emergency Medicaid reimbursement (they don’t meet income requirements) – Hospital bills the patient directly – If patient can’t/won’t pay, hospital eats the cost as uncompensated care – Hospital may pursue collection, write off as bad debt, or raise prices for other patients
Emergency Medicaid is specifically for poor undocumented immigrants who meet the same income requirements as citizens getting regular Medicaid. It’s not universal coverage – it’s poverty-based, just like regular Medicaid. Now, once an immigrant becomes “documented” they are qualified to receive some government benefits but most lawful permanent residents must wait five years after getting green cards before they can access Medicaid, SNAP, or other federal benefits. During those five years, they’re paying the same taxes as citizens but can’t access the safety net programs their taxes fund.
Now here’s where many people lose the plot. Medicaid is both state and federally funded. Under current federal law, undocumented immigrants are not eligible for federal Medicaid coverage. KFF data show that as of May 2025, 14 states and DC use state-only funds to provide health coverage to children regardless of immigration status, including 7 states that do so for at least some adults. We all know that politicians love playing fast and loose with language when it suits their agenda. The recent uproar over Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” is the perfect example of this deception.
Trump claimed his legislation would kick “at least 1.4 million illegal immigrants” off Medicaid. The White House doubled down with posts about “protecting Medicaid for Americans by removing at least 1.4 million illegal immigrants from the program.” House Speaker Mike Johnson piled on, claiming Democrats opposed the bill because they wanted “Medicaid for illegal immigrants.” The problem? As I have pointed out over and over again, undocumented immigrants can’t get Medicaid in the first place.
The 1.4 million people Trump referenced aren’t on Medicaid at all. They’re enrolled in state-funded health programs that some states offer using their own money – not federal Medicaid dollars. Fourteen states and DC use state-only funds to provide health coverage to children regardless of immigration status, with seven states covering some adults. These aren’t federal programs – they’re state-funded initiatives using state money.
Trump’s recently signed “One Big Beautiful Bill” includes a cynical penalty mechanism. If states continue providing health coverage to undocumented immigrants using their own money, the federal government will slash their matching funds for completely separate Medicaid programs – cutting federal reimbursement for ACA Medicaid expansion from 90% to 80%. Think about that. States spending their own money on immigrant health programs will see federal funding for U.
S. citizen programs cut as punishment. It’s legislative extortion wrapped in fiscal policy. California alone could lose $3 billion annually. Utah and Illinois have “trigger laws” that would automatically terminate their entire Medicaid expansion programs if federal matching rates drop, meaning hundreds of thousands of U. S. citizens could lose healthcare coverage as collateral damage. Rather than directly prohibiting state-funded immigrant programs – which would be honest but politically difficult – Trump created indirect penalties forcing states to make the cuts themselves. Then politicians can claim they’re not taking healthcare away from anyone.
The Congressional Budget Office estimates this will result in 7.8 million Americans losing Medicaid coverage – actual citizens, not undocumented immigrants. Hospitals will face a healthcare crisis, still required to treat everyone under federal law but receiving less reimbursement. Meanwhile, undocumented immigrants contribute tens of billions in federal, state, and local taxes annually. Between 2000 and 2011, they generated a $35.1 billion surplus in the Medicare Trust Fund, essentially subsidizing healthcare for the very Americans politicians claim to be protecting.
The real scandal isn’t immigrants draining Medicaid – it’s politicians using deliberately deceptive language to cut healthcare for actual Americans while scapegoating people who can’t vote back. The takeaway is: Politicians are using deliberately deceptive language to manufacture outrage about “immigrants on Medicaid” when undocumented immigrants literally cannot access Medicaid in the first place – they only qualify for emergency care reimbursement that represents 0.4% of total Medicaid spending and actually goes to hospitals, not immigrants.
Trump’s signed legislation weaponizes this lie by threatening to cut federal funding for actual American citizens’ healthcare if states dare to spend their own money helping immigrants, creating a perverse system where 7.8 million Americans will lose Medicaid coverage while politicians claim to be protecting the program from people who were never eligible for it.