
5. Medical and Insurance Bills: The Quiet Climb
Medical expenses rarely get the same attention as gasoline or rent, but they have quietly continued to rise under Trump’s second term. According to BLS data, medical care prices increased about 3.3% over the past year. This includes doctor visits, hospital services, dental care, and prescription drugs.
For insured Americans, these increases often appear in the form of higher co-pays, deductibles, and out-of-pocket expenses. Insurance premiums themselves have also risen for many plans, particularly in employer-sponsored coverage and private marketplace policies.
The Hill reported that while medical inflation is not as extreme as it was in the early 2020s, it remains a persistent financial drain. For families managing chronic illnesses, diabetes, mental health conditions, or long-term medications, even modest annual increases can translate into hundreds or thousands of dollars in extra costs.
Unlike gasoline or streaming services, medical care is not optional. Patients cannot easily shop around for emergencies or specialized treatment. This lack of flexibility makes medical inflation especially painful.
Lower-income households are hit hardest. Even small increases in prescription costs can lead people to delay treatment, skip doses, or take on medical debt. Medical bills remain a leading cause of personal bankruptcy in the United States.
While some families may feel temporary relief in other budget categories, rising healthcare costs quietly erode those gains, making true financial security harder to achieve.