One Big Beautiful Bill: $1 Trillion in Medicaid Cuts and $295 Billion in SNAP Cuts

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act slashes $863 billion from Medicaid and $295 billion from SNAP to fund $1 trillion in tax cuts for the wealthiest, projected to strip healthcare from 10.9 million people and food assistance from hundreds of thousands of older adults.

The 'One Big Beautiful Bill Act' passed by the House includes an estimated $863 billion in Medicaid cuts and $295 billion in SNAP cuts over ten years. The Congressional Budget Office projects 10.9 million Americans will lose health insurance, while SNAP work requirements will extend to age 64, cutting food aid for approximately 800,000 older adults per month.

Executive summary

What this record documents

  • The One Big Beautiful Bill Act includes $863 billion in Medicaid cuts and $295 billion in SNAP cuts over fiscal years 2025-2034, exceeding $1 trillion in combined safety net reductions.
  • The CBO projects 10.9 million Americans will become uninsured due to Medicaid losses and ACA marketplace coverage reductions.
  • SNAP work requirements extend from age 54 to age 64, with the CBO estimating approximately 800,000 older adults will lose food assistance in a typical month.
  • SNAP faces a 36% cut by 2034 — proportionally far deeper than Medicaid's 15% cut — devastating the nation's primary food safety net.
  • The cuts directly fund approximately $1 trillion in tax giveaways concentrated among the wealthiest 1%, while increasing the federal deficit by an estimated $3 trillion.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. One Big Beautiful Bill Act introduced

    The House introduces the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, a sweeping budget reconciliation package that pairs massive tax cuts with deep reductions to Medicaid, SNAP, and other safety net programs.

  2. CBO scores project 10.9 million uninsured

    The Congressional Budget Office releases its analysis projecting that 10.9 million Americans will lose health insurance under the bill's Medicaid and ACA provisions. SNAP cuts are scored at $295 billion over ten years.

  3. Center for American Progress documents $1T-for-$1T swap

    The Center for American Progress publishes analysis showing that the $863 billion in Medicaid cuts directly correspond to approximately $1 trillion in tax cuts concentrated among the wealthiest 1% of Americans.

  4. Commonwealth Fund analyzes job losses

    The Commonwealth Fund publishes analysis showing how Medicaid and SNAP cutbacks would trigger significant job losses across states, with healthcare and food service sectors hit hardest.

  5. Urban Institute finds 3 in 10 young adults at risk

    The Urban Institute reports that Medicaid cuts in the bill leave 3 in 10 young adults vulnerable to losing health care access, with disproportionate impacts on low-income and minority communities.

  6. House passes the bill

    The House holds a final vote on the bill, which includes the devastating health and food assistance cuts. The bill passes and moves to the Senate.

  7. Implementation timeline begins

    Early provisions of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act begin implementation, including Medicaid work reporting requirements for expansion adults ages 19-64, with a compliance deadline of December 2026.

Analysis

Reporting, legal context, and impact

What Happened

The "One Big Beautiful Bill Act," passed by the House in 2025, contains the largest cuts to the American social safety net in modern history. The bill slashes an estimated $863 billion from Medicaid and $295 billion from SNAP (the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) over fiscal years 2025 to 2034 — a combined reduction exceeding $1.15 trillion in healthcare and food assistance.

These cuts directly fund approximately $1 trillion in tax reductions overwhelmingly benefiting the wealthiest Americans, while simultaneously increasing the federal deficit by an estimated $3 trillion including higher interest costs.

Who Loses Health Coverage

The Congressional Budget Office projects that the bill will cause 10.9 million Americans to become uninsured, either through direct Medicaid cuts or through the erosion of Affordable Care Act marketplace coverage. The Urban Institute found that 3 in 10 young adults are particularly vulnerable to losing healthcare access.

The Medicaid provisions include mandatory work reporting requirements for adults ages 19 to 64 covered through Medicaid expansion, with a compliance deadline of December 2026. Historical evidence from state-level work requirements shows that these provisions primarily cause coverage losses through administrative complexity rather than actually increasing employment.

Who Loses Food Assistance

SNAP faces a proportionally deeper cut than Medicaid — 36% by 2034 compared to Medicaid's 15%. The bill raises the age limit for SNAP work requirements from 54 to 64. The CBO estimates that approximately 800,000 older adults will be cut off from food assistance in a typical month due to this change alone.

These are adults ages 55 to 64 who currently rely on SNAP to meet basic nutritional needs — many of whom face health conditions, limited employment options, or caregiving responsibilities that prevent them from meeting rigid work requirements.

The $1 Trillion Swap

The Center for American Progress documented what it called the bill's "budget math": approximately $1 trillion cut from healthcare and food assistance for low-income Americans, redirected to approximately $1 trillion in tax cuts concentrated among the richest 1% of earners. The Commonwealth Fund analyzed how these cutbacks would trigger significant job losses across every state, with healthcare and food service sectors hit hardest.

Legal Analysis

The right to adequate food and the right to health are enshrined in the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (Articles 11 and 12), the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Article 25), and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (Article 24). While the United States has not ratified the ICESCR, it is a signatory and these rights are recognized under customary international law.

The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (Article 5(e)), which the US has ratified, specifically protects the right to public health, medical care, and social services without discrimination. Given the disproportionate impact of these cuts on communities of color, the racial equity implications are direct.

Why This Matters

Stripping healthcare from 10.9 million people and food assistance from hundreds of thousands of older adults — to fund tax cuts for the wealthiest — represents a deliberate policy choice that will result in preventable suffering and death. The scale is not hypothetical: the CBO's projections represent real people who will lose access to medical care and food assistance, with predictable consequences for mortality and well-being.

Linked reporting

Reporting and secondary sources

  1. $1 Trillion in Medicaid Cuts — $1 Trillion in Tax Giveaways for the Richest 1 Percent Center for American Progress
  2. The Truth About the One Big Beautiful Bill Act's Cuts to Medicaid and Medicare Center for American Progress
  3. How Medicaid and SNAP Cutbacks in the One Big Beautiful Bill Would Trigger Job Losses Across States Commonwealth Fund
  4. Medicaid Cuts in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act Leave 3 in 10 Young Adults Vulnerable Urban Institute
  5. Changes to Medicaid, the ACA and other key provisions of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act American Medical Association
  6. President Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill Act, Explained NAACP Legal Defense Fund
  7. Final House Vote on Devastating Health and Food Assistance Cuts Medicare Rights Center

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