12-month postpartum Medicaid in Florida
The number
Florida Medicaid (Statewide Medicaid Managed Care) extended postpartum Medicaid coverage to 12 months, effective 2022-04-01.
What the 12-month postpartum extension covers
Florida Medicaid (Statewide Medicaid Managed Care) has extended postpartum Medicaid coverage from the federal minimum of 60 days to 12 months. The extension took effect 2022-04-01 and was authorized under Section 9812 of the American Rescue Plan Act (2021), which allowed states to make the extension permanent through a State Plan Amendment.
What the extension covers: the same Medicaid benefits you had during pregnancy — primary care, specialty care including cardiology and behavioral health, prescription drugs, dental, vision, and transportation to appointments. Crucially, it covers screening and treatment for the leading causes of late-postpartum death: cardiovascular and cardiomyopathy events (roughly a third of US pregnancy-related deaths), mental-health and substance-use conditions, and infections.
What you need to do to keep coverage: generally nothing during the 12 months — Florida Medicaid (Statewide Medicaid Managed Care) is required to provide continuous eligibility. At the end of the 12-month window, the state will check whether you still qualify under another Medicaid category (expansion adult, parent, disability-based). If you no longer qualify for Medicaid, you will be referred to the health insurance marketplace for ACA subsidies with a special enrollment period triggered by loss of Medicaid.
Florida's parent income ceiling is 26% of the federal poverty level, one of the lowest in the country, and because the state has not expanded Medicaid, an estimated 415,000 Floridians fall into the coverage gap. Florida Voices for Health organizes an annual gap-closing advocacy campaign.
For Black families
The 12-month postpartum extension is especially important for Black birthing people: CDC data show roughly a third of Black pregnancy-related deaths occur between 43 days and 1 year postpartum, exactly the window the 60-day cutoff used to exclude. Florida's parent income ceiling is 26% of the federal poverty level, one of the lowest in the country, and because the state has not expanded Medicaid, an estimated 415,000 Floridians fall into the coverage gap. Florida Voices for Health organizes an annual gap-closing advocacy campaign.
Where to get help in Florida
- Federally Qualified Health Centers in Florida: every FQHC accepts Medicaid, charges on a sliding scale for the uninsured, and has certified application counselors who can help you apply or renew. See our FQHC directory for this state at /clinics/fl/.
- Medicaid-accepting providers in Florida: our provider directory lets you filter to providers in this state. See /providers/fl/.
- State health profile for Florida: for state-level health outcomes context (maternal mortality, infant mortality, life expectancy, uninsured rate) by race, see /health/florida/.
- Florida Medicaid (Statewide Medicaid Managed Care) consumer help line: 1-877-711-3662 for application help, renewal questions, and general Medicaid inquiries. Ask for an interpreter if you need one; language access is required under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act.
- Black Mamas Matter Alliance maintains a national directory of Black perinatal organizations at blackmamasmatter.org. Filter to programs serving Florida.
- National Health Law Program (NHeLP) doula tracker: up-to-date Medicaid doula coverage map at healthlaw.org/doulamedicaidproject.
References & primary sources
- Florida Medicaid (Statewide Medicaid Managed Care), state Medicaid portal: https://www.ahca.myflorida.com/medicaid.
- KFF State Health Facts: kff.org/statedata. Medicaid income eligibility + enrollment.
- Medicaid.gov: medicaid.gov. Federal program guidance + state plan amendments.
- March of Dimes 12-month postpartum tracker: marchofdimes.org/report-card.
- CDC Pregnancy Mortality Surveillance System: cdc.gov/reproductivehealth.
Data refreshed: