UnitedHealth Group revealed a troubling outlook Tuesday, announcing expectations for declining revenue in 2026 as the healthcare behemoth struggles to regain its footing amid mounting medical costs and membership losses. The company narrowly surpassed fourth-quarter earnings expectations, but UnitedHealth delivered disappointing revenue projections that signal deeper operational challenges ahead.
The Minnetonka-based healthcare conglomerate reported adjusted earnings of $2.11 per share for the fourth quarter, barely edging past analyst estimates of $2.10. Revenue reached $113.2 billion, falling short of the anticipated $113.82 billion. More concerning, however, was the company’s forecast for 2026 revenue exceeding $439 billion, representing a 2 percent year-over-year decline. Wall Street had anticipated sales of $454.6 billion for the year.
The Revenue Reckoning
This marks a historic moment for UnitedHealth, which has not experienced declining revenue in a decade. CFO Wayne DeVeydt attributed the projected downturn to three primary factors reshaping the company’s financial landscape.
Business divestitures comprise the first element, including operations in the United Kingdom and South America that the company plans to shed throughout the year. These strategic exits reflect a narrowing focus on domestic markets as leadership attempts to streamline operations.
Membership Hemorrhage
The second factor proves more alarming. UnitedHealth anticipates losing more than 3 million members in 2026, a substantial membership decline that underscores competitive pressures and strategic repositioning efforts. The company is deliberately shrinking its customer base, raising prices, and cutting benefits as part of a controversial turnaround strategy aimed at restoring profitability.
DeVeydt emphasized that the company has strengthened its balance sheet and refocused on American domestic businesses. The fourth quarter represented a turning point where management removed underperforming international operations and positioned the organization for what they hope will be a return to historical growth patterns.
Medicare Payment Pressures
The third challenge stems from Medicare’s transition to its V28 coding system, which has reduced insurer payments by modifying how patient diagnoses are weighted. This regulatory change will deliver a $6 billion revenue hit to UnitedHealth in 2026. UnitedHealthcare, the company’s insurance division, will absorb $2 billion of that impact, while the Optum healthcare services unit faces the remaining $4 billion.
The timing could not be worse. On Monday, federal regulators proposed nearly flat payment rates for Medicare Advantage plans in 2026, sending UnitedHealth shares tumbling alongside other health insurers. These government payment rates directly influence how much insurers can charge for monthly premiums and the benefits they offer, ultimately shaping profitability.
Medicare Advantage, the privately run alternative to traditional Medicare, now covers more than half of all Medicare beneficiaries and represents a major source of revenue for insurers. Medical costs from these patients have surged over the past two years as older adults increasingly return to hospitals for procedures delayed during the pandemic, including joint and hip replacements.
Medical Cost Management
DeVeydt acknowledged that fourth-quarter medical costs remained elevated but stopped growing beyond expectations. For 2026, UnitedHealth projects its medical benefit ratio at 88.8 percent, plus or minus 50 basis points. This metric measures total medical expenses paid relative to premiums collected. The projection represents an improvement from the 89.1 percent ratio reported for 2025, suggesting the company expects better cost management ahead. A lower ratio indicates the insurer collected more in premiums than it paid in benefits, boosting profitability.
Leadership Turmoil and Community Tensions
The financial results emerged against a backdrop of broader organizational challenges for UnitedHealth, as fourth-quarter net income plummeted to just $10 million, or 1 cent per share, compared with $5.54 billion, or $5.98 per share, in the same period last year. When excluding business divestitures, restructuring expenses, and costs related to the massive cyberattack on its Change Healthcare unit, UnitedHealth earned $2.11 per share.
Just two days before the earnings announcement, CEO Stephen Hemsley joined other Minnesota business leaders in signing an open letter demanding immediate de-escalation of tensions after the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis — a move that also put pressure on UnitedHealth executives to help stabilize community confidence.
UnitedHealth now pins its hopes on new leadership to execute the turnaround plan while increasing transparency to restore both profitability and the company’s battered reputation following two years of setbacks.
Source: CNBC

