Trump administration rolls out rural health funding, with strings
attached
[December 30, 2025]
By DEVI SHASTRI and MARGERY A. BECK
States will share $10 billion for rural health care next year in a
program that aims to offset the Trump administration's massive budget
cuts to rural hospitals, federal officials announced Monday.
But while every state applied for money from the Rural Health
Transformation Program, it won't be distributed equally. And critics
worry that the funding might be pulled back if a state's policies don't
match up with the administration's.
Officials said the average award for 2026 is $200 million, and the fund
puts a total of $50 billion into rural health programs over five years.
States propose how to spend their awards, and the Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services assigns project officers to support each state,
said agency administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz.
“This fund was crafted as part of the One Big Beautiful Bill, signed
only six months ago now into law, in order to push states to be
creative," Oz said in a call with reporters Monday.
Under the program, half of the money is equally distributed to each
state. The other half is allocated based on a formula developed by CMS
that considered rural population size, the financial health of a state’s
medical facilities and health outcomes for a state’s population.
The formula also ties $12 billion of the five-year funding to whether
states are implementing health policies prioritized by the Trump
administration's “Make America Healthy Again” initiative. Examples
include requiring nutrition education for health care providers, having
schools participate in the Presidential Fitness Test or banning the use
of SNAP benefits for so-called junk foods, Oz said.
Several Republican-led states — including Arkansas, Iowa, Louisiana,
Nebraska, Oklahoma and Texas — have already adopted rules banning the
purchase of foods like candy and soda with SNAP benefits.

The money that the states get will be recalculated annually, Oz said,
allowing the administration to “claw back” funds if, for example, state
leaders don't pass promised policies. Oz said the clawbacks are not
punishments, but leverage governors can use to push policies by pointing
to the potential loss of millions.
“I've already heard governors express that sentiment that this is not a
threat, that this is actually an empowering element of the One Big
Beautiful Bill," he said.
Carrie Cochran-McClain, chief policy officer with the National Rural
Health Association, said she’s heard from a number of Democratic-led
states that refused to include such restrictions on SNAP benefits even
though it could hurt their chance to get more money from the fund.
“It’s not where their state leadership is,” she said.

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Mehmet Oz, administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, speaks during an event about drug prices with President
Donald Trump, Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025, in the Oval Office of the
White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)

Experts say fund is inadequate in face of other cuts
Oz and other federal officials have touted the program as a 50%
increase in Medicaid investments in rural health care. Rep. Don
Bacon, a Republican from Nebraska who has been critical of many of
the administration’s policies but voted for the budget bill that
slashed Medicaid, pointed to the fund when recently questioned about
how the cuts would hurt rural hospitals.
“That’s why we added a $50 billion rural hospital fund, to help any
hospital that’s struggling,” Bacon said. “This money is meant to
keep hospitals afloat.”
But experts say it won't nearly offset the losses that struggling
rural hospitals will face from the federal spending law's $1.2
trillion cut from the federal budget over the next decade, primarily
from Medicaid. Millions of people are also expected to lose Medicaid
benefits.
Estimates suggest rural hospitals could lose around $137 billion
over the next decade because of the budget measure. As many as 300
rural hospitals were at risk for closure because of the GOP’s
spending package, according to an analysis by The Cecil G. Sheps
Center for Health Services Research at the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill.
“When you put that up against the $50 billion for the Rural Health
Transformation Fund, you know — that math does not add up,”
Cochran-McClain said.
She also said there's no guarantee that the funding will go to rural
hospitals in need. For example, she noted, one state’s application
included a proposal for healthier, locally sourced school lunch
options in rural areas.
And even though innovation is a goal of the program, Cochran-McClain
said it's tough for rural hospitals to innovate when they were
struggling to break even before Congress’ Medicaid cuts.
“We talk to rural providers every day that say, ‘I would really love
to do x, y, z, but I’m concerned about, you know, meeting payroll at
the end of the month,’” she said. “So when you’re in that kind of
crisis mode, it is, I would argue, almost impossible to do true
innovation.”
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