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Just days after its public release, Trumpcare is already ailing. Several Republican senators are pushing back on their party’s health care bill, enough to put the bill’s future in serious doubt.

But the bill—officially called the American Health Care Act (AHCA)—offers clues at where Republicans might go next. Here’s what millennials need to know:

Some parts of the latest bill are good news for millennials.

• It keeps the Obamacare provision that allows twenty-somethings to stay on their parents’ insurance policies until the age of 26.

• The AHCA could lessen premiums for young adults, though that will come at the expense of older Americans. The latest bill widens what’s called the insurance age band, meaning insurers are allowed to charge older Americans more for their insurance—five times more to be exact—reducing the financial burden on younger folks. A study from the AARP Policy Institute found that the change could result in 15% lower premiums for people ages 20-29. But those 60 and older could face a 22% increase in their premiums, according to AARP.

• Wealthier millennials could suddenly do better under AHCA because it determines tax credits largely based on age, not income. According to the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation, a 27-year-old with $20,000 in annual income would now get the same $2,000 tax credit as a 27-year-old making $75,000. Under Obamacare, a $20,000 income would have earned an average $3,225 tax credit, with that phasing out by the time income reached $48,000.

But, it’s more complicated than that. There’s a new provision within the AHCA called the “continuous health insurance coverage incentive” that could offset much of the savings. The provision allows insurance companies to charge anyone who has lost insurance coverage for more than 63 days up to 30% more for their first year of insurance. This has a similar intention to Obamacare’s individual mandate, in that it tries to keep people on insurance plans all the time. But reality is not so clean. For one, the new provision would allow insurance companies to collect the fees, while Obamacare’s penalty went to the government.

More specifically, here’s the bad news for millennials.

• While Obamcare’s mandate penalty is $695, the continuous coverage penalty on a mid-level insurance plan would come to $1064 for an average 27-year-old.

• Younger people are disproportionately likely to suffer a lapse in insurance coverage. A 2013 study in the journal Health Affairs found that of those losing health insurance over the course of the 24 months studied, 49% were ages 19-34, even though that group made up only about one-third of the under-65 adult population.

Sarah Schultz, communications director for Young Invincibles, a millennial advocacy and policy non-profit, says, “We may as well call this the ‘Millennial Penalty.’ ”