After several brutal years, hospitals are still navigating one of the most turbulent financial recoveries in recent memory. While many systems have stabilized enough to move beyond crisis mode, the outlook remains far from secure. For healthcare leaders, planning ahead means reckoning with an uneven recovery and a complex mix of challenges and opportunities.
Here’s what’s improving, what’s still uncertain, and what’s shaping the next chapter in hospital performance.
Labor has always been hospitals’ largest expense—and it’s still stretching budgets. Even as reliance on travel nurses and temporary staff declines, many organizations are paying significantly more for labor than they were just a few years ago.
What’s still driving labor-related strain:
In response, hospitals are doubling down on long-term strategies: investing in internal training pipelines, cross-training clinical teams, and leveraging automation and smart scheduling tools to do more with fewer resources.
Many hospitals are reporting year-over-year improvements—but the recovery isn’t evenly distributed. Some organizations are seeing margin gains, while others continue to face headwinds.
What’s contributing to the uneven pace:
Inflation, shifting patient behaviors, and ongoing payer negotiations all add to the volatility. That’s why operational discipline and agile planning remain essential as systems look to stay ahead of ongoing disruption.
Not-for-profit hospitals face unique financial pressure. With fewer levers to pull for fast cost-cutting, many are focusing on long-term transformation to stay sustainable in an increasingly complex environment.
To build long-term financial sustainability, many not-for-profit hospitals are automating back-office functions to reduce administrative overhead, piloting value-based care models that better align reimbursement with outcomes, and reassessing their service lines and physical footprint to ensure they’re positioned for future viability.
These strategic shifts are designed to help organizations move beyond short-term survival and create a more resilient, mission-driven operating model.
But sustainability isn’t just a financial goal—it’s also about accountability. As public scrutiny intensifies, especially around tax-exempt status, not-for-profit hospitals are rethinking how they define and demonstrate community impact.
Lawmakers and watchdog groups are asking tough questions about whether tax-exempt hospitals are doing enough to justify their status—particularly in underserved communities.
"At both the national and state level we're seeing severe attacks on the not-for-profit hospitals and the sector itself, due to its exemptions from taxes and related ability to issue tax exempt debt."
-Keith Alexander, Healthcare Executive
In response, many health systems are taking a more proactive stance:
These efforts aren’t just about defending tax status—they’re about reinforcing the mission-driven value of not-for-profit care.
Mergers and acquisitions remain a key part of the healthcare landscape—but they’re evolving. While some systems pursue M&A for strategic growth, others see it as a means to stay financially viable amid ongoing margin pressure.
Today's healthcare partnerships are largely driven by the need to expand access to capital, reduce operational costs through shared services, and increase bargaining power with payers and suppliers.
However, consolidation also raises concerns about access to care, competition, and long-term outcomes. Healthcare leaders must weigh the financial benefits of scale against the need for localized care and community trust.
As the M&A environment continues to shift, the most successful partnerships will be those that balance strategic ambition with operational sustainability and community accountability.
The path forward won’t be linear. Rising labor costs, regulatory uncertainty, and structural shifts in care delivery continue to test financial resilience. But there’s also opportunity—especially for organizations willing to adapt.
As the year progresses, the most resilient organizations will likely be those that:
Hospital transformation is about more than just surviving the current moment—it’s about building toward a more adaptive and sustainable future.
To hear more expert insights on this topic, listen to our related podcast episode, where they discuss the challenges and trends in today's healthcare environment.