Rising healthcare costs aren’t just a budgeting nightmare. They can impact your employees’ access to quality coverage and your organization’s ability to remain competitive. For many employers, the challenge becomes especially clear during group health insurance renewal season, when premium increases appear without warning.
In this article, we’ll explain why these price hikes happen and outline practical options employers can pursue to regain control of their healthcare budget.
In this blog post, you’ll learn:
Health insurance premium increases stem from a mix of factors, many outside of an employer’s control. Group health plans are experience-rated, meaning your employees’ insurance claims can directly impact your renewal rates. If they use more healthcare services than expected, you might see higher rate increases. But, there are also changes in the wider healthcare and insurance industry that impact premiums.
Common drivers include:
Industry data reflects the size of this challenge. National reports show that employer-sponsored premiums have continued rising year over year, with sharp increases expected in both the group and individual insurance markets.
While you can’t prevent your employees from aging or moving, and you can’t control insurer pricing models, you can choose how your organization responds when premiums rise.
Below are several strategies employers use to keep benefits sustainable.
One of the most powerful ways employers can counteract rising premiums is by moving from a traditional group health insurance plan to an individual coverage health reimbursement arrangement (ICHRA). ICHRAs work for large, midsize, and small businesses alike.
Rather than offering a group health insurance plan to the whole workforce, employers provide monthly contributions to their employees so they can purchase their own individual health insurance plans. This method allows you to sidestep annual rate hikes. You simply set the budget that works for you and stick to it for the plan year.
Here’s how an ICHRA helps employers control costs:
As the industry’s leading ICHRA administration platform, Remodel Health helps employers transition from costly group plans to an innovative healthcare solution. Our team supports compliance, handles payments, and provides guidance to employees through every step of the process.
If you’re a small business owner with fewer than 50 full-time equivalent employees (FTEs), a qualified small employer HRA (QSEHRA) can be another cost-effective alternative to group health insurance.
A QSEHRA allows small businesses to reimburse employees tax-free for individual health insurance premiums and eligible medical expenses.
Eligible medical expenses include:
QSEHRAs are similar to ICHRAs, but they aren’t as flexible. Small businesses can’t vary allowances or eligibility using employee classes with a QSEHRA. There are annual limits on employer contributions. That said, a QSERHA is a strong, compliant alternative for small businesses ready to leave behind unpredictable group premiums.
Small businesses can partner with Remodel Health to administer an ICHRA with white-glove service, or they can administer a QSEHRA or ICHRA with our PeopleKeep brand.
If you’re hesitant to leave your group health insurance plan, it’s worth asking your broker or carrier whether alternative plan designs or rate adjustments are available.
Some employers try:
However, negotiation typically offers minimal relief, as insurance companies aren’t responsible for some of the factors driving premium increases, such as inflation. Even so, this step can be a useful part of evaluating all your options.
And if negotiations don’t yield meaningful savings, your broker can work with Remodel Health to compare a switch to ICHRA.
When a traditional group healthcare plan becomes too expensive, some employers switch to a high-deductible health plan (HDHP) to reduce monthly premiums.
You can pair an HDHP with:
This can help offset the burden of a higher deductible for medical care. However, it still ties your organization to the traditional group health plan renewal cycle, leaving the door open for future rate spikes. Switching to an ICHRA can offer greater savings and long-term budget stability without sacrificing the quality of coverage your employees have.
If group insurance costs are rising and you’re not ready to transition to an HRA, a taxable health stipend can provide budget-friendly flexibility.
A health stipend is an employer-funded, taxable allowance employees can use for health-related expenses. It’s not a formal health plan and doesn’t include the compliance requirements associated with HRAs.
Why employers consider health stipends:
Problems with stipends:
While stipends don’t offer tax advantages like HRAs, they’re an affordable way to support your employees without committing to the cost of group health insurance.
Premium increases are unavoidable, but employers have more options than ever before to protect their finances. Whether you renegotiate your plan or move to an individual coverage health reimbursement arrangement (ICHRA), you can take back control of your budget while still offering competitive benefits.
Remodel Health specializes in helping organizations break free from rising group health plan premiums by transitioning to individual health coverage through ICHRA. Schedule a call with a personalized benefits advisor today to get started!
Is ICHRA still a viable option when individual insurance rates increase? Yes, and here’s why.