Employee contribution rates for health insurance plans
Dawn Dennie
2 Posts
I was hoping that you could lend some insight on small employer benefits by providing detailed information on how much employers are charging their employees for health insurance coverage. Thanks in advance for your reply.
Comments
We pay $95.00 a month towards each employee's
insurance-- regardless of what level of coverage they have opted.
Employees are stuck with any where from $154 a month to $658 a month.
We are a sewing industry just happy to be open and providing jobs. We
are the only one left in our area.
How does this stack up to others?
Thanks- Tom
The base plan (HMO) is $25.00 for employee the buy-up plan is $45.00 for employee
base plan for employee + child(ren) or employee + spouse is $75.00 $125.00 for the buy up
base plan for family is $125.00 and for the buy up its $170.00
We divide the payments into 2 and take them out of the 1st 2 paydays in a month (we pay bi-weekly)most employees understand the reason behind the partial contributions, and some are happy because they are low compared to some other places and then our old time employees are unhappy because they have to pay anything at all.
We are expecting a 40% rate increase in our health insurance October 1 and will not be increasing our portion.
Here's where we are. We pay 100% of employee premiums and have just started picking up some of the dependent costs. We found that our competition for employees pay, on average, 60% of dependent coverage. We can't reach that level in one whack so have started picking up the increases in coverage. The upcoming round of increases will be the second time. Our goal is to reach 50% employer contribution towards dependent coverage. We have other benefits that are better than the competition so slightly lower than the competition is OK in the insurance area.
I don't think that you will find any trends, other than by industry and employer size. Overall, employers are all over the map pertaining to contributions. In my mind, the most important consideration is what your competition for employees is doing. Where are your new employees most likely to come from and what employers are they most likely to go to. You must compete with this group. If the benefits are lower then you are forced to pay higher wages to compensate. The other alternative, of course, is to do neither and accept a higher rate of turnover.
Be careful of changing unless there is a major reason to do so because the disruption to employees and their relationships to their doctors creates all sorts of morale problems. We went through that recently because some physician group providers had financial problems and our previous carrier dropped them. Further, given our current state of affairs re. health care its hard to NOT have problems.
As for changing insurance companies, there are constant offers with teaser rates. We have changed a couple of times, but within 2-3 years we're facing the same high rate increases.
We're currently looking into AFLAC for supplemental coverage. They offer several products, also pretax dollars, and employees can choose what is important to their personal situations. With the Wellness Benefit, employees can actually recover a portion of the premiums. Anyone out there have experience to share...pro or con???
>VERY CAREFULL in selecting your sales rep, however. They give the
>term "hard sell" a whole new meaning. It's wise to sit in on all of
>the employee presentations to make sure the rep is behaving himself
>(or herself). I came close to tossing our AFLAC rep right out the
>door because he was overselling -- for instance, he kept speaking
>about the cancer plan as though it was an investment vehicle, and he
>had the gall to say that it's OK & routine to lie about the nature of
>certain claims in order to get the maximum benefit. He explained, in
>front of a group of insurance underwriters & my senior management
>team, that an employee can collect on a disability/accident claim even
>if the injury occurred as the result of doing an activity expressly
>forbidden by the plan, such as sky diving--to collect, the employee
>would simply need to lie about how the accident occurred ("nobody ever
>actually checks," he said).
It sounds to me like you need to report this AFLAC rep to the company. I am sure they would be relieved to relieve you of having to deal with him or her.
My own experiences with AFLAC have been pretty good. I agree that you need to be careful when you select the AFLAC rep who will be dealing with your employees. Be sure that they can identify with your employee group and their real needs, and will do only needs based selling.
Also, think twice about adopting their free Section 125 plan. In many cases you do not need this, if you already haev a 125 plan through your Health Insurer. You would need to amend the existing plan to include the AFLAC coverages you offer, but it would be less confusing to you than filing two 5500 reports each year.
Our employees pay $65.00/month for family, $45.00 for employee with children and $25.00/month for employee only. This will go up to an undetermined amount come Jan. 1, 2002.