I'm being offered a role at a startup. It's a non-US company with about 6 employees in the US, including myself. I need coverage for me, wife and two children. We have a choice of three PPOs and as an example I'll share the middle one in terms of cost:

    In-Network Overall Deductible: Family $1,000
    Out-of-Network Overall Deductible: Individual Family $3,000
    In-Network Out-of-pocket Limit: Family $7,000
    Out of Network Out-of-pocket Limit: Family $14,000

    Monthly Cost Analysis for Employee + Family: $1,882.85

    The company is saying my cost is after their $1,200 contribution so the total cost of my family's insurance would be $3,083/month ($37k/year) of which my employer is only paying 39%. My previous employer offered a HDHP and I was only paying $350/month – I know PPOs cost more but the jump in cost is extremely high it seems. I'm trying to understand why it's so high? Is it because there's only a handful of US employees and the company isn't able to access better insurance rates?

    Can someone explain why potential new employer's health insurance premiums are so high?
    byu/5thape inInsurance



    Posted by 5thape

    5 Comments

    1. WorldlyOriginal on

      Yes. With only a handful of employees, your company is just a rounding error for the health insurance companies and benefits managers, while still requiring a considerable effort to onboard and service your company.

      Everything works on economies of scale, and employer health insurance is no different

    2. 37k for a family plan is very high, especially for that deductible level.

      I’d guess this is a combination of the low employer contributions, a very small company, and at least one pretty unhealthy person in your office driving up pricing.

      Edit: I was thinking about this and a group this small is probably community underwritten so the experience shouldn’t matter. The price still seems very high. I’d expect something in the 25-30k range.

    3. lost_in_life_34 on

      northeast it’s around twice that for unsubsidized ACA coverage so this is pretty good for a group this small

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