Benefitfocus Data Shows Employers in Education, Health Care, Manufacturing and Retail Continue to Shift More Health Insurance Costs to Employees

In education, HDHPs are becoming the norm
- The share of employers offering at least one HDHP has more than doubled since 2016, from 23 to 50 percent
- Employers have done a lot to make HDHPs attractive—they now pay 87 percent of the total HDHP premium and have doubled their contribution to employees' HSAs since 2016
- Efforts have worked—34 percent of employees selected an HDHP when given the choice for 2018, up from 20 percent two years ago
Health care employers raise price of traditional health coverage to encourage HDHP adoption
- Employers have transferred more PPO plan costs onto workers—the average employee premium contribution for a single-coverage PPO is up 24 percent from 2016
- The number of employers offering HDHPs has nearly doubled in two years, with 73 percent offering at least one in 2018, up from 41 percent in 2016
- Despite efforts, only 27 percent of employees selected an HDHP for 2018
Despite boom in HDHP offerings among manufacturers, more employees go with PPOs
- 88 percent of employers in manufacturing now offer an HDHP, up from 54 percent in 2016
- However, the percentage of employees electing an HDHP continues to decrease while PPO participation grew from 36 percent in 2016 to 57 percent for 2018
- Voluntary benefits have become increasingly prevalent among manufacturers, with nearly 60 percent of employers offering at least one for 2018, up from 34 percent in 2016
Retail employees shoulder more health plan costs, while more employers offer voluntary benefits to supplement coverage
- Employers offering at least one HDHP increased from 55 percent in 2016 to 76 percent
- 40 percent of employees elected HDHPs, but premiums for these plans are rising, with the average annual employee contribution for a single-coverage HDHP up nearly 20 percent since 2016
- Despite HDHP prevalence, retail employers contributed 40 percent less to HSAs than the average for all employers, and employees contributed 20 percent less than peers in other industries
- 56 percent of employers offered at least one voluntary benefit to supplement coverage, up from 43 percent in 2016
"Everywhere you turn there's a story about rising health care costs. What employers in every industry have in common is the struggle to economically provide the best plans and care for their employees," said
For more findings, download the full Benefitfocus State of Employee Benefits 2018 – Industry Edition here.
About
Except for historical information, all of the statements, expectations, and assumptions contained in this press release are forward-looking statements. Actual results or performance might differ materially from those explicit or implicit in the forward-looking statements. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially include: the need to innovate and provide useful products and services; our ability to compete effectively; our ability to maintain our culture and recruit and retain qualified personnel; reliance on key personnel; management of growth; changes in government regulations; the immature and volatile nature of the market for our products and services and other factors that could impact our anticipated growth; fluctuations in our financial results; general economic risks; privacy, security and other risks associated with our business; and the other risk factors set forth from time to time in our SEC filings, copies of which are available free of charge within the Investor Relations section of the Benefitfocus website at http://investor.benefitfocus.com/sec-filings or upon request from our investor relations department. Benefitfocus assumes no obligation and does not intend to update these forward-looking statements, except as required by law.
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