Self-insured vs fully-insured medical plans Jun 5, 2008

Why your employees should know the difference

One of the many many ways that the health insurance market doesn’t act like “real” insurance is through the use of self-insured plans by most large employers. When a plan is self-insured, it means the employer is paying all of the health care costs plus administration costs—not “just” premiums.

Here’s the difference:

If an employer-sponsored plan is fully-insured, the insurance company is ultimately responsible for the health care costs and the employer pays premiums.

If an employer-sponsored plan is self-insured, the employer is ultimately responsible for the health care costs, and pays for all of those costs plus administration fees.

If your plans are self-insured, your employees should know it and they should know why.

Many companies move to self-insured plans once they reach a specific size because it becomes less expensive for them to pay for all of the medical expenses than to pay the premiums required by the insurance company to take on the risk. If this is the case for your company, you should not be shy to communicate that information to your employees. Your employees should know that their company—not the insurance company—is picking up the bill for all of those costs. And, they should know that the insurance carrier is responsible for negotiating rates with in-network providers and processing claims.

The trick in communicating this information is to keep it relevant to individual employees. Don’t overwhelm your employees with mind-numbing figures about how much the company spends on medical costs. Do speak to them honestly about how the medical insurance market works and how small changes—like using generic prescription drugs instead of brand name drugs—do make a difference in the big picture.

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Comments

Thanks Jennifer! Your simple, but clear explanation of self-insured vs. fully-insured medical plans was extremely helpful! :-)

—Sherri Mitchell, about 1 year ago

This is wonderful and so helpful. Thank you for posting this.

—Eric , 11 months ago

So does that mean they don't have to follow government policy about insuring a dependent who is part of a family plan of an employee, but that dependent is no longer in college? Can they make up their own rules as to who is covered and for how long?

—Angie Flaucher, 9 months ago

Very simple and wonderful definitions of self-insured vs fully insured. It is very helpful to all. Keep on the good work.

Ashley, 7 months ago

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