Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Pick a plan: Workers shop for own insurance

- Tom Murphy CHRIS CARLSON/AP

Instead of offering one or more options, some companies are turning health insurance shopping over to employees.

A federal rule change last year stoked this new approach. It allows employers to reimburse workers for coverage they bought without paying a tax penalty.

The concept sends employees to individual insurance markets where they can find more choices for coverage. It also protects employers from huge annual cost spikes. But it’s a big change for workers who are used to having their employer give them benefit choices every year.

This new approach – known as an Individual Coverage Health Reimbursem­ent Arrangemen­t or ICHRA – started with coverage plans for this year. More workers will likely see them offered this fall during their company’s annual signup window for 2021 coverage.

Benefits experts say the idea is drawing interest from employers, but they expect the option to grow slowly over the next few years.

“We are seeing much more cautious adoption of it,” said Alan Silver, senior director of health and benefits for the consulting firm Willis Towers Watson.

Here’s how it works: Employees pick a plan that works best for them, sometimes with help from an outside company hired by their employer. Then the employer reimburses them, at least partially, for the cost.

Benefits consultant­s say the accounts can be attractive to companies that have been hammered by insurance costs or want to offer benefits to attract new employees but haven’t been able to afford them.

Element Designs, with about 65 employees, switched earlier this year. The Charlotte, North Carolina, custom door maker was facing a 60% price hike for its old coverage plan. That would have followed a 50% increase from the year before.

The company couldn’t absorb those hikes. But human resources manager Kymberlee Hernandez said it also couldn’t tell employees in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic, “Hey guys, by the way, we’re not going to have health care this year.”

“This was definitely a good alternativ­e for us,” she said.

The company is reimbursin­g employees $500 per month for their coverage and another $300 if they have dependents.

Employee Olivia Banks found the new approach daunting at first. But a company hired by her employer, Take Command Health, helped Banks figure out which plans would include her doctors and what sorts of expenses she could handle.

“The benefit on the other side is a plan that’s tailored more towards you,” said the account manager.

The federal government estimates that once employers get used to the new rule, more than 11 million workers and family members will get insurance this way.

That’s a relatively small slice of the market for employer-sponsored health insurance, which covered about 157 million people last year, according to the nonprofit Kaiser Family Foundation.

HealthSher­pa, a company that helps people find coverage in the insurance marketplac­es, said it is working with more than 50 employers to start the coverage switch between this month and January. Separately, it also is helping individual­s with ICHRAs find coverage through an app it debuted in July.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has strained some employer budgets and made them start thinking about insurance alternativ­es, HealthSher­pa cofounder Cat Perez said.

“It’s definitely picked up as the pandemic has played on,” she said.

The new option is expected to grow first with small businesses and in places where employers think the insurance market offers enough coverage choices.

 ??  ?? Olivia Banks, an account manager at Element Designs, found the company’s new health insurance structure more tailored to her needs.
Olivia Banks, an account manager at Element Designs, found the company’s new health insurance structure more tailored to her needs.

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