Current:Home > reviewsJohnathan Walker:Workers are paying 7% more this year for employer-sponsored health insurance -OceanicInvest
Johnathan Walker:Workers are paying 7% more this year for employer-sponsored health insurance
Surpassing Quant Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-10 19:03:47
Climbing food and housing prices aren't the only costs causing consumers to dig deeper into their pockets these days. Insurance premiums are forcing them to shell out more money, too.
According to a new survey from health policy research firm KFF, workers this year are contributing, on average, $6,575 toward the cost of insurance premiums for their employer-sponsored family health insurance, or $500 more than they paid in 2022. Meanwhile, annual premiums for family coverage plans jumped a whopping 7% this year, reaching $23,968 on average. By comparison, annual premiums last year increased 1%.
The surge in premium costs comes as accelerating inflation is putting a dent in workers and employers' wallets and driving up medical device and drug costs, a report from the American Hospital Association shows. It also comes amid a series of mergers in the health care industry that have diminished incentives for insurers to price their coverage plans competitively, American Medical Association President Jesse M. Ehrenfeld, M.D., told MoneyWatch.
Mergers change landscape
"An era of unprecedented merger deals [in the health insurance industry] allowed big insurers to cement near-monopolies in markets across the country … increas[ing] corporate profitability at the expense of affordable high-quality care." Ehrenfeld said.
The KFF study, which surveyed 2,133 non-federal public and private employers with at least three employees between January and July of 2023 and 2,759 companies that responded to a single survey question about their coverage offerings during that same time period, shows that insurance premiums aren't the only costs dinging consumers' wallets.
- Open enrollment underway for Medicare and Medicaid
- What the end of the COVID-19 emergency means for free vaccines, health data and more
- At least 1.7 million Americans use health care sharing plans, despite lack of protections
According to the poll, insurance deductibles have also spiked for the nearly 153 million Americans who rely on employer-sponsored coverage. Deductibles for workers with individual health insurance plans have increased 10% over the past five years, and 50% over the last $10 years to an average of $1,735, KFF data shows.
And while employers so far have absorbed some of the costs of rising coverage costs for their employees, that could also soon change: 23% of employers plan to pass on premium costs to their workers if insurance premiums rise again, according to the poll.
- In:
- medical debt
- Health Care
veryGood! (6626)
Related
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- MH370 vanished a decade ago and search efforts stopped several years later. A U.S. company wants to try again.
- 5 people dead after single-engine plane crashes along Nashville interstate: What we know
- 5 die in fiery small plane crash off Nashville interstate
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- War in Gaza and settler violence are taking a toll on mental health in the West Bank
- New Broadway musical Suffs shines a spotlight on the women's suffrage movement
- As threat to IVF looms in Alabama, patients over 35 or with serious diseases worry for their futures
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- MH370 vanished a decade ago and search efforts stopped several years later. A U.S. company wants to try again.
Ranking
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- 5 die in fiery small plane crash off Nashville interstate
- 2 snowmobilers killed in separate avalanches in Washington and Idaho
- Bitcoin prices near record high. Here's why.
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Nab $140 Worth of Isle of Paradise Tanning Butter for $49 and Get Your Glow On
- Wendy's is offering $1, $2 cheeseburgers for March Madness: How to get the slam dunk deal
- Miami Beach is breaking up with spring break — or at least trying to
Recommendation
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
See how much the IRS is sending for the average 2024 tax refund
Vermont father pleads guilty to manslaughter in drowning death of 2-year-old son after allegedly fleeing DUI crash
New satellite will 'name and shame' large-scale polluters, by tracking methane gas emissions
Small twin
'The Harlem Renaissance' and what is Black art for?
Alabama Republicans to vote on nominee for chief justice, weeks after court’s frozen embryo ruling
Coast-to-coast Super Tuesday contests poised to move Biden and Trump closer to November rematch