The average health plan out-of-pocket maximum is $8,000, yet 37% of Americans struggle to cover a $400 emergency expense. It is no wonder that many employees consider themselves functionally uninsured despite being enrolled in an employer-sponsored health plan.
As the divide grows with each passing plan year, employers are witnessing their employee "benefit" suddenly become a "liability" — particularly for those employees who have little access to savings, have poor credit, or, like most Americans, live paycheck-to-paycheck.
Offering guaranteed financial assistance to employees who need help paying high out-of-pocket medical and pharmacy costs may be the only way for employers to receive full benefit for the policies they purchase for their employees. Studies show that the majority of employees enrolled in high-deductible health plans report skipping or delaying care, which can have catastrophic consequences. Employees who skip care stay sicker for longer, and when outcomes are eroded, employers see an increase in health plan expenses as well as absenteeism/presenteeism.
Employee financial assistance to help offset health plan out of pocket costs come in a number of forms that permit the employer contribution to be deductible by the employer and non-taxable to the plan participant.
Employer contributions to HSAs, HRAs, and FSAs are the most common forms of this type of financial support. Employers can also sponsor employer loan plans that provide access to employer dollars when they need them to offset health care costs.