Tariffs and risingโ Premiums in the Small Group Health Insurance Market
Recent analysis of health insurance filings โฃreveals that import tariffs โare beginning to influence premiumโ calculations in the small group health insurance market,adding โanother layer of complexity to affordability concerns for smallโฃ businesses and their employees. A review of 88 small groupโ market rate filings showed that approximately 25% (22 insurers) explicitly referenced tariffs as a factor in their pricing. It’s likely that other insurers have considered tariff impacts without directly stating so.
Several states have seen filingsโ noting anticipated increases in the โฃcost of both โคbrand-name and specialty prescription drugs due to new import tariffs, particularly for medications lacking generic alternatives. The impact varies, but insurersโ are grappling with how to account for this emerging cost driver.
Independent health Benefits Corporation (Newโ York) is seeking an 18.9% overall rate changeโ for 2026, citing increased costs stemming from both inflation and tariffs. United Healthcare Insurance Company (Oregon) has incorporated a 2.9%โค claims impact into its initial โrate filings to โคaddress uncertainty surrounding โtariffs and potential onshoring of manufacturing,translating to a roughly 2.7% premium increase.
Though, notโข allโข insurers are factoring tariffs into their projections.Neighborhood Health Plan of Rhode Island, such as, โฃopted not to include tariffโค impacts in its rate development, citing the current uncertainty surrounding whether proposed tariffs will be finalized.
This cautious approach is largely dueโข to the timing of premium lock-in. insurersโ operating in the ACA-compliant small group market are oftenโ requiredโ to finalize premiums six โto nine months before the coverage year begins. This necessitates pricing decisions based โonโฃ available information, and tariffs represent a relatively unprecedented factor. Unlike established โtrends like inflation or utilization shifts, there is limited historical data to โคpredict theโฃ full effect of sweeping import tariffs on prescriptionโข drug pricing.Furthermore, ACA regulations regarding Medical Loss Ratios (MLR) add another layer of complexity. These rules limit the percentage ofโ premiums insurers can retain for administrative costs and profit, requiring โrebates โฃifโ premiums exceed actual spending. Conversely, underpricing premiumsโ in the โface of rising drug costs due to tariffs could lead to financial difficulties for insurers.The inclusion of tariff considerations, even at a relatively modest range of 1.7% to 3.0% among those insurers who are factoring them in, could translate to higher benefit costs for small businesses. For companies operating withโข tightโ margins, even small premium increases can significantly impact decisions regarding employer contributions, cost-sharing arrangements, โคand the continuation โof health coverage. While MLR rules offer โsome protection by mandating rebates for excess premiums,they do not shield employers or employees from the initial burden of โคhigher premiums.
Ultimately,tariff-related uncertainty is becoming a new variable in the rate-setting process for some small group insurers,contributing to the ongoing challenge of maintaining โคaffordable job-based health coverage.