Your renewal just landed, and it's ugly. 11% increase. Maybe 15%. Maybe 20%. Your broker is already framing it as "the market" and "unavoidable." They're not wrong that costs are going up, but they're not telling you the whole story.
Here's what the broker won't say: your renewal increase is negotiable, and there are funding mechanisms that can cut your costs by 15-30% that most brokers never mention because they don't get paid to sell them.
Key Takeaways
- The median small business health insurance increase is 11% for 2026, but some employers are seeing 20%+ increases
- Healthcare cost inflation (9% projected for 2026) is driving carrier increases, not your claims
- Most brokers don't offer alternative funding models because they earn smaller commissions on them
- Taft-Hartley multi-employer plans and level-funded arrangements can reduce costs by 15-30%
- The key to negotiating better renewals is arriving with competitive data, not just accepting the increase
The uncomfortable truth about your renewal
Your broker will tell you the increase reflects your claims experience. That might be partially true, but it's incomplete. Carriers are raising rates across the board because healthcare costs are inflating at roughly 9% annually, and they're building that into everyone's renewal regardless of individual claims.
The 11% median increase isn't a reflection of how healthy or unhealthy your workforce is. It's a reflection of carrier pricing strategy. They know most employers won't push back, won't compare options, and will just pay the higher premium. Why wouldn't they? There's no penalty for proposing a big increase if it gets accepted 80% of the time.
This is where you need to be different.
What your broker isn't telling you
Most brokers get paid through commissions built into your premium. The problem is that certain funding mechanisms pay them more than others. Fully insured traditional plans? Highest commission. Level-funded? Less. Self-funded with reference-based pricing? Least of all.
So when your broker presents your renewal, they're implicitly pushing you toward the option that pays them most. That's not malicious, but it is structural. You have to ask the right questions to get past it.
Here's what to ask: "What alternative funding mechanisms are available for a company our size, and what's the commission difference between each option?"
If they stumble or deflect, you already have your answer.
The Taft-Hartley option your broker won't mention
Taft-Hartley health plans are multi-employer trusts funded by employers across multiple industries. They exist because unions and management jointly created them decades ago to give smaller employers access to the same bargaining power as large corporations.
The carriers don't love them because Taft-Hartley plans are price-sensitive and require more administrative work. Your broker doesn't love them because commissions are lower than fully insured plans.
But here's what matters to you: Taft-Hartley plans frequently cost 15-30% less than equivalent traditional fully insured coverage. The savings come from size (thousands of employers pooling risk), professional management (experienced trustees who understand the business), and competitive bidding among carriers.
If you have 25+ employees and you're paying more than $50,000 annually in premiums, you owe it to yourself to get a Taft-Hartley quote. The math almost always works out in your favor.
Level-funded: the middle ground
If Taft-Hartley feels like too big a change, level-funded plans are a simpler alternative. These split the difference between fully insured and self-funded. You pay a fixed monthly premium, but the carrier refunds unused claims money if your group is healthy.
Level-funded works best when your workforce is relatively healthy and you've had low claims years. The risk is that if claims exceed expectations, you could face a larger-than-expected renewal. But for many mid-size employers, the savings potential makes it worth considering.
The key is running the numbers with someone who actually presents this option, not someone who dismisses it.
How to actually negotiate your renewal
Stop accepting the first number your broker presents. That's the most expensive mistake you can make.
Request a renewal at least 60 days before your current plan expires. This gives you time to:
- Get quotes from 2-3 competitive carriers
- Explore at least one alternative funding model (Taft-Hartley or level-funded)
- Present competitive data to your incumbent carrier
When you show your incumbent that you're actively shopping, they'll often sharpen their pencil. They don't want to lose you, and they know that if you leave, they might not replace you at the same price point with a new customer.
This is basic negotiation: the party with more options has more leverage. If you're only talking to one carrier through one broker, you've already lost leverage.
The real cost of doing nothing
Every year you accept a double-digit increase without pushing back, you're compounding the problem. A 15% increase this year followed by another 12% next year means your costs have jumped 30% over two years. That's real money that could be going to payroll, equipment, or profit.
Employers who successfully manage costs treat every renewal as a negotiation, not a clerical event. They're not looking for a fight; they're looking for value. And value means asking questions that their brokers might not want to answer.
Don't sign until you've done this
Before you accept any renewal, get a second opinion from someone who offers Taft-Hartley plans. The difference in pricing can be dramatic, and you'll only know if you ask.
Your broker works for you. If they're not presenting your options fairly, it's time to work with someone who will.
Test Your Renewal Against Market Data
Common Questions About Negotiating Health Insurance Renewals
How much can I actually save by shopping around?
Savings vary by region, plan design, and group size, but employers who compare options typically find 10-20% savings by moving to more competitive funding mechanisms. Taft-Hartley plans specifically often show 15-30% reductions.
Why don't all brokers offer Taft-Hartley plans?
Commission structures differ, and some brokers lack the expertise or relationships to place business in multi-employer plans. Others simply don't offer them because they've never done the paperwork.
Is level-funded risky for a small company?
Level-funded works best for groups with 25+ employees and a history of reasonable claims. The risk is lower than full self-funding because carriers provide stop-loss protection. The key is understanding that refunds aren't guaranteed.
How long does it take to switch plans?
Most transitions take 4-8 weeks from quote to effective date. Starting early gives you negotiating leverage and prevents gaps in coverage.
Sources
- Small Business Health Insurance Premiums Could Rise 11% in 2026 — OneDigital, January 2026
- Small Business Health Insurance Hits Breaking Point as Costs Surge 11% — Live Insurance News, March 2026
- Small Business Health Insurance Costs Rising 11% in 2026: 5 Solutions — Venteur, February 2026
- Putting the Extraordinary ACA Premiums Increase in Perspective — Commonwealth Fund, January 2026
- KFF Employer Health Benefits Survey — Kaiser Family Foundation
- NAPEO PEO Industry Data — National Association of Professional Employer Organizations
- DOL Taft-Hartley Act Information — U.S. Department of Labor
Sam Newland, CFP® is an independent benefits strategist who helps mid-size employers cut 15-30% off their health costs through alternative funding mechanisms including Taft-Hartley plans. He built Business Insurance Health to give employers the data and options their brokers often don't provide.





