Connecticut Health Insurance Cost Projector for Employers
Compare fully insured, PEO, self-funded, and strategic captive health plan costs for your Connecticut business — powered by real data, not guesswork.
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Connecticut Small-Group Health Insurance at a Glance
Avg Single Premium
$860/mo
Avg Family Premium
$2410/mo
Cost vs National Avg
+24%
Exchange: Federal (healthcare.gov)
Medicaid Expanded: Yes
Small Group Def: Up to 50 employees
Age Rating: 3:1 (federal default)
Market Type: Merged individual and small-group market
Key Carriers: Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, ConnectiCare, Aetna/CVS Health, UnitedHealthcare
💡 What Connecticut Employers Need to Know
Connecticut has above-average health insurance costs driven by high provider reimbursement rates and concentration of specialty medical centers. The merged market means individual and small-group plans follow the same rating rules.
Connecticut offers some of the most generous continuation coverage in the nation at 30 months for small employers.
The typical deductible range for silver-tier plans in Iowa is $1,500-$6,000 for silver-tier plans. The benchmark plan is the Anthem Silver PPO 3500. Use our projector below to compare how your specific group would be priced across fully insured, PEO, self-funded, and strategic captive arrangements.
📋 Connecticut Continuation Coverage: State continuation: 30 months for employers with fewer than 20 employees
❓ Frequently Asked Questions: Connecticut Employer Health Insurance
How much does small business health insurance cost in Connecticut?
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In Connecticut, the average small-group health insurance premium is approximately $860/month for single coverage and $2410/month for family coverage. Connecticut's cost index is 1.24 relative to the national average (1.00), meaning premiums are above the national average. Actual rates depend on your group's demographics, plan design, carrier, and rating area within the state.
What health insurance carriers are available for small businesses in Connecticut?
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The major carriers in Iowa's small-group market include Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, ConnectiCare, Aetna/CVS Health, UnitedHealthcare. Carrier availability varies by county and rating area — urban areas typically have more options than rural regions.
Does Connecticut have a state health insurance exchange?
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Connecticut operates its own state-based exchange, Access Health CT, for individual and small-group enrollment. Employers can also work directly with carriers or licensed brokers.
What are Connecticut's health insurance mandates beyond the ACA?
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Mandates comprehensive coverage including mental health parity, substance abuse treatment, infertility, hearing aids, and autism spectrum disorder. These state-specific mandates can affect plan design and pricing for fully insured small-group plans.
How does Connecticut's Medicaid expansion affect employer health insurance?
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Connecticut has expanded Medicaid (HUSKY Health), which covers adults up to 138% of the federal poverty level. This reduces the uninsured rate and can stabilize the overall insurance market.
What continuation coverage options exist in Connecticut?
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State continuation: 30 months for employers with fewer than 20 employees. Federal COBRA applies to employers with 20+ employees and provides 18 months of continuation coverage. Understanding your state's continuation requirements is important for compliance and employee communication.
📐 Methodology & Sources: Premium estimates are based on KFF Employer Health Benefits Survey (2024), CMS rate filing data, and state Department of Insurance public filings. Cost indices reflect geographic variation in provider reimbursement rates, cost of living, and market concentration. The projector uses actuarial models calibrated to 2026 national benchmarks with state-specific adjustments. All calculations run in your browser — no data is sent to a server until you choose to submit. Sources: KFF (kff.org), CMS (cms.gov), Connecticut DOI, SHRM, BLS.
Analyst Notes
This projection model for Connecticut employers uses composite rate data derived from CMS Medical Loss Ratio (MLR) filings and MEPS-IC survey results. The fully insured baseline reflects Connecticut-specific community rating adjustments where applicable, while self-funded projections incorporate stop-loss premium estimates from the Self-Insurance Institute of America (SIIA) benchmarking data. PEO rates are modeled using aggregated large-group purchasing power discounts typically ranging from 8-22% depending on industry classification and claims history.
Rate trend assumptions for Connecticut are based on a blended index of KFF Employer Health Benefits Survey data, Milliman Medical Index growth rates, and state-specific regulatory filings. The captive insurance projections assume a minimum of 50 participants in a group captive structure with appropriate reinsurance attachment points. Employers with favorable loss ratios (under 65%) may see additional savings not fully captured in these directional estimates.
For a detailed actuarial review specific to your company's demographics, claims experience, and risk tolerance, contact our analysis team. Plan design changes (deductible levels, copay structures, network breadth) can shift these projections by 15-30% in either direction.
Data Sources & Methodology ▼
This analysis draws from the following primary data sources:
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) — Medical Loss Ratio (MLR) Annual Report Data
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality — Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, Insurance Component (MEPS-IC)
Kaiser Family Foundation — Employer Health Benefits Survey, 2024-2025 editions
Milliman — Milliman Medical Index, annual health cost trend projections
State insurance department rate filings and regulatory bulletins
Methodology note: All projections use a composite rate approach with demographic adjustment factors. State-specific regulatory constraints are reflected in baseline rate assumptions. Results are directional estimates intended for planning purposes.