Analyze Your Costs

Maryland Health Insurance
Cost Per Employee Calculator

Compare fully insured, level-funded, self-funded, PEO, and MEWA health plan costs for your Maryland business -- powered by real data from KFF, CMS, and state DOI filings.

Maryland Small-Group Health Insurance at a Glance

Avg Single Premium
$806/mo
Avg Family Premium
$2285/mo
Cost vs National Avg
+12%
Annual Trend
8.3%/yr
Exchange: State-based marketplace
Medicaid Expanded: Yes
Top Carriers: CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield, Kaiser Permanente, UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, Cigna
State Mandates: Extensive mandates including autism, diabetes, in vitro fertilization, mental health parity, and hearing aids. All-payer hospital rate setting system.
1
Your Company
Tell us about your business so we can estimate health insurance costs using Maryland-specific rates and demographics.
38
55%
12%
33%
Total: 100%
2
Current Situation
Tell us about your current health benefits arrangement so we can show how alternatives compare.
75%
3
Compare Options
Select which funding types to compare and your preferred plan tier. We'll calculate costs for each based on Maryland market data.

Built on Real Pricing Data -- Not Guesswork

This tool is powered by actuarial and regulatory datasets, calibrated to 2026 market conditions.

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CMS Federal Age Curves

Official ACA 3:1 rating factors for every age 0-64+, plus state exceptions (NY, VT, MA, DC)

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50-State Cost Indices

State-level premium multipliers reflecting provider costs, utilization patterns, and market regulation

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KFF EHBS Survey

Kaiser Family Foundation 2025 Employer Health Benefits Survey -- the gold standard for employer cost benchmarks

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Actuarial Claims Data

Expected claims from SOA and Milliman research, used for self-funded and large group pricing models

Calculation Methodology

Base Premium Calculation: We start with the KFF 2025 national average single premium ($720/mo) and apply the Maryland cost index (1.12) to get the state-adjusted base rate. Age adjustments use the CMS 3:1 federal age curve, and tier mix multipliers convert single rates to blended PEPM costs.

Funding Type Adjustments: Fully insured rates include carrier margin (15-20%) and risk charges. Level-funded rates remove 8-12% of carrier margin but add stop-loss premium. Self-funded rates are pure expected claims plus admin fees (typically $30-50 PEPM) and stop-loss. PEO rates reflect group purchasing power (typically 13% below direct market). MEWA rates are similar to PEO but with association-specific pool dynamics.

Trend Projections: 3-year projections use funding-type-specific trend rates: fully insured (8.3%), level-funded (5.4%), self-funded (5.0%), PEO (4.0%).

Limitations: This calculator provides estimates based on market averages. Actual premiums depend on your specific group's claims history, plan design, carrier underwriting, and negotiated rates. Use this as a comparison starting point, then request actual quotes.

Want a Personalized Cost Analysis?

Get a detailed report with your specific numbers -- reviewed by a licensed benefits advisor.

What Maryland Employers Need to Know About Health Insurance Costs

Maryland has a cost index of 1.12, approximately 12% above the national average. The state is unique in having an all-payer hospital rate setting system -- the Health Services Cost Review Commission (HSCRC) sets hospital rates that all payers must follow, creating cost predictability but limiting negotiation leverage.

CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield dominates the market, with Kaiser Permanente providing strong integrated-model competition in the Baltimore-Washington corridor. UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, and Cigna round out the competitive landscape.

Maryland operates Maryland Health Connection, its own state-based marketplace, and has been an aggressive market regulator. The state's proximity to Washington, D.C. means many employers compete for talent with the federal government's comprehensive FEHB program.

The all-payer system means self-funded plans don't get the same hospital cost advantage in Maryland as in other states, since rates are fixed. However, self-funding still provides ERISA preemption of state mandates and access to claims data, making it attractive for larger employers.

Maryland Continuation Coverage: State continuation: 18 months for employers with fewer than 20 employees. Federal COBRA applies to employers with 20+ employees.