Utah Health Insurance
Cost Per Employee Calculator
Compare fully insured, level-funded, self-funded, PEO, and MEWA health plan costs for your Utah business -- powered by real data from KFF, CMS, and state DOI filings.
Utah Small-Group Health Insurance at a Glance
Calculation Methodology
Base Premium Calculation: We start with the KFF 2025 national average single premium ($720/mo) and apply the Utah cost index (0.88) 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 14% 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 (7.7%), level-funded (4.9%), self-funded (4.6%), PEO (3.6%).
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.
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What Utah Employers Need to Know About Health Insurance Costs
Utah has one of the lowest health insurance cost indices at 0.88, approximately 12% below the national average. The state benefits from a younger-than-average population (lowest median age in the nation), lower chronic disease rates, and competitive provider costs along the Wasatch Front.
SelectHealth (affiliated with Intermountain Healthcare, one of the most efficient integrated health systems in the nation) dominates the market, offering competitive pricing through its owned provider network. Regence BCBS and UnitedHealthcare provide additional competition.
Utah expanded Medicaid via ballot initiative in 2018 (with a narrower expansion than originally approved) and uses the federal marketplace. The state's business-friendly regulatory environment keeps mandates minimal.
Utah's young, growing population and strong technology sector (the 'Silicon Slopes') create demand for competitive benefit packages. The combination of already-low base rates and PEO group purchasing power creates very competitive total benefit costs -- among the lowest in the nation.