Get a Free Quote

Arkansas Level-Funded vs Fully Insured
Savings Calculator

Compare level-funded and fully insured health plan costs for your Arkansas business. See potential savings, surplus refunds, and worst-case scenarios -- powered by Arkansas-specific carrier data and actuarial benchmarks.

Arkansas Level-Funded Market at a Glance

Avg FI Premium PEPM
$610/mo
LF Savings Potential
13% avg
Cost vs National Avg
-19%
LF Market
Competitive
Min Group Size: 2 employees
Surplus Return: 50-75% of unused claims fund
LF Carriers: UnitedHealthcare Level-Funded, Cigna Level-Funded, Aetna Funding Advantage
Mandates: Standard ACA mandates plus mammography and diabetes coverage
1
Your Company
Tell us about your Arkansas business so we can model level-funded vs fully insured costs using Arkansas-specific rates and carrier data.
38
60%
20%
20%
2
Current Plan & Level-Funded Model
Enter your current fully insured costs and configure the level-funded model parameters. We'll show a side-by-side comparison using Arkansas-specific data.
10%
70%
15%

Level-Funded Health Insurance in Arkansas: What Employers Need to Know

Arkansas employers enjoy some of the lowest health insurance costs in the nation, with a cost index of 0.80. This low-cost environment creates an interesting dynamic for level-funded plans: the dollar savings per employee may be more modest than in high-cost states, but the risk exposure is also proportionally lower. For Arkansas employers, level-funded plans often represent a low-risk way to potentially reduce costs while gaining access to claims data and surplus refund opportunities.

Arkansas Blue Cross Blue Shield dominates the fully insured market, but the level-funded space is served primarily by national carriers like UnitedHealthcare, Cigna, and Aetna. QualChoice, a regional carrier, has also entered the level-funded arena. The minimum group size is typically 2 employees, and the state's regulatory environment is favorable to self-funded and level-funded arrangements.

The stop-loss market in Arkansas benefits from the state's lower overall cost environment, with stop-loss premiums running about 10% below national averages. This makes level-funded plans more economically attractive by reducing one of the major cost components. Arkansas employers with 10-100 employees are in the sweet spot for level-funded plans, where the group is large enough for reasonable claims predictability but small enough to benefit from the flexibility and potential savings.

Frequently Asked Questions: Level-Funded Plans in Arkansas

Is level-funded health insurance available in Arkansas? +
Yes. Arkansas employers have access to level-funded health plans from carriers including UnitedHealthcare Level-Funded, Cigna Level-Funded, Aetna Funding Advantage. The minimum group size is typically 2 employees. Level-funded plans in Arkansas are treated as self-funded under ERISA, providing flexibility in plan design and potential savings.
How much can Arkansas employers save with level-funded? +
Based on Arkansas's average fully insured PEPM of $610 and typical level-funded discounts of 13%, employers can expect meaningful savings in the expected claims scenario. Best-case savings with surplus refunds can reach 20-30%, while worst-case exposure is capped by stop-loss insurance.
What happens if claims are higher than expected? +
Stop-loss insurance protects against catastrophic claims. Individual specific stop-loss covers any single claimant above the attachment point (e.g., $50,000). Aggregate stop-loss caps total group claims at 125% of expected. Your maximum exposure is predetermined and contractually limited.
What if claims are lower than expected? +
This is where level-funded shines. If your group's claims are below the funded amount, you receive a surplus refund. In Arkansas, typical surplus return provisions are 50-75% of unused claims fund. With fully insured plans, the carrier keeps the difference.
Which Arkansas employers are the best fit for level-funded? +
Level-funded plans work best for Arkansas employers with 2-250 employees, younger-than-average workforces, and a desire for cost transparency. Industries with lower claims risk (technology, professional services, education) often see the best results. The Arkansas market is classified as competitive for level-funded options.

Built on Real Data -- Not Guesswork

This calculator uses Arkansas-specific actuarial data, carrier rate filings, and published survey benchmarks.

📊

KFF Employer Survey

2025 benchmarks from 2,000+ employers on premiums, plan design, and funding type distribution

📋

SOA Claims Tables

Society of Actuaries group health experience studies for expected claims modeling by age and industry

📈

Stop-Loss Rate Data

Sun Life and Voya reference rate schedules for specific and aggregate stop-loss pricing by attachment point

🏗

Arkansas DOI Filings

State-level rate filings, carrier market share data, and regulatory requirements from Arkansas's insurance department

Want a Custom Level-Funded Quote for Arkansas?

Get a side-by-side comparison with actual carrier quotes from UnitedHealthcare Level-Funded, Cigna Level-Funded, Aetna Funding Advantage -- reviewed by a benefits advisor who knows the Arkansas market.

Calculation Methodology

Fully Insured Cost: Current PEPM x number of employees x 12 months. Projected forward using the annual renewal increase rate.

Level-Funded Breakdown:
- Claims Fund: PEPM x claims ratio x state cost index (0.8 for Arkansas) x age factor x industry adjustment x plan tier multiplier. This is held in a claims account to pay medical expenses.
- Admin Fee: PEPM x admin percentage. Covers TPA fees, network access, compliance, and reporting.
- Stop-Loss Premium: Based on attachment point selected. Adjusted by Arkansas's stop-loss factor (0.9) and group demographics.
- Total Level-Funded: Claims Fund + Admin Fee + Stop-Loss Premium.

Scenario Modeling:
- Best Case: Actual claims at 55% of expected. Employer receives ~50% of surplus (unused claims fund) as a refund.
- Expected Case: Actual claims match the expected claims fund. Typical savings vs fully insured.
- Worst Case: Claims run 130% of expected, but stop-loss caps total exposure at 125% of expected claims fund.

State Cost Index: Arkansas's index of 0.8 adjusts base claims for state-level provider costs, utilization patterns, and regulatory environment. Based on CMS Geographic Practice Cost Index and Arkansas DOI rate filings.

Data Sources: SOA Group Health Experience Study, Mercer National Survey 2025, KFF 2025 Employer Health Benefits Survey, TrustMark/Voya level-funded reference data, Sun Life stop-loss rate manuals, NAIC stop-loss model regulations, CMS Federal Age Rating Curves, Arkansas Department of Insurance filings.