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New Hampshire Level-Funded vs Fully Insured
Savings Calculator

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

New Hampshire Level-Funded Market at a Glance

Avg FI Premium PEPM
$760/mo
LF Savings Potential
10% avg
Cost vs National Avg
+10%
LF Market
Limited
Min Group Size: 2 employees
Surplus Return: 40-65% of unused claims fund
LF Carriers: UnitedHealthcare Level-Funded, Cigna Level-Funded
Mandates: ACA plus state mandates for mental health, breast reconstruction, and diabetes supplies
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Your Company
Tell us about your New Hampshire business so we can model level-funded vs fully insured costs using New Hampshire-specific rates and carrier data.
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20%
20%
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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 New Hampshire-specific data.
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70%
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Level-Funded Health Insurance in New Hampshire: What Employers Need to Know

New Hampshire has above-average health insurance costs, with a cost index of 1.10 reflecting the state's proximity to the expensive Boston medical market and relatively high provider pricing. Level-funded plans can offer New Hampshire employers meaningful savings compared to the community-rated small-group fully insured market, particularly for employers with younger employee demographics.

The New Hampshire fully insured market is served primarily by Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, Harvard Pilgrim, and Cigna. For level-funded arrangements, UnitedHealthcare and Cigna are the main options. The limited carrier competition means New Hampshire employers may need to look at both in-state and regional carrier options when evaluating level-funded alternatives.

New Hampshire has moderate state-specific benefit mandates, including coverage for mental health services, breast reconstruction, and diabetes supplies. Level-funded plans under ERISA may be exempt from some of these mandates, creating potential cost savings. The state's Insurance Department treats level-funded plans as self-funded and has not imposed specific restrictions on these arrangements. New Hampshire employers in technology, healthcare, and professional services are the most active adopters of level-funded plans.

Frequently Asked Questions: Level-Funded Plans in New Hampshire

Is level-funded health insurance available in New Hampshire? +
Yes. New Hampshire employers have access to level-funded health plans from carriers including UnitedHealthcare Level-Funded, Cigna Level-Funded. The minimum group size is typically 2 employees. Level-funded plans in New Hampshire are treated as self-funded under ERISA, providing flexibility in plan design and potential savings.
How much can New Hampshire employers save with level-funded? +
Based on New Hampshire's average fully insured PEPM of $760 and typical level-funded discounts of 10%, 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 New Hampshire, typical surplus return provisions are 40-65% of unused claims fund. With fully insured plans, the carrier keeps the difference.
Which New Hampshire employers are the best fit for level-funded? +
Level-funded plans work best for New Hampshire 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 New Hampshire market is classified as limited for level-funded options.

Built on Real Data -- Not Guesswork

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

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KFF Employer Survey

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

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SOA Claims Tables

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

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Stop-Loss Rate Data

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

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New Hampshire DOI Filings

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

Want a Custom Level-Funded Quote for New Hampshire?

Get a side-by-side comparison with actual carrier quotes from UnitedHealthcare Level-Funded, Cigna Level-Funded -- reviewed by a benefits advisor who knows the New Hampshire 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 (1.1 for New Hampshire) 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 New Hampshire's stop-loss factor (1.08) 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: New Hampshire's index of 1.1 adjusts base claims for state-level provider costs, utilization patterns, and regulatory environment. Based on CMS Geographic Practice Cost Index and New Hampshire 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, New Hampshire Department of Insurance filings.