Pennsylvania Level-Funded vs Fully Insured
Savings Calculator
Compare level-funded and fully insured health plan costs for your Pennsylvania business. See potential savings, surplus refunds, and worst-case scenarios -- powered by Pennsylvania-specific carrier data and actuarial benchmarks.
Pennsylvania Level-Funded Market at a Glance
Frequently Asked Questions: Level-Funded Plans in Pennsylvania
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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 (1.05 for Pennsylvania) 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 Pennsylvania's stop-loss factor (1.03) 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: Pennsylvania's index of 1.05 adjusts base claims for state-level provider costs, utilization patterns, and regulatory environment. Based on CMS Geographic Practice Cost Index and Pennsylvania 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, Pennsylvania Department of Insurance filings.
Level-Funded Health Insurance in Pennsylvania: What Employers Need to Know
Pennsylvania has one of the most competitive health insurance markets in the country, driven by the presence of major carriers headquartered or regionally based in the state. Independence Blue Cross in Philadelphia, Highmark in Pittsburgh, Cigna in nearby Connecticut, and Geisinger in central Pennsylvania all compete vigorously. This competition extends to the level-funded space, where employers have multiple carriers to choose from.
Pennsylvania's cost index of 1.05 reflects slightly above-average costs, with significant variation between the expensive Philadelphia metro area and more affordable central and western Pennsylvania. Level-funded plans allow Pennsylvania employers to access pricing based on their own group's demographics and geography rather than a statewide community rate. This can produce meaningful savings for employers with younger workforces or those located outside the high-cost Philadelphia corridor.
Pennsylvania's Insurance Department treats level-funded plans as self-funded under ERISA and has not imposed specific restrictions on these arrangements. The state has moderate benefit mandates, including coverage for autism services, colorectal cancer screening, and diabetes management. The stop-loss market is competitive, with multiple reinsurers actively writing business in Pennsylvania.