A health plan where the employer pays claims directly (often with stop-loss insurance) rather than paying premiums to an insurer.
In a self-insured (or self-funded) health plan, the employer assumes the risk of paying claims directly rather than purchasing insurance from a carrier. The employer typically contracts with a third-party administrator (TPA) for claims processing and purchases stop-loss insurance to cap exposure on catastrophic claims.
Self-insurance is typically more economical for employers with 100+ employees and stable demographics — the employer captures the carrier's profit margin. Below that size, the variance in claims year-to-year usually makes fully-insured plans safer.
PEO master plans are typically fully-insured (because the PEO pools many small clients into a stable risk pool that fits the insurance model). Self-insurance becomes more relevant if/when a business moves out of a PEO at larger scale.
A health plan where the employer pays claims directly (often with stop-loss insurance) rather than paying premiums to an insurer.
In a self-insured (or self-funded) health plan, the employer assumes the risk of paying claims directly rather than purchasing insurance from a carrier.
Most PEO buying decisions touch several related concepts at once. Self-insured health plan typically comes up alongside the other terms in this category. Closely related terms include Group health insurance, Stop-loss insurance.
This is one entry from our PEO glossary covering payroll, benefits, workers comp, HR compliance, and PEO mechanics. Browse all terms.
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