Report: HSA-eligible enrollees more than double as deductibles rise

Enrollment in such plans is increasing as employers see deductibles and cost-sharing as the easiest way to control overall spending.

The number of enrollees participating in HSA-eligible plans more than doubled between 2013 and 2018, from 4% to 10%.

A recent study has found that health plan deductibles rose across the board between 2013 and 2018, with PPO plans seeing the largest increase and HSA-eligible plans seeing the smallest increase.

The study, “Trends in Cost Sharing for Medical Services,” conducted by the Employment Benefit Research Institute (EBRI), analyzed a sample of 5.9 million enrollees between 2013 and 2018 and found that enrollees in HMO/EPO plans saw the highest deductible increases (8% for employee-only plans, 12% for family plans), followed by PPO/POS plans (6.1% for employees, 6.7% for families) and comprehensive plans (4.7% for employees, 6.5% for families).

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HSA-eligible plans saw the lowest deductible increase, climbing just 0.8% for employee-only plans and 2.1% for family coverage plans between 2013 and 2018.

The researchers also found that the number of enrollees participating in HSA-eligible plans more than doubled in those five years, from 4% to 10%.

Correspondingly, the number of enrollees in the most dominant plans — PPO and POS plans — fell 10%, from 65% in 2013 to 55% in 2018. Save for a 6% bump in enrollment for HRA plans, enrollee shares of various other plans remained flat.

Paul Fronstin, director of research at the EBRI, said that costs are rising as employers see deductibles and cost-sharing as the easiest way to control overall spending.

“It’s not surprising to me that deductibles are going up,” Fronstin said. “All they’re doing is changing one number in their plan, rather than excluding providers or certain drugs. It’s the easiest thing to do.”

The rise of HSA-eligible plans, Fronstin added, is a manifestation of the increased deductibles.

“They’re then giving people an HSA which allows them to pay that deductible on a pre-tax basis,” he said.

Other study findings include:

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