Employer health care premiums hit $25K in 2024: KFF

The average employer-sponsored health insurance premium for US families rose 7% this year – same as last year, according to the annual KFF survey of 2,100 companies.

Is inflation really easing? Well, for health care, not so much. This marks the second year in a row that employer-sponsored health insurance premiums are up 7% to reach an average of $25,572 annually, according to KFF’s annual survey, 2024 KFF Employer Health Benefit Survey. Premiums jumped 7% — the biggest increase the survey reported since 2011 – in 2024, same as last year.

The survey of 2,142 employers examines trends in employer-sponsored health coverage, including premiums, employee contributions, wellness programs and employer practices. On average, employees contributed $6,296 towards the cost of family coverage, while the employer contribution was $19,276. Premiums for individual coverage was $8,951 in 2024.

“Employers are shelling out the equivalent of buying an economy car for every worker every year to pay for family coverage,” KFF President and CEO Drew Altman said. “In the tight labor market in recent years, they have not been able to continue offloading costs onto workers who are already struggling with health care bills.”

This year, KFF asked employers detailed questions about their provider networks, abortion coverage and family building benefits, as well as coverage for GLP-1 drugs for weight loss.

Fewer than 1-5 employers with at least 200 employees (18%) say they cover GLP-1 drugs, while half (52% say they don’t cover them. Among firms that do not currently cover the drugs for weight loss, few (3%) say they are “very likely” to do so in the next year.

Related: Employers turn to alternative strategies to control health care spending

Other key findings: