The average cost of family coverage in employer health plans pushed above the $20,000 mark for the first time this year, according to a new report, as the 5% average increase in premiums exceeded the growth rate for wages and general inflation.
Low-wage workers face unique challenges, the study found, since they are less likely to be offered employer coverage and must pay a larger share of the premium when they have the chance to buy it.
The numbers come from an annual national survey by the California-based Kaiser Family Foundation on cost trends for employer health plan coverage, the market where about 153 million Americans obtain health insurance via private-sector carriers.
"The average family premium is now $20,000, so that's a milestone — not, obviously, in a good way," said Drew Altman, the foundation's president, in a news conference on Wednesday. "It's as expensive as buying an economy car, but buying it every year."
Employer-sponsored health plans are the single-largest category of health insurance in the country, providing coverage to more people than the Medicare or Medicaid programs.
The coverage has been highlighted by some Democratic presidential candidates who are proposing a "Medicare for All" system that would be run by the federal government. The political debate focuses on expanding access to care but seldom hits the cost issues highlighted by the survey, Altman said. He added: "92 percent of Americans have coverage, and they're worried about the cost of their coverage."
The political debate also tends to treat employer-sponsored coverage in stark terms — some say it is good, others say it is bad — but the survey shows the quality of coverage is not monolithic, Altman said.
"The sharpest split … is between workers in low- and higher-wage firms, who really are living in different health insurance systems," he said. Costs are "prohibitive," Altman said, when workers making $25,000 a year must pay $7,000 a year just for their share of family premiums.