Small Business Health Insurance Costs Hit a Record High. Here's What Most Owners Don't Know.
Family premiums reached $26,993 in 2025 — outpacing wages and inflation. For small business employees, the numbers are even worse. But a growing number of small employers are quietly using an alternative most business owners haven't heard of.
The numbers from the 2025 Employer Health Benefits Survey are in, and they're not good for small businesses.
Average annual premiums for family health coverage hit $26,993 in 2025 — a 6% increase from the prior year that outpaced both wage growth (4%) and inflation (2.7%). Single coverage averaged $9,325 annually. And researchers at KFF, who conducted the survey, noted that "early reports suggest that cost trends will be higher for 2026."
For large employers, this is an uncomfortable budget line. For small businesses, it's a different problem entirely.
2025 Health Insurance Cost Snapshot (KFF Survey)
📊 Average family premium: $26,993 (+6% year-over-year)
📊 Average single premium: $9,325
📊 Small business worker contribution to family coverage: $8,889 more than large company workers
📊 Small business workers with $2,000+ deductibles: 53% vs 28% at large firms
📊 2026 outlook: Costs expected to rise further
Why Small Business Workers Pay More — A Lot More
The gap between what employees at small companies pay for health coverage versus what employees at large companies pay has been widening for years. In 2025, it became impossible to ignore.
Workers at small firms contribute an average of $8,889 more per year toward family health coverage than their counterparts at large employers. They're also more than twice as likely to face a deductible of $2,000 or more — 53% of small firm workers vs. 28% at large companies.
This isn't because small business owners are less generous. It's because the traditional group health insurance market was built for large employers. Premiums in the group market are calculated based on risk pool size. A company with 500 employees spreads risk across hundreds of people and thousands of claims. A company with five employees doesn't have that luxury — and the pricing reflects it.
The result: small businesses either pay significantly more for equivalent coverage, offer worse coverage, or offer nothing at all. According to federal data, only about half of small businesses with fewer than 50 employees offer health benefits at all.
The Alternative Most Small Business Owners Don't Know Exists
Here's what's changed — and what most of the coverage on rising health insurance costs misses entirely.
Small businesses are no longer required to purchase traditional group health insurance to offer their employees meaningful benefits. Individual marketplace plans — the same plans available on healthcare.gov and state exchanges — can be accessed through employer-sponsored arrangements that require no minimum group size, no minimum participation rate, and no traditional underwriting.
The practical result: a business with one employee can offer real health coverage to that employee. A 12-person accounting firm can offer each staff member a choice of plans. A marketing agency with a mix of W2 employees and 1099 contractors can cover the entire team. A dental practice, an HVAC company, an engineering firm — all of them can access meaningful benefits without the traditional group policy structure. And even a solo operator with an EIN can set this up for themselves.
The pricing difference is significant. While the traditional group market puts small employers at a disadvantage, individual marketplace plans are priced on individual risk — not company size. Many small businesses accessing benefits this way see per-employee costs starting around $2 per employee per day depending on the coverage selected and employee demographics.
| Factor | Traditional Group Plan | No Group Minimum Model |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum employees required | Usually 2–10+ | 1 |
| Minimum participation rate | 50–75% typically | None |
| Pricing basis | Group risk pool | Individual marketplace rates |
| Works with 1099 workers | Rarely | Yes |
| Works with part-time staff | Limited | Yes |
| Employer admin burden | High | Low to none |
| Starting cost per employee | $400–$700+/month | ~$60–$200+/month |
Why Aren't More Small Businesses Using This?
The short answer: most small business owners don't know it exists. The longer answer involves how the benefits industry markets itself.
Traditional brokers and insurance carriers have little incentive to promote lower-cost individual alternatives — their commissions are tied to group policy premiums. The financial press covers rising group insurance costs without mentioning what's available outside the group market. And the small business owners who most need this information are usually too busy running their businesses to go looking for it.
The business owners who have found this model tend to discover it one of two ways: a referral from another business owner who's already using it, or a benefits consultant who specializes in small business alternative coverage. Word of mouth is currently the primary distribution channel for a product that could benefit millions of employers.
What the 2026 Forecast Means for Small Businesses
KFF's survey doesn't just document 2025 costs — it flags what's coming. "Early reports suggest that cost trends will be higher for 2026," the survey notes. For small business owners already stretched thin on traditional group insurance, another year of above-inflation cost growth narrows the options.
The practical implication is straightforward: the longer a small business stays in the traditional group market, the more they pay for coverage that was never designed for their size. The alternative model isn't experimental — it's already being used by thousands of small employers nationwide. It simply hasn't been marketed to them.
See What Benefits Would Cost Your Business
Most small business owners are surprised by what's available — and what it actually costs. A no-pressure conversation with a benefits advisor takes about 15 minutes.
Get a Free Benefits Assessment →What Small Business Owners Should Do Right Now
If you currently offer group health insurance, it's worth getting a comparison quote against individual marketplace alternatives before your next renewal. In many cases, employers find they can offer equivalent or better coverage at meaningfully lower cost — and extend that coverage to workers who weren't eligible under their group policy.
If you currently offer nothing, the 2025 data offers a clear argument for changing that. Employee retention at small businesses is increasingly tied to benefits access — this is especially true in professional services, skilled trades, and any business where your team is hard to replace. An accounting firm losing a senior associate to a competitor who offers benefits. A tech agency losing a developer. A dental practice losing a hygienist. The cost of turnover in skilled roles almost always exceeds what a basic benefits package costs. With individual marketplace plans, the minimum viable benefits package is more affordable than most business owners assume.
Either way, the first step is understanding what's actually available for a business your size — and what it would cost. That information is free to get and takes about 15 minutes to pull together.