Employee Benefits · Self-Insured Health Plans
Your claims. Your data.
Your dollars.
Unlike fully-insured plans that lock your data behind the insurance company’s wall, self-funded plans let you pay claims directly, see exactly what’s driving cost, and keep the savings when claims run favorable. JS Benefits Group helps employers evaluate readiness, structure stop-loss, and administer self-funded plans across the Mid-Atlantic and nationally.
Serving employers in PA, NJ, NY, DE, MD & nationwide.
On this page
What you need to know about self-funding.
Claims flow, stop-loss, and TPA structure
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Size, claims history, and risk tolerance factors
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How we evaluate and structure your plan
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Why JSBG — How We Support You
Our self-funding advisory and admin services
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Common questions about self-funding
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65%+
Of U.S. Covered Workers Are in Self-Funded Plans
100+
Typical Starting Group Size for Self-Funding
ERISA
Federal Framework Preempts State Mandates
Full Control
Full Claims Data & Plan Design Control
WHAT SELF-INSURANCE ACTUALLY MEANS
Self-funding isn't going without insurance. It's owning the plan.
The language trips people up. A self-insured plan still has insurance — stop-loss coverage caps catastrophic claims, a TPA processes payments, and your provider network is often the same one a carrier would use. What changes is who holds the risk and who keeps the savings.
The simple mechanics.
In a fully-insured plan, you pay a premium to an insurance carrier, and the carrier takes on all claims risk in exchange for that fixed premium. If claims come in low, the carrier keeps the margin. If claims run high, the carrier absorbs the loss — and prices next year’s renewal accordingly.
In a self-insured plan, you pay actual claims as they come in, rather than a flat premium. You contract with a third-party administrator (TPA) to process claims, a pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) to handle prescriptions, and a stop-loss carrier to cap your downside. When claims run low, the savings stay with your company.
In practice: A self-insured employer’s monthly cash outlay is the fixed cost (TPA fees, PBM admin, stop-loss premium) plus the variable cost (actual claims paid). Stop-loss caps the variable side so a catastrophic year can’t blow up the budget.
Roughly two-thirds of U.S. employees with employer-sponsored health insurance are in self-funded plans — it’s been the majority model for decades among large employers. What’s changed is that the floor has moved down: employers as small as 100 enrolled employees routinely self-fund today, and level-funded products have opened the door for groups even smaller.
The Five Components
What makes up a self-insured plan
1
Plan Document & SPD
ERISA-compliant plan document defining benefits, eligibility, appeals, and fiduciary framework. The SPD is what employees read.
2
Third-Party Administrator (TPA)
Processes claims, handles customer service, manages network access, and produces the monthly reports that make your plan transparent.
3
PBM (Pharmacy Benefit Manager)
Manages the drug benefit. PBM selection is one of the highest-leverage cost decisions in a self-funded plan — rebates, formularies, and contracting vary dramatically.
4
Stop-Loss Coverage
Specific stop-loss caps per-claimant exposure; aggregate stop-loss caps total plan claim exposure. This is what keeps self-funding manageable.
5
Network Access
Typically leased from a major carrier (BCBS, Aetna, Cigna, UHC) so employees retain the same network experience as a fully-insured plan.
BENEFITS AND TRADE OFFS
Why self-funding works - and where it gets hard.
Self-funding isn’t a universal answer. It’s a structural shift that creates real advantages and real obligations. Good advisors lay out both sides. Here’s the honest version.
The Upside
Why employers move to self-funded.
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Full claims data transparency
Monthly detailed reporting shows exactly what's driving cost — high-cost claimants, Rx trends, network leakage, utilization patterns. You can't manage what you can't see. -
Savings stay with the employer
When claims run favorable, the money doesn't become carrier profit. It stays on your balance sheet, funds future reserves, or returns to the benefit budget. -
Plan design flexibility
Not locked into carrier-standard plan designs. Add concierge navigation, direct primary care, centers of excellence, reference-based pricing — build the plan your workforce actually needs. -
ERISA preemption of state mandates
Self-funded plans operate under federal ERISA, which preempts most state-level mandated benefits, premium taxes, and rate-review requirements that apply to fully-insured plans. -
Cost-containment ROI flows back
Wellness programs, disease management, pharmacy carve-outs, and navigation services reduce actual claims — and the savings stay with you, not the carrier. -
Monthly cost tied to your group
Renewal conversations shift from "what's the market doing" to "what did our group actually experience." Your rates reflect you, not the carrier's entire block.
The Honest Trade-Offs
What employers need to understand.
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Claim volatility is real
Month-to-month claim spending fluctuates. Even with stop-loss in place, your cash flow profile changes from a fixed premium to a variable-plus-fixed model. Finance teams need to model this. -
Fiduciary responsibility increases
The plan sponsor becomes the ERISA plan fiduciary. That means documented processes for vendor selection, fee reviews, plan governance, and the legal responsibility that comes with it. -
HR workload shifts, doesn't disappear
Instead of managing a carrier relationship, HR manages a TPA, PBM, stop-loss carrier, network vendor, and compliance workflow. A good broker offloads most of this — but not all of it. -
One bad claim year hits the P&L
Stop-loss caps catastrophic exposure, but even a "normal-bad" year with high aggregate claims becomes visible on the financial statements in a way fully-insured never does. -
Stop-loss renewals have their own volatility
Specific stop-loss pricing reflects your own recent high-claim experience. A seven-figure claim in year two can reshape your year-three stop-loss quote. This is manageable but must be modeled. -
Switching back is possible but not trivial
Exiting back to fully-insured involves a run-out period, tail liability for incurred-but-not-paid claims, and a fresh underwriting exercise with new carriers. Not a decision to revisit annually.
HOW THE TRANSITION WORKS
From fully-insured renewal to first claim payment - the 9-month plan.
Our Framework
Claims Data & readiness analysis
Before any quoting, we model your claims experience, demographics, workforce stability, cash flow profile, and risk tolerance. Not every group is a fit — we'll tell you either way. Deliverable: a written feasibility memo with projected fixed/variable cost ranges and a go/no-go recommendation.
TPA, PBM and network selection
TPA selection sets the operating DNA of the plan — claims processing quality, member experience, and reporting depth. PBM selection is often the single highest-leverage cost decision. We run competitive procurements, negotiate performance guarantees, and align contracts with your cost-containment strategy. Deliverable: vendor recommendations with side-by-side contract comparisons.
Stop-loss placement and structure
Specific deductible selection (typical range: $25K–$200K depending on group size and risk appetite), aggregate stop-loss attachment, contract basis (12/12, 15/12, paid-basis, incurred-basis), lasers, disclosure — each of these levers affects both cost and protection. We quote the market, negotiate terms, and model multiple scenarios against your risk tolerance. Deliverable: stop-loss program recommendation with scenario modeling.
Plan documents, SPD, and compliance setup
Plan document drafting, SPD preparation, 5500 filing readiness, HIPAA privacy framework, COBRA administration coordination, ACA reporting integration (1094/1095), Rx coverage disclosures, and ERISA fiduciary governance. The compliance layer is what separates a well-run self-funded plan from a liability waiting to happen. Deliverable: complete plan documents, compliance calendar, and fiduciary governance framework.
Employee communications, launch and year-one management
Open enrollment, ID card distribution, employee education, payroll integration, and then the part that matters: ongoing claims analysis and quarterly reviews. Self-funding's value comes from actively managing the data, not just writing checks. JSBG reviews claims trends, high-cost claimants, Rx patterns, and network utilization every quarter — and builds next year's renewal strategy off what we actually see, not what the market assumes.
IS YOUR GROUP A GOOD FIT?
Six questions that tell us quickly.
Not every group belongs in a self-funded plan. The right candidates share a consistent profile — stable workforce, leadership comfort with variability, and claims experience that actually supports the move. If your group checks most of these boxes, self-funding deserves a serious look.
01
Are you willing to hold the plan for 3+ years?
Self-funding compounds. Year one is setup and baseline; year two is pattern recognition; year three is where cost-containment ROI meaningfully accrues. Groups that bounce in and out don’t capture the structural advantage.
02
Do you have 100+ enrolled employees?
Below ~100, claim data credibility gets thin and fixed costs weigh heavier. Between 100–250, self-funding works with disciplined stop-loss structure. Above 250, self-funding becomes the economically rational default for most groups.
03
Is your workforce relatively stable year-over-year?
High turnover makes claims experience harder to underwrite and increases administrative friction. Stable tenure creates credible data and lets wellness/navigation investments pay back over multi-year horizons.
04
Are you recent fully-insured renewals running 8+%?
If your fully-insured renewals are consistently high despite what feels like a healthy, low-claim workforce, you’re almost certainly subsidizing the carrier’s broader book. That subsidy is recoverable — it just requires seeing your own data.
05
Do you have leadership engagement on benefit strategy?
Self-funding rewards active management — quarterly claims review, cost-containment decisions, PBM renegotiation. It rewards CFOs and HR leaders who want to run their plan, not just administer a contract.
06
Does your finance team handle variable cash flow comfortably?
Self-funding replaces a fixed monthly premium with a fixed-plus-variable cost profile. If your CFO or finance team prefers strict cash predictability above all else, level-funded may be a better stepping stone than full self-funding.
- Readiness Flags
Strong Indicators you're ready for self-funding
When we see three or more of these profile markers together, self-funding moves from “worth exploring” to “clearly indicated.” These are the signals that usually lead to a successful transition.
- Workforce of 100+ enrolled with stable tenure and manageable turnover
- Consistent fully-insured renewal pain above the market average despite favorable demographics
- CFO or owner-operator engagement in benefit strategy, not just HR
- Existing investment in wellness, navigation, or cost-containment that isn't paying back under fully-insured
- 3+ years of claims data available for underwriting (or willingness to shadow-collect)
- Multi-year commitment horizon — not looking to revisit the structure every renewal
HOW JSBG SUPPORTS YOU
We don't sell plans. We build and run them.
Self-funding is an operating model, not a product. The work doesn’t stop at placement — it starts there. Here’s what JSBG actually does for self-insured clients across the full plan year.
Feasibilty & Financial Modeling
Pre-transition claims modeling, projected fixed/variable cost ranges, stop-loss scenario analysis, and a written go/no-go recommendation. If self-funding isn't right for your group, we'll say so — and we'll show you the math.
TPA & PBM Procurement
Competitive RFPs, contract negotiation, performance guarantee structuring, and side-by-side comparison of claims processing quality, Rx rebate structures, reporting depth, and member experience.
Stop Loss Structuring
Specific and aggregate stop-loss placement, contract basis optimization, laser negotiation, disclosure review, and annual remarket. Stop-loss is where self-funded plans live or die — we treat it that way.
Plan Documents & ERISA Compliance
Plan document drafting, SPD preparation, 5500 filing coordination, HIPAA privacy framework, fiduciary governance setup, ACA 1094/1095 integration, and ongoing compliance calendar management.
Cost Containment Stratergy
Pharmacy carve-outs, direct primary care partnerships, centers of excellence, navigation services, reference-based pricing evaluation — we help employers identify which levers fit your group and implement them.
Quarterly Claims Review
The ongoing work that makes self-funding worth it. Claims trend analysis, high-cost claimant review, Rx pattern tracking, network utilization, renewal preparation 120 days out — not 30 days before.
ERISA
Federal Preemption
Self-funded plans operate under federal ERISA.
One of the most important structural advantages of self-funding is that your plan is governed by the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), which preempts most state-level benefit mandates, premium taxes, and rate-review requirements that apply to fully-insured plans. For multi-state employers, this means consistent plan design across jurisdictions rather than a patchwork of state-specific variations.
That preemption doesn’t eliminate compliance work — it shifts it to the federal layer. Self-funded plans still must meet ERISA fiduciary standards, file Form 5500 annually (for large plans), comply with ACA employer mandate and reporting, administer COBRA, and maintain HIPAA privacy protections. JSBG manages the full federal compliance stack for our self-insured clients.
ERISA
FORM 500
ACA 1094/1095
COBRA
HIPAA
SPD/SMM
PCORI
RX TRASNSPARCY
Frequently Asked Questions
Self-Insured Plans · FAQs
In a self-funded plan, the employer assumes direct financial responsibility for paying employee health claims rather than paying fixed premiums to an insurance carrier. The employer funds claims as they occur, typically through a dedicated claims account, and purchases stop-loss insurance to cap exposure on large individual claims and in aggregate. A third-party administrator (TPA) or carrier handles claims processing and network access. The employer keeps any surplus when claims run below projections — unlike a fully-insured plan where the carrier keeps that difference.
Self-funding has traditionally been associated with large employers (500+), but the market has evolved significantly. Many employers with 100 or more employees are viable self-funding candidates, and level-funded plans — a structured variation of self-funding — can work for groups as small as 25–50 lives. The right threshold depends on claims history, workforce demographics, risk tolerance, and cash flow capacity. We run a readiness analysis for every employer we evaluate — there’s no one-size answer.
Stop-loss insurance protects a self-funded employer from catastrophic claims exposure. Specific stop-loss covers individual claims above a set threshold — for example, once a single employee’s claims exceed $75,000 in a plan year, the stop-loss carrier pays the excess. Aggregate stop-loss caps the employer’s total claims liability across the entire group, typically set at 125% of expected claims. Technically stop-loss is not legally required, but virtually every self-funded employer below a certain size purchases both layers. Running self-funded without stop-loss is a meaningful financial risk most employers aren’t positioned to take.
A third-party administrator (TPA) handles the day-to-day administration of your self-funded plan — claims processing, provider network access, utilization management, member services, and regulatory filings. Most self-funded employers use either a standalone TPA or a carrier acting in an ASO (administrative services only) capacity. The TPA does not bear insurance risk; they process and adjudicate claims on your behalf. Choosing the right TPA is one of the most consequential decisions in a self-funding transition — network quality, reporting capabilities, and service levels vary significantly across the market.
The primary advantages are cost transparency, plan flexibility, cash flow, and claims data ownership. Self-funded employers see every dollar of claims spend and what’s driving it — fully-insured employers typically receive only summary data. Self-funded plans are exempt from state insurance mandates and premium taxes, which can meaningfully reduce cost. Plan design is fully customizable — benefit levels, networks, formularies, and wellness incentives can all be tailored to your workforce. And when claims run favorably, the employer keeps the difference rather than the carrier.
The primary risk is claims volatility — in a bad claims year, costs can exceed projections even with stop-loss in place, since stop-loss deductibles and corridors mean the employer still bears a defined layer of risk. Cash flow planning is more complex than writing a fixed premium check each month. ERISA compliance, plan document obligations, and nondiscrimination rules require ongoing attention. Self-funding also places greater administrative responsibility on the employer and their broker. These risks are manageable with proper stop-loss structuring, a capable TPA, and an experienced advisor — but they’re real and worth understanding before transitioning.
Generally no — self-funded ERISA plans are exempt from state insurance regulation, including state benefit mandates and premium taxes. This is one of the structural cost advantages of self-funding, particularly in states with broad mandated benefit requirements. The plan is governed by ERISA at the federal level rather than state insurance law. There are exceptions — certain state laws apply to self-funded plans (some state surprise billing protections, mental health parity requirements, and reporting obligations), and non-ERISA plans (government employers, church plans) operate under different rules. We review the applicable regulatory landscape as part of every self-funding evaluation.
Level-funded is a structured form of self-funding designed for smaller employers. In a level-funded plan, the employer pays a fixed monthly amount — covering expected claims, stop-loss premiums, and administrative fees — which eliminates the cash flow variability of traditional self-funding. At year end, if claims came in below the funded amount, the employer receives a refund of the surplus. Level-funded plans offer most of the data transparency and savings potential of self-funding with the payment predictability of a fully-insured plan. They’re generally appropriate for groups of 10–200 lives where traditional self-funding may carry too much volatility.
Most transitions happen at the annual plan renewal date and take 90 to 120 days from initial analysis through implementation. The timeline includes readiness assessment, stop-loss marketing and carrier selection, TPA selection, plan document drafting, network contracting confirmation, open enrollment, and employee communication. Rushing the transition — particularly the stop-loss and TPA selection — is a common mistake that leads to poor outcomes. We build a transition timeline at the start of every engagement and manage the process from first analysis through go-live.
NEXT STEP - READINESS REVIEW
Is self-funding right for your workforce? Let's find out.
A focused review of your current plan, claims experience, workforce profile, and cash flow tolerance — with a written feasibility recommendation. No sales pitch, no pressure. If self-funding is the right move, we’ll tell you how to get there. If it’s not, we’ll tell you what is.