What the 2017 Trump Healthcare Executive Order Meant for Employers

Updated Note: This article discusses the 2017 healthcare executive order and its impact on employer benefits planning. While some rules and market conditions have changed since then, the topic remains useful for understanding how federal healthcare policy can affect plan options, employee communication, and long-term benefits strategy.

In 2017, President Trump’s healthcare executive order did not repeal the Affordable Care Act, but it created important questions for employers about plan options, ACA compliance, employee communication, association health plans, short-term coverage, and health reimbursement arrangements.

For employers, the announcement created uncertainty. Businesses were already managing rising healthcare costs, annual renewals, employee expectations, and compliance responsibilities. Any major healthcare policy change had the potential to affect how employers reviewed coverage options and communicated benefits to their workforce.

For today’s employers, the main takeaway is simple. Healthcare policy changes should be reviewed through the lens of cost, compliance, employee communication, and long-term benefits strategy.

Why This Still Matters for Employers

Even though the executive order was signed in 2017, it still offers an important benefits planning lesson. Federal rules, agency guidance, court decisions, carrier pricing, and market conditions can all affect how companies evaluate health coverage.

Small and midsize employers were especially interested in whether new rules could create lower-cost options. Many businesses wanted more flexibility, especially if they were facing premium increases or limited carrier choices.

At the same time, lower-cost options are not always better options. Employers need to review covered services, provider networks, exclusions, employee eligibility, compliance responsibilities, and long-term plan stability before making changes.

1. Cost-Sharing Reduction Payments and Premium Pressure

Cost-sharing reductions, often called CSRs, were designed to lower out-of-pocket costs for eligible lower-income individuals enrolled in certain marketplace plans. These reductions helped reduce expenses such as deductibles, copays, and coinsurance for qualifying enrollees.

In 2017, the federal government stopped reimbursing insurers for CSR payments. Insurers were still required to provide the reductions to eligible members, so many carriers adjusted premiums to make up for the lost reimbursement.

For employers, the effect depended on the type of coverage they offered. Large group plans were not affected in the same way as individual marketplace plans. However, changes in the individual market still mattered because they influenced employee questions, coverage comparisons, and broader healthcare pricing discussions.

Employers also needed to explain the difference between marketplace coverage and employer-sponsored coverage. This was especially important during open enrollment, when employees may have compared plan costs, subsidies, networks, and out-of-pocket expenses.

2. Association Health Plans and Small Business Coverage Options

One of the main goals of the executive order was to expand access to association health plans, often called AHPs. These plans allow certain employers or groups to join together to purchase coverage.

The appeal was clear. Smaller businesses often have less bargaining power than larger employers. By participating in an association health plan, some employers hoped they could access more plan options or lower premiums.

However, employers needed to look beyond the advertised cost. A cheaper plan may come with narrower coverage, different benefit requirements, fewer consumer protections, or more limited provider access.

Before considering an association health plan, employers should review plan documents, carrier stability, network access, prescription coverage, eligibility rules, and compliance responsibilities.

3. Short-Term Limited-Duration Insurance

The executive order also directed federal agencies to consider expanding short-term limited-duration insurance. These plans were generally designed to provide temporary coverage for people between other forms of insurance.

Short-term plans may offer lower monthly premiums, but they are not the same as comprehensive employer-sponsored health coverage. Depending on the plan and the rules in effect, short-term policies may limit benefits, exclude pre-existing conditions, or provide less protection than ACA-compliant coverage.

For employers, this created an employee education issue. Workers comparing individual options may focus mainly on premium costs without understanding the limits of the coverage.

A lower premium can be appealing, but the real value of a health plan depends on what it covers when an employee actually needs care.

4. Health Reimbursement Arrangements

The order also asked federal agencies to review rules related to health reimbursement arrangements, or HRAs. HRAs are account-based arrangements employers can use to reimburse employees for eligible medical care expenses.

For employers, HRAs can be useful because they provide a structured way to help employees manage healthcare costs. They may also give employers more control over contribution levels while still supporting workers with eligible medical expenses.

However, HRAs are compliance-sensitive. Employers need to understand how an HRA interacts with group health coverage, what expenses can be reimbursed, what notices may be required, and whether the arrangement satisfies current federal rules.

An HRA should be designed as part of a broader benefits strategy that considers plan costs, employee needs, documentation, and compliance.

5. Contraceptive Coverage Rules and Employer Responsibilities

The Trump administration also changed federal rules related to contraceptive coverage by expanding the types of employers and organizations that could qualify for exemptions based on religious or moral objections.

For employers, this issue required careful handling. It was not only a benefits design question. It also involved compliance, employee communication, workplace expectations, and potential employee relations concerns.

Employers considering any change to contraceptive coverage should review the rules carefully before making plan changes. They should also consider how a change could affect employees who relied on the benefit.

Because this area can involve legal, regulatory, and employee relations concerns, employers should speak with qualified benefits and legal advisors before changing contraceptive coverage.

Employer Takeaways

Employers should not assume every healthcare policy change directly affects their group plan. However, they should be ready to explain how employer-sponsored coverage differs from marketplace coverage, especially when employees have questions about cost, subsidies, and plan value.

Employers should also avoid comparing plans based on premium alone. Plan design, covered services, network access, employee eligibility, exclusions, compliance obligations, and employee experience all matter.

Before changing a benefits strategy, employers should review current plan documents, renewal pricing, carrier guidance, employee needs, and compliance obligations. Even a cost-saving change can create confusion if employees do not understand what is covered, what is changing, and where to go for help.

Review Your Benefits Strategy With JS Benefits Group

Healthcare rules can change quickly, but employers still need practical, compliant benefits decisions. JS Benefits Group helps businesses compare plan options, review renewal strategy, understand employee communication needs, and make informed decisions about group health coverage.

Whether your business is reviewing health plan renewals, considering new coverage options, or trying to answer employee benefits questions, our team can help you move forward with more clarity. The right benefits strategy should support your budget, your compliance responsibilities, and your employees.

For more information, call JS Benefits Group at (877) 355-6070 or email info@jsbenefitsgroup.com.

Important Note

This article is for general informational purposes only and should not be treated as legal, tax, or compliance advice. Employers should consult qualified benefits, legal, or compliance professionals before making changes to their health plan or employee benefits program.

FAQ

Did the 2017 executive order repeal Obamacare?

No. The executive order did not repeal the Affordable Care Act. It directed federal agencies to consider rule changes related to association health plans, short-term limited-duration insurance, and health reimbursement arrangements.

Were employer-sponsored health plans directly affected?

Some employer-sponsored plans were not directly affected by every change. However, employers still needed to monitor the broader market because policy changes can influence premiums, employee questions, coverage comparisons, and renewal strategy.

Are association health plans always better for small businesses?

No. Association health plans may offer lower premiums in some situations, but employers still need to review coverage levels, networks, exclusions, compliance requirements, and employee needs before choosing a plan.

Is this executive order still relevant for employers today?

Yes, but mostly as a benefits planning lesson. The 2017 order shows how federal healthcare policy can affect plan options, employee questions, and market conditions. Employers should always review healthcare policy changes with a benefits advisor before changing coverage.