A health insurance broker should help a small business lower costs and match employees with solid coverage. Yet many brokers earn a percentage of every premium dollar you pay, meaning higher rates lift their income. When commissions tie broker compensation to premium size, advice can tilt toward fully insured plans that lock you into rising costs instead of leaner options such as small business health plans. That commission bias often goes unnoticed until renewal season, when you face yet another rate hike with no alternative proposals on the table.
By asking for a written breakdown of broker compensation and demanding side-by-side comparisons with lower-cost models, you shift the conversation from what benefits the broker to what truly benefits your business and employees.
A health insurance broker’s commission is typically a fixed percentage of every premium dollar you pay. When your premiums rise 8 – 12% at renewal, the broker’s annual income rises in lockstep, without any extra work on their part. That incentive nudges brokers toward fully insured plans with the biggest premiums, even if leaner options would meet your employees’ needs at far lower cost.
Over time, commission-driven renewals turn a predictable business expense into a compound drain on cash flow: higher premiums squeeze wage growth and restrict funds for hiring or equipment. Because the broker controls plan proposals, you may never see lower-commission alternatives, such as small business health plans
In short, the commission structure can quietly shift your benefits strategy from cost containment to commission preservation, unless you ask pointed questions and demand transparent compensation details.
Health insurance brokers earn most of their income from the plans they recommend. Because compensation is tied to premium size, a broker can make far more on a rich, fully insured policy than on lower-cost alternatives. Understanding how those commissions are structured helps explain why certain plans often dominate proposals, even when they cost your business more.
| Plan Type | Common Commission Model | Typical Broker Earnings per Family* |
| Fully insured group plans | 4 – 7 % of total premium (plus renewal bonuses on volume) | $1023-$1,790 per employee |
| Level-funded Plans | 3-7% of premium or flat per-employee fee. Premiums are generally lower* | $240 – $1,432 per employee |
| PEO health insurance | Paid based on a percentage of admin, employees enrolled in medical, or employees enrolled in the PEO | $300 – $750 per employee |
| Taft-Hartley plan | No commission, 1-3% of premium*, flat per-employee fee, or consulting model | $0, if not allowed; $180 - $720 per employee |
* Commissions based on the 2024 average family premium of $25,572/year. Level-funded rates are assumed to be 20% cheaper - $20,458/year. Taft-Hartley premium assumed to be $19,200/year.
A fully insured plan is the simplest product for a broker to manage and the most lucrative to sell:
The net result: unless you ask pointed questions or engage an advisor paid on a fee-for-service basis, you may never see the lower-commission plans that could shrink your total spend and give employees greater flexibility.
A health insurance broker’s pay structure can push your premiums higher than necessary. When compensation rises with every dollar you send to the carrier, the incentive is clear: recommend plans that keep rates and commissions upward. Understanding these incentives helps you spot advice that favors the broker’s income over your balance sheet.
Traditional brokers earn the highest commissions on fully insured plans, so they rarely highlight funding models that reduce premiums and, therefore, their own compensation. Three proven alternatives: PEO health insurance, level-funded plans, and a Taft-Hartley plan offer lower broker compensation but far better cost control for small employers.
A PEO health insurance arrangement pools many small businesses into one large group, giving you access to big-company rates and broad national networks. Brokers are usually paid a flat referral fee rather than a percentage, so your premium savings flow back to the business. Employers also get bundled HR, payroll, and compliance support through small business health plans that simplify administration and reduce overhead.
PEO4YOU offers coverage options that give small businesses predictable monthly payments while reducing unnecessary broker commissions. Employers gain access to claims data, can adjust benefits mid-year, and may recoup unused dollars while maintaining stability and cost control through small business health plans. For more personalized guidance, contact us to explore the best fit for your team.
PEO4YOU connects small businesses with large group health coverage options that deliver rate stability and cost control without the high broker commissions. By pooling many employers together, these plans spread risk and keep benefits consistent, an advantage for industries with mobile or seasonal workforces. Learn more about nationwide options through nationwide coverage or contact us for tailored guidance.
Choosing any of these alternatives aligns your health plan costs with actual employee needs rather than broker commission formulas, letting you protect cash flow while improving coverage.
Small-business owners often hesitate to challenge a trusted advisor. Yet commission-driven incentives can quietly raise costs. Addressing two frequent objections helps you move the conversation from loyalty to clear financial logic.
Trust and verification are not opposites. A reputable health insurance broker should welcome transparency. Ask for a written breakdown of their compensation on your plan and on lower-premium options like PEO health insurance or a level-funded contract. If the broker’s income drops sharply when premiums fall, you have objective reason to seek a second opinion, just as you would with any other vendor whose fees rise when your expenses rise.
Complexity is often overstated. A reputable PEO bundles HR, payroll, and compliance with large-group health rates, managing the administration for you and, consequently, increasing simplicity. Taft-Hartley trusts use pooled reserves and professional trustees to stabilize costs year after year. Both models are regulated, ACA-compliant, and widely used by thousands of employers. What feels “risky” is often just unfamiliar, and unfamiliarity benefits a commission-based broker who profits from keeping your plan exactly where it is.
Brokers who earn a percentage of premiums can unintentionally steer you toward higher-cost plans. Protect your bottom line by making compensation transparent and by knowing when to bring in an impartial advisor.
You don’t have to accept plans that serve a commission schedule better than they serve your balance sheet. Many small businesses stay trapped in fully insured coverage because brokers push plans that increase their own earnings. With PEO4YOU, you can access affordable group coverage that pools your business with others nationwide, lowering costs while expanding your choice of doctors and hospitals.
Unlike traditional brokered plans, small business health plans through PEO4YOU return the savings to your company instead of to a commission structure. You also get the added value of integrated HR, payroll, and compliance support that keeps operations streamlined.Schedule your free consultation to see if hidden broker commissions are inflating your health insurance costs and explore smarter, lower-cost coverage options for your business.
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