Health Insurance Options for Small Business: What Actually Works
You want to offer health benefits to your team. You’ve looked it up once, seen acronyms like QSEHRA and ICHRA, and promptly closed the tab. You’re not alone.
Offering health insurance as a small business doesn’t have to be complicated — but you do need to understand what your options actually are before you can make a smart decision.
All Your Options, Side by Side
| Option | Team Size | Employer Controls Plan? | 2025 Cost Range |
| Group Health Insurance | 2–50 employees | Yes | 700/employee/month |
| QSEHRA | 1–49 employees | No (reimburses employee’s plan) | Up to $6,350/individual |
| ICHRA | Any size | No | No cap |
| PEO (pooled group plan) | Any size | Partially | Varies |
| Health Stipend | Any size | No | Set by employer |
Traditional Group Health Insurance
This is the classic route — your business picks a plan from an insurer, employees enroll, and you split the premium cost.
How it works: You choose from plans offered by private insurers or through the SHOP Marketplace on Healthcare.gov. You pay a portion of each employee’s premium (typically 50–80%) and they pay the rest via payroll deduction.
Minimum participation rules matter. Most insurers require 70% of eligible employees to enroll. If too many employees waive coverage (because they’re on a spouse’s plan, for example), you may not meet the threshold.
Pros: Familiar structure, one plan for the whole team, potential tax credit for businesses with fewer than 25 employees.
Cons: Administrative burden, high upfront costs, less flexibility for employees.
QSEHRA — The Small Business Reimbursement Model
The Qualified Small Employer Health Reimbursement Arrangement is designed for businesses with fewer than 50 employees that don’t offer a group plan.
Instead of buying a group plan, you set a monthly allowance. Employees buy their own individual health insurance and submit receipts for reimbursement — tax-free for both parties.
2025 contribution limits:
- Individual: up to 529/month)
- Family: up to 1,066/month)
This model gives employees flexibility to choose their own plan while keeping your costs predictable. The downside is the contribution caps — they may not cover a full premium for employees in expensive markets.
ICHRA — More Flexible, No Limits
The Individual Coverage HRA has no contribution limits and no employer size restrictions. You set whatever monthly allowance you want, employees use it toward their own individual or family health plan.
You can also set different allowance amounts for different classes of employees (full-time vs. part-time, salaried vs. hourly) — something you can’t do with a QSEHRA.
If you’re a growing business and want maximum flexibility without the cost and complexity of a group plan, ICHRA is worth serious consideration.
PEO — Borrow a Bigger Company’s Buying Power
A Professional Employer Organization co-employs your staff, which lets your small team access the same large-group insurance rates that a 500-person company would get.
The savings can be real — sometimes 20–30% below what you’d pay for a small-group plan directly. The trade-off is giving up some HR control and paying PEO fees (typically 2–12% of payroll or a per-employee monthly fee).
Companies like Justworks, TriNet, and Rippling offer PEO services built around this model.
Health Stipends — The Simplest Option
A health stipend is simply extra compensation earmarked for health insurance. You add a set amount to each employee’s paycheck; they use it however they want, including buying their own health coverage.
The catch: Stipends are taxable income, unlike HRA reimbursements. That means employees pay income and payroll taxes on the amount, and so do you (employer payroll taxes).
It’s administratively simple but financially less efficient than a formal HRA.
How to Choose Based on Your Situation
| If you… | Consider… |
| Have 2–20 employees and want simplicity | QSEHRA or ICHRA |
| Have 10+ employees and want group rates | Group plan or PEO |
| Want zero admin and don’t mind tax impact | Health stipend |
| Are growing fast and want flexibility | ICHRA |
| Have under 25 employees and qualify for tax credit | SHOP Marketplace group plan |
The best move is usually to start with ICHRA or QSEHRA if you’re small, then graduate to a group plan or PEO as your team scales. Either way, talking to a licensed health benefits broker costs nothing and can save you hours of research.




