Health insurance rates in Maine set to skyrocket
I was absentmindedly opening my mail over the weekend when a number on an innocuous-looking letter from my health insurance carrier stood out to me: 20 percent. That’s how much my health insurance rate could increase next year.
It was buried halfway down the page, with a note saying that “these adjustments reflect broader trends in healthcare spending, including rising medical service costs and general inflation.”
I was stunned by that number, and I’ve learned that I won’t be alone. Maine could have among the highest health insurance rate increases in the Northeast next year, according to Bob Carey, superintendent of the Maine Bureau of Insurance.
“They are eye-popping numbers,” Carey said.
Mainers who receive health coverage through the individual and small group employer market could see rate increases up to 32 percent next year, based on proposed rates submitted by insurers and currently under review by the state Bureau of Insurance. If approved, the average rate increase for individuals would be 26 percent and for the small group market it would be 19 percent.
Carey said he has worked in insurance for 25 years and doesn’t remember another time when health insurance carriers requested 30 percent increases.
“It’s a lose-your-sleep moment because I can only push so far,” he said. “When the claims come in, they need premium to pay the claims.”
The state publicly reports how much in premiums health insurers take in and pay out in claims, as well as underwriting gains or losses, which, according to a Bureau of Insurance explanation, are the amount of premium remaining after claims and administrative expenses are paid. Underwriting gains aren’t necessarily profit, the bureau notes, since they don’t reflect income from investments, capital gains and losses and federal income taxes.
In 2023, health insurance companies in Maine reported an underwriting loss of $1.27 million in the individual market. The large group market reported gains of $54.4 million and the small group market reported gains of $19 million.
It’s important to note that these proposed rate increases have not yet been approved and are still under review. However, the final rate likely won’t be dramatically different.
The Bureau of Insurance is in charge of reviewing and approving rate increases for the merged market, which covers roughly 116,000 Mainers. Insurers in mid-June submitted proposed increases based on what they are paying out in claims and expect in market trends. Carey’s office then reviewed the requested rates for whether they are excessive, unfairly discriminatory or inadequate. The insurers then resubmit with updated information in mid-July and the final rate is then typically finalized around mid-August.
(The “merged market” includes all individuals and all small employers in a single risk pool. Maine merged the two groups several years ago in an effort to keep costs down, according to Maine Public. Individuals on the market may use the exchange – CoverME.gov – to purchase coverage.)
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