Employer health benefit costs are on an upward trajectory that has moved healthcare from a routine HR expense to a strategic financial concern.
According to Mercer's National Survey of Employer-Sponsored Health Plans, average cost per employee rose 6.0% in 2025, and is projected to increase in 2026 — 6.7%, the highest in 15 years.
The CFO Perspective on Health survey notes that this rate is more than double in general inflation. The average health benefit cost per employee is expected to reach $18,500 this year.
CFO healthcare attitudes:
To offset costs, some CFOs expressed interest in a defined contribution approach, similar to a 401(k) where employers may contribute a defined amount annually. 45% favor a strong emphasis on plan design changes, such as higher deductibles or modified cost-sharing structures.
Strengthening Metrics: 53% of CFOs are not confident that long-term, investment-based cost-management strategies are saving money underscoring the need for stronger program-level metrics to validate ROI.
Join us May 26th to continue the conversation. During our webinar, “How Employers Are Truly Bending the Cost Curve,” hear from rewards leaders at Bob’s Discount Furniture, Prudential Financial and Marriott about what’s working, what’s not and how to manage healthcare spending.