Majority of working Americans select same health plan from prior year during benefits open enrollment, Voya survey finds
New Voya research details employee decision-making when it comes to workplace benefits enrollment, leaving opportunity for greater employer engagement
Heading into open enrollment season, Voya’s research sought to further understand how employees are engaging with their benefits and the decision-making involved in their annual enrollment selection. While the research shows that inertia plays a role for employees in making benefits changes, having the tendency to select the benefits they enrolled in previously, Voya’s data also showed nearly half (49%) of benefits-eligible employed Americans spend less than 20 minutes reviewing information related to their workplace benefits during their employer’s open enrollment period.2 The good news is 79% of employees “strongly agree” or “agree” they will spend more time reviewing their employee benefits options and coverage than they did during the last enrollment period.1
“The workplace annual enrollment period is the one time of year employees can review and engage with their employer’s holistic benefits package, which should not be taken lightly,” said
“High Deductible” naming could create decision-making bias
When it comes to overall health plan selection, two of the most common plans employers offer are the
“It’s clear that employees’ decisions can be driven by underlying, non-financial factors like inherent biases against HDHPs, their own inertia around decision-making and an aversion to high deductibles,” added Black. “As employees make several quick decisions during annual enrollment, further education and guidance around the benefits and solutions offered through the workplace is critical. Helping employees overcome these obstacles can enable them to make the best decisions and choices for them and their family — and potentially help create improved financial outcomes for employees and employers alike.”
Voya’s research also uncovered only 3% of working Americans understand the full benefits of an HSA, which is only slightly higher among HSA owners at 4%.1 This data underscores the notion that employees may be lacking an ability to build strategies to increase health care savings, cover medical and living expenses in retirement, or to use their account as an investment vehicle once the account balance reaches a certain threshold. Specifically, less than half of respondents were aware HSAs can be used to:
- Pay for health care expenses in retirement (47%);
- Provide tax advantages (47%);
- Roll money over from year to year (43%); and
- Be used as an investment vehicle (29%).1
As an industry leader focused on the delivery of benefits, savings and investment solutions to and through the workplace, Voya is committed to delivering on its mission to make a secure financial future possible for all — one person, one family, one institution at a time.
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Voya Financial Consumer Insights & Research survey conducted
Sept. 27 –Oct. 7, 2024 , among 345 adults aged 18+ Americans, working either full time or part time, who have primary or shared household responsibility for making financial and health/medical plan decisions, are benefit eligible for employer-sponsored retirement and health plans, and currently enrolled. -
Voya Financial Consumer Insights & Research survey conducted
Sept. 25-27, 2024 , among 2,201 Americans aged 18+, featuring 513 benefits-eligible working Americans.
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