Benefits renewal and open enrollment remain the most critical and complex periods in employee benefits planning. Rising healthcare costs, evolving plan designs, and increased employee expectations are pushing employers to rethink traditional approaches and explore smarter, more innovative strategies.
In Vita’s recent webinar, 5 Key Lessons from Open Enrollment, benefits experts Caroline Barkley and Erik Hansen shared key open enrollment trends and strategic insights to help HR teams strengthen renewal negotiations and plan a more effective employee benefits strategy in 2026.
• How data-driven negotiations improve open enrollment outcomes
• Managing outlier renewals and high-cost claims risk
• The evolution of consumer-driven healthcare and HDHP alternatives
• When alternative health plan funding makes sense for employers
• Post open enrollment best practices for compliance and communication
With the highest health benefit cost increases seen in over 15 years and national medical trends projected around 9%, renewal negotiations are becoming increasingly challenging. For HR leaders, this means traditional renewal approaches are no longer enough to meet cost containment goals.
Rather than relying solely on carrier-provided projections, HR leaders need to root their benefits renewal strategy in data to strengthen their approach.
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Before renewal, partner with your advisor to review claims projections, demographic risk, and benchmark data to support negotiations and identify potential outlier exposure.
An outlier renewal occurs when a health plan renewal includes a significant rate increase due to unusually high claims experience. A small percentage of employers are impacted each year, but outlier renewals can result in dramatic cost spikes. Understanding your outlier risk management plan early is critical to managing these situations effectively.
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While high-deductible health plans help control employer costs, data shows that the impact on employees has largely been confusion and deferred care. That shift has paved the way for the next generation of consumer-driven healthcare, which focuses on value-based decision-making rather than simply shifting costs to employees.
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As healthcare costs rise, more employers are evaluating alternatives to fully insured health plans, including self-funding, captives, level funding, ICHRAs, and PEO arrangements. The risk-reward spectrum of these options emphasizes that flexibility often comes with increased risk sensitivity.
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Errors discovered after OE can lead to compliance and payroll issues, employee frustration, and costly corrections. That’s why post-open enrollment auditing and communication is an essential part of the open enrollment process.
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To extend the value of your open enrollment strategy: