Annual cost structure
The calculator estimates net annual cost as employee premium plus expected out-of-pocket costs, then subtracts tax savings and employer account funding. Using the built‑in example utilization (4 primary care visits, 2 specialist visits, 12 prescription fills, and $2,500 of other covered expenses with $400 preventive), the model produces a comparable, apples‑to‑apples annual view for both options.
Premium share and employer support
Premiums are converted to yearly amounts and adjusted for employer contributions. In the example, Plan A uses a $650 monthly premium with 60% employer support, while Plan B uses $520 with 55% support. The employee premium portion becomes the largest fixed cost driver for many households, so small percentage changes can materially shift annual totals.
Deductible, coinsurance, and maximum exposure
For non‑preventive covered expenses, the tool applies the deductible first, then coinsurance to the remaining eligible amount, and finally caps spending at the out‑of‑pocket maximum. Example terms: Plan A deductible $1,500, coinsurance 20%, max $6,500; Plan B deductible $2,500, coinsurance 15%, max $7,000. Copays for visits and prescriptions are added and assumed to count toward the cap.
Tax-advantaged contributions and credits
Pretax contributions reduce net cost through estimated tax savings. With a 20% marginal rate, a $1,500 pretax contribution yields about $300 in tax savings, while $2,000 yields about $400. Employer account funding is treated as a direct offset (example: $500 vs $800). If you also receive annual premium credits or wellness incentives, enter them to reduce employee premium totals.
Interpreting savings and break-even levels
The results section highlights which plan is cheaper and by how much per year, then estimates a break‑even level of other covered expenses where the choice flips. If Plan B shows lower net cost, it typically means premium savings and tax advantages outweigh its higher deductible. Use the break‑even figure to test realistic scenarios for a low‑use year, a typical year, and a high‑use year before enrollment. Recheck inputs whenever provider networks, drug tiers, or expected procedures change during the year.