Utah Health Insurance Snapshot (2025)

Discover how Utah health insurance premiums vary by age and location, and why HRAs often outperform small-group plans.

Relative Cost of Coverage

At $474 per month, Utah’s average Bronze premium is the 8th highest among the fifty states—above New Hampshire (the least-expensive state with an average premium of $273) and below Vermont (the most-expensive state with an average premium of $854).

Because Utah’s average premiums are higher than the U.S. average and incomes are much higher than the U.S. median, the premium represents 5.6% of median household income—lower than the national average of 6.3%.

Avg Premium Premium / Household Income
Utah $474 5.6%
United States $425 6.3%

Variation Within the State

Within Utah, Bronze premiums for a 30-year-old range from about $432 to $646—almost a 1.5-to-1 swing. But those numbers matter most when weighted by where people actually live:

Utah’s Population Pct Below this Average Premium Counties
25% $456 Weber, Box Elder
50% $573 Uintah, Carbon
75% $599 Sevier, San Juan
  • One-quarter of Utah residents live in areas where the average 30-year-old Bronze plan is $456 or less, and three-quarters live where it’s $599 or less.
  • The lowest average Bronze premiums for 30-year-olds are typically found in counties such as Davis ($432), Salt Lake ($438), Summit ($441), often along the Wasatch Front.
  • Conversely, the highest average premiums are often seen in counties like Iron ($646), Washington ($646), Sanpete ($642), clustered in the southern and central regions.
  • In Salt Lake, the state’s most populous county, the average Bronze premium for a 30-year-old is $438.

Variation by Age

Age Average Bronze Average Silver Average Gold
21 $341 $423 $468
30 $474 $589 $650
40 $504 $626 $692
50 $725 $901 $995
60 $1,022 $1,270 $1,403

Average premiums for Bronze plans rise by approximately $15 per year from age 21 to 30. Through the 30s, this increases to about $3 per year. The pace quickens in the 40s, with an average annual increase of roughly $22, and then surges to approximately $30 per year for those in their 50s—putting rates past $1,000 a month by age 60. Silver and Gold plans follow a similar trajectory, consistently costing about 25% and 37% more than Bronze plans, respectively, at each age band.

The Role of Premium Tax Credits

Premium Tax Credits (PTCs) limit the share of household income that is spent on a marketplace plan.

They equal the difference between (a) the premium of the benchmark Silver plan for an employee’s age and county and (b) a sliding-scale contribution tied to household income. Because benchmark premiums rise with age, PTCs rise more or less in step; because the required contribution shrinks as income falls, credits grow even faster for lower-paid workers.

When a company offers affordable coverage—whether through a group plan, an ICHRA, or a QSEHRA—the employee forfeits the credit. If the employer’s benefit isn’t meaningfully higher than the federal subsidy it replaces, neither the business nor the worker comes out ahead. In practice, we’ve found that when most employees qualify for about $200 or more per month in PTCs, an employer-funded plan rarely delivers additional value.

For Utah, that $200-mark is reached at roughly $51,000 of wages for a 30-year-old and about $53,000 for a 40-year-old. If most of your team sits above those thresholds, consider skipping an affordable plan—or design an HRA that is affordable for higher-paid staff but intentionally unaffordable for lower-paid or older employees, letting each person keep whichever option (company benefit or federal credit) leaves them better off.

Why HRAs Usually Outperform Small-Group Insurance

For most small employers in Utah, reimbursing individual-market premiums through an ICHRA or QSEHRA offers clear advantages over buying a traditional group contract:

  • Lower structural cost – Individual carriers must meet an 80 % medical-loss ratio, publish rates, and pay lower commissions; small-group carriers face looser caps and higher commissions, which show up in premiums.
  • Employee choice and portability – Each worker selects the network, deductible, and metal tier that fits their situation and keeps the policy when changing jobs.
  • Budget control – Employers set a fixed allowance. Marketplace premiums move predictably, avoiding double-digit renewal shocks common in the group market.
  • Simpler compliance – HRAs eliminate participation minimums and most COBRA or Form 5500 obligations, and they are just easier to administer.

Run the Numbers for Your Team

Salusion makes it easy to estimate healthcare costs.

Simply enter an employee’s age, zip code, and annual salary into Salusion’s Cost-of-Insurance Calculator, and instantly see average premiums for Bronze, Silver, and Gold individual plans. The calculator also provides an estimated premium tax credit based on the entered household income, and will also tell you whether a proposed HRA allowance is considered affordable for an ICHRA and a QSEHRA.

Salusion’s Cost-of-Insurance Calculator

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