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Concentration in Health Insurance Markets


About two-thirds of Americans received health insurance through private plans in 2022. People may enroll in these private insurance plans through various markets, including:

  • The individual health insurance market, which offers coverage directly to individuals. The individual exchanges, a subset of the overall individual market, are marketplaces in each state operated by the state or federal government. You can also view overall individual market and individual exchange enrollment data by state.
  • The small-group health insurance market, which offers coverage through small employers.
  • The large-group health insurance market, which offers coverage through large employers.

In this report, we find that private health insurance markets overall were concentrated from 2011 through 2022; most people who enrolled in a private health insurance plan did so with one of a small number of insurance companies. However, the markets for individuals became slightly less concentrated from 2020 through 2022. This concentration in the health insurance market can lead to increases in insurance premiums, which can reduce patients' access to affordable health insurance.

This interactive map provides information on health insurance markets by year and market type. Select a market type (e.g., Small-Group Market) and year (e.g., 2011) to see country-wide data and the associated data table. You can also hover over a state to see more detailed information. Clicking on the play button or moving the slider under the map will show you how the data changes over time for a market type. You can also download the data used in this graphic.



Individual Market

Select a year to view its associated data table.


Legend
Largest three issuers hold less than 80% market share
Largest three issuers hold 80-100% market share. Darker blue indicates that this number is closer to 100%.

Source: GAO analysis of data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). | GAO-25-107194




  • Our analysis includes the 50 states and the District of Columbia.
  • Federal law defines a small employer as having an average of 1 to 50 employees during the preceding calendar year; however, states may apply this definition based on an average of 1 to 100 employees.
  • Small and large employers may offer fully insured group plans (by purchasing coverage from an issuer) or self-funded group plans (by setting aside funds to pay for employee health care). Most small employers purchase fully insured plans, while most large employers self-fund at least some of their employee health benefits. For the small-group and large-group markets, enrollment data are from fully insured plans only.
  • Where multiple issuers in a state shared a parent company, we aggregated the individual issuers to the parent company level. We calculated issuers' market share using covered life-years that issuers reported to Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, which measure the average number of lives insured, including dependents, on a pre-specified day of each month of the 12 months in the reporting year. Rather than a point-in-time measurement, this measure accounts for changes in enrollment that occur throughout the year. Market share refers to the ratio of the enrollment for each issuer in a state to the total enrollment in that state.
  • Covered life-years is one of several ways to measure health insurance enrollment, so it may differ from other measures of market size.
  • Names for some issuers have changed over time. For the purposes of this graphic, we have presented the issuer name associated with a given year.
  • We rounded market share values of less than 0.5 percent to zero.