The analysis, published March 27, broke down how much the average household spends on health, auto and home insurance.
Here’s how the states stacked up on annual household spending on health insurance premiums:
- New Jersey: $2,762
- New Hampshire: $2,731
- Maryland: $2,699
- Kansas: $2,585
- Virginia: $2,580
- Minnesota: $2,541
- North Dakota: $2,504
- Massachusetts: $2,488
- Connecticut: $2,474
- Wisconsin: $2,466
- Vermont: $2,466
- Illinois: $2,447
- Maine: $2,422
- Idaho: $2,341
- Nebraska: $2,323
- Indiana: $2,294
- Utah: $2,265
- Colorado: $2,260
- South Dakota: $2,229
- Montana: $2,204
- North Carolina: $2,187
- Iowa: $2,147
- Rhode Island: $2,146
- Wyoming: $2,143
- Ohio: $2,140
- Missouri: $2,113
- Georgia: $2,106
- Pennsylvania: $2,081
- Arkansas: $1,983
- Arizona: $1,979
- Texas: $1,974
- Nevada: $1,930
- Michigan: $1,929
- Delaware: $1,922
- New York: $1,921
- Oklahoma: $1,918
- Washington: $1,898
- South Carolina: $1,892
- Louisiana: $1,872
- Oregon: $1,871
- Alabama: $1,856
- Florida: $1,836
- California: $1,831
- Kentucky: $1,806
- Hawaii: $1,737
- Alaska: $1,735
- Tennessee: $1,710
- Mississippi: $1,705
- West Virginia: $1,612
- New Mexico: $1,459
At the Becker's 5th Annual Fall Payer Issues Roundtable, taking place November 17–19 in Chicago, payer executives and healthcare leaders will come together to discuss value-based care, regulatory changes, cost management strategies and innovations shaping the future of payer-provider collaboration. Apply for complimentary registration now.
