Designing HIP Plans
How we recommend building Hospital Indemnity Plans.
The Basic Structure of Hospital Indemnity Plans
Hospital indemnity plans are simple by design. You pay a monthly premium. If you go to the hospital, the plan pays you cash.
There are no networks to worry about. No deductibles or coinsurance calculations. Just straightforward daily benefits.
How Benefits Are Structured
Daily Benefit Amounts
Most plans let you choose your daily benefit level. Common options include $100, $200, $300, or $500 per day.
Higher daily benefits cost more in monthly premiums. Choose an amount that would meaningfully help with your expenses.
Maximum Benefit Periods
Plans limit how long they'll pay benefits. Typical options:
- 365 days per year: Most common for hospital stays
- 730 days lifetime: Maximum total days across all stays
- 100 days per year: For skilled nursing facility coverage
| Benefit Type | Daily Amount | Maximum Days | Annual Maximum |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hospital Room | $300 | 365 | $109,500 |
| ICU | $600 | 30 | $18,000 |
| Skilled Nursing | $150 | 100 | $15,000 |
Different Types of Hospital Coverage
Inpatient Hospital Benefits
This is the core benefit. You receive payment for each day you're admitted to a hospital.
Coverage typically starts on the first day of admission. Some plans have elimination periods (waiting days) before benefits begin.
Intensive Care Unit (ICU) Benefits
Many plans pay extra for ICU stays. ICU benefits are usually 2-3 times the regular hospital benefit.
Some plans pay ICU benefits in addition to regular hospital benefits. Others pay only the higher ICU amount.
Emergency Room Benefits
Some plans include one-time payments for emergency room visits that don't result in admission.
Typical ER benefits range from $100 to $500 per visit. Usually limited to a few visits per year.
Additional Benefits Often Included
Ambulance Coverage
Plans may pay a flat amount for ambulance transportation to the hospital.
Typical benefit: $200-$500 per ambulance trip, with annual limits.
Outpatient Surgery
Some plans pay benefits for same-day surgeries performed at hospitals or surgical centers.
Usually a percentage of the daily hospital benefit, like 25% or 50%.
Diagnostic Tests
Plans might include small benefits for expensive diagnostic procedures like MRIs or CT scans.
Typical payments: $100-$300 per test, with annual limits.
Eligibility and Underwriting
Age Limits
Most plans accept applicants from age 18 to 75 or 80. Some extend coverage to age 85.
Coverage usually continues for life once you're enrolled, even if you exceed the application age limit.
Health Questions
Many hospital indemnity plans use simplified underwriting. You answer basic health questions but don't need medical exams.
Common questions ask about recent hospitalizations, surgeries, or diagnoses of serious conditions.
Guaranteed Issue Options
Some plans accept everyone regardless of health status. These typically have:
- Lower maximum benefits
- Waiting periods for pre-existing conditions
- Higher premiums
Waiting Periods and Limitations
Effective Date
Coverage usually starts 30 days after your first premium payment. Emergency coverage for accidents may start immediately.
Pre-existing Condition Waiting Periods
Many plans won't cover hospital stays related to conditions you had before buying the policy.
Waiting periods typically range from 6 to 24 months. After this period, pre-existing conditions are covered.
What Counts as Pre-existing
Usually defined as conditions for which you:
- Received treatment or advice from a doctor
- Took prescription medication
- Had symptoms that would cause a reasonable person to seek care
Premium Structure and Increases
How Premiums Are Calculated
Hospital indemnity premiums depend on:
- Age: Older applicants pay more
- Benefit amount: Higher daily benefits cost more
- Gender: Women sometimes pay slightly more due to longer life expectancy
- Geographic location: Urban areas may cost more than rural
Rate Increase Policies
Most plans are guaranteed renewable but not guaranteed level premium. Companies can raise rates for entire groups of policyholders.
Rate increases typically require state insurance department approval and advance notice to policyholders.
Family Coverage Options
Individual vs Family Plans
Individual plans cover only the named insured. Family plans can cover spouse and dependent children.
Family coverage costs more but provides broader protection for household members.
Child Coverage
Children are often covered at reduced benefit levels, like 50% of the adult benefit.
Coverage for newborns typically starts automatically if the mother has family coverage.
Integration with Other Insurance
Hospital indemnity plans are designed to supplement, not replace, your primary health insurance.
Benefits are paid regardless of what Medicare, employer insurance, or other coverage pays.
You can have multiple hospital indemnity plans, though companies may limit total coverage amounts.
Common Exclusions
Hospital indemnity plans typically don't cover stays related to:
- Substance abuse treatment
- Mental health conditions (varies by state)
- Experimental treatments
- Care received outside the U.S.
- Injuries from high-risk activities (like skydiving)
Key insight: Hospital indemnity plans work best when designed to fill specific gaps in your existing coverage, not as primary insurance.
Choosing the Right Plan Design
Start by estimating your potential out-of-pocket costs for a hospital stay with your current insurance.
Choose a daily benefit that would meaningfully offset these costs without paying for more coverage than you need.
Consider your age, health status, and family history when deciding on benefit amounts and plan features.
Remember that simple plans with clear benefits are usually easier to understand and claim against than complex plans with many riders.