A practical guide for business leaders seeking to lower the cost of healthcare for employers and employees

For millions of Americans , healthcare coverage comes through their employer. For business leaders, that makes healthcare more than a benefit. It is a core operating responsibility, and often one of the largest investments they make in their workforce.

Responsible healthcare spending is about helping healthcare dollars support what people need most: access to quality care, clearer guidance, smoother and more personalized experiences and earlier support before health issues become more serious.

For employers, the practical question is simple: How can healthcare work better for employees and their families while lowering costs over time?

Responsible spending starts with making healthcare easier to use

In many industries, higher spending often brings a clearer experience or better performance. In healthcare, that relationship is less predictable. People can spend more and still face confusion about where to go, what is covered, how much care may cost or what step to take next.

That complexity matters. When healthcare is difficult to navigate, people may delay care, miss preventive services or end up in care settings that are not the best fit for their needs.

For employers, responsible spending requires attention to two connected priorities:

  1. Fair and predictable costs: ensuring services, medications and care are purchased at competitive, sustainable rates.
  2. Better support at the point of decision : helping people understand their benefits, options and next steps when they need care.

Either priority on its own is incomplete. Competitive pricing matters. So does helping employees and their families make informed decisions with confidence. Together, they create a practical path to improving care and lowering the cost of healthcare.

Negotiation matters, but lowering costs requires more

Employers and health plans are right to focus on negotiated rates, pharmacy costs and benefit design. These are important levers for maintaining sustainable healthcare coverage.

But the cost of healthcare is not determined by price alone. In many areas of the country, provider consolidation and limited competition can make pricing more difficult to influence. That is why leaders also need to look at the broader experience employees have as they navigate the healthcare system.

Can they find care when they need it? Are their options understandable? Are chronic conditions being supported consistently? Are care teams connected? Are benefits, claims and next steps clear?

The most effective healthcare strategies look beyond any single visit or procedure. They focus on the everyday decisions and experiences that shape health a person’s health outcomes, employee confidence, and total healthcare costs over time.

The quiet cost lever: where care happens

One of healthcare’s least intuitive realities is that the same service can vary significantly in cost depending on where it is delivered.

Hospital care is essential when people need hospital-level services. At the same time, many routine services may be available in physician offices, ambulatory surgery centers, virtual care settings or other clinically appropriate options that can be more convenient and lower cost.

Employees should not have to figure this out alone. Clear, trusted guidance can help them understand their options before they make a decision, so they can choose care that fits their clinical needs, personal circumstances and benefits.

Reducing friction before it becomes a bigger problem

Healthcare can be complicated. For employees and families managing work, caregiving and daily responsibilities, that complexity can become a barrier.

A person may not know whether a symptom requires urgent attention, where to find an in-network provider, whether a service is covered or what an expected cost may be. Without support, even routine decisions can become frustrating and time-consuming.

That is why care navigation has become one of the most important capabilities in healthcare. When people receive clear guidance early, they are more likely to access care in a timely way, follow through on recommended next steps and avoid confusion that can lead to delays or more complicated health situations.

Aligning networks and payment with better outcomes

Responsible healthcare spending also means building provider networks and payment models that support quality, coordination and better health - shifting healthcare towards outcomes over transactions.

When care teams are aligned around outcomes, it becomes easier for primary care physicians, specialists, behavioral health clinicians and pharmacy teams to work from a shared plan. That coordination can improve the experience for patients and help people stay on track with their care.

This includes the fundamentals that make a difference over time: annual checkups, regular follow-ups for chronic conditions, behavioral health support and medication guidance that helps people take prescriptions correctly and consistently.

The goal is a healthcare experience that feels more connected, more proactive and easier for people to use.

Better experience can help lower healthcare costs

Healthcare is one of the few major areas of household spending where people are often expected to make important decisions with limited information, fragmented tools and unfamiliar terminology.

That complexity has consequences.

When people receive guidance they trust and healthcare becomes easier to navigate, several positive things tend to happen:

  1. People can make more informed choices. They better understand their benefits, care options and expected costs.
  2. Follow-through improves. Preventive care, chronic condition management and medication adherence become easier to maintain.
  3. Friction declines. Fewer unresolved questions, misdirected calls and administrative hurdles reduce frustration for employees, employers and the system.

Employees expect convenience, clarity and timely support in nearly every other part of their lives. Healthcare should be no different. Making healthcare easier to understand is not only a better experience - it is a practical part of lowering the cost of healthcare.

One example is virtual assistan t technology used by Elevance Health-affiliated health plans to help members find answers, understand benefits and take the next step with confidence. Members can ask questions such as, “Is my surgery covered?” or “How much will my surgery cost?” and receive personalized answers in plain language within seconds.

A practical test for lowering the cost of healthcare

Business leaders can assess their healthcare strategy by asking a few practical questions:

  • Are employees able to find care and support when they need it?
  • Is the healthcare experience understandable, responsive, reliable and easy to navigate?
  • Are people receiving guidance before confusion becomes a barrier?
  • Are provider networks and payment models aligned with quality and coordination?
  • Are preventive care and chronic condition support easy for employees to access?
  • Is the strategy sustainable for employees, families and the organization over time?

Negotiation, benefit design and network strategy remain essential. But increasingly, one of the most practical ways to lower the cost of healthcare is to help people navigate the system earlier and more effectively, so they can make informed decisions and access appropriate care with confidence.

Responsible healthcare spending is ultimately about making healthcare work better: improving access, supporting quality, simplifying the experience and lowering costs for employers, employees and families over time.