Tokio Marine Report Looks at Stop Loss Claims

The latest from Tokio Marine;

Tokio Marine HCC – A&H Group, a member of the Tokio Marine HCC group of companies based in Houston, Texas, has released its 2025 Annual Market Report, revealing the challenges facing US businesses in offering competitive and affordable healthcare benefits, in an environment of increasingly frequent and severe stop loss claims.

The report, which looks at TMHCC’s claims and loss ratio data, reveals the threshold that constitutes a “large claim” in medical stop loss has evolved, as what was once considered a catastrophic and rare claim has now become commonplace. This result is shown by the frequency of stop loss claims above $2 million, which are up 1,251% from their levels before the full effect of the Affordable Care Act in January 2014, which removed the cap on health benefit payments.

The percentage point increase in frequency over the years is significant at all TMHCC’s large claim thresholds, each signifying exponential growth in claims per insured. In fact, the report found that the frequency of large claims was up this past year across four key stop loss reimbursement thresholds: $200K (46 points), $500K (75 points), $1M (112 points) as well as $2M (247 points).

Other key takeaways from the report include:

  • The top four most frequent types of stop loss claims have remained consistent since 2021, led by neoplasms/cancers, cardiovascular diseases, musculoskeletal/connective tissue and then digestive diseases.
  • The top two categories of stop loss claims, neoplasms/cancers and cardiovascular diseases, make up over 48% of total costs in 2024, and have increased over the years from 44% in 2021.
  • The report also reveals that nervous system diseases, endocrine/metabolic diseases and infectious/parasitic diseases are emerging diagnoses in types of stop loss claims.

Commenting on the report’s findings, Jay Ritchie, President & CEO of Tokio Marine HCC – A&H Group, said: “As one of the largest carriers in the Stop Loss market, we found 2024 to be a year of significant change. The rising frequency of claims, particularly as hospitals seek to recover financially from the pandemic, have been contributing to a hardening market. Insurers are responding with higher rates and stricter terms all while the industry adapts to new AI capabilities.

“As these trends are expected to continue throughout the remainder of 2025, TMHCC will continue demonstrating a strong underwriting discipline, selecting risks carefully and maintaining relationships across the market to deliver quality service while challenging the status quo and adapting to emerging technologies.”

About alastair walker 19486 Articles
20 years experience as a journalist and magazine editor. I'm your contact for press releases, events, news and commercial opportunities at Insurance-Edge.Net

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