HealthJoy Blog

The Renewal Reckoning: How Brokers Can Win in a Volatile Market

Written by Justin Holland | October 7, 2025

This renewal season isn’t just another tough cycle—it’s a client retention crisis in the making. While national headlines forecast a modest 6-9% increase in health benefit costs, brokers on the ground are walking into client meetings with fully-insured group renewals quoting 15%, 20% or even higher. To make matters worse, these bombshells are arriving later than ever, compressing timelines and amplifying client anxiety.

This massive gap between the national averages and the painful reality for many employers has created the perfect storm for Broker of Record (BOR) changes. When a client sees a 9% trend in the news but gets a 19% increase from you, their first call isn't to the carrier—it's to your competitor. This isn’t about blaming the carriers; it’s about understanding the fundamental market drivers and positioning yourself as the indispensable advisor.

So, what's really happening?

The Root Cause: A Perfect Storm of Inflation and Utilization

The high renewals you're seeing aren't random. They’re the direct result of a perfect storm of underlying cost drivers that are reshaping the healthcare landscape. To survive, you must be able to explain the "why" behind the costs and present a proactive strategy to manage them.

  • The pharmacy inflation engine: It’s no secret that prescription drug spending is a major driver of renewals, and the culprits are well-known: specialty drugs and GLP-1s. What’s often overlooked, however, are the staggering numbers behind the trend. Specialty medications now account for more than 50% of total pharmacy spend for less than 2% of the population, representing multi-million-dollar claims. The explosion in demand for GLP-1s has added a massive, unplanned cost category for employers, with some experts projecting they'll add a full percentage point to medical trend this year alone.
  • The provider squeeze: Hospitals and provider systems are battling their own economic challenges, including inflation, supply chain disruptions and labor shortages. To stay afloat, they’re negotiating much higher reimbursement rates from carriers, and those increases are passed directly onto your clients’ premiums. This is a unit cost problem. Every MRI, office visit and procedure simply costs more than it did a year ago.
  • A surge in utilization: Post-pandemic, people are returning to care in a significant way. The most dramatic shift has been a 40% jump in behavioral health utilization. While this is a positive sign for stigma and well-being, it also introduces a major new cost category, often with high-cost, out-of-network claims.
  • The growing power of high-cost claimants: The 80/20 rule is now closer to 90/10. A very small number of members with complex or chronic conditions drive the vast majority of an employer's health spending. What’s changing is that the number of people falling into this high-cost category is growing, making it a more predictable and a significant budget item. 

The Proactive Blueprint: From Crisis to Opportunity

You can’t stop a rare cancer diagnosis and you can’t control hospital contract negotiations, but you can control how your clients’ employees navigate the healthcare system. This environment demands a fundamental shift from transactional agent to strategic consultant. The traditional “set it and forget” approach is over. The brokers who will not only survive but thrive in this renewal reckoning are those who embrace a forward-thinking, data-driven approach. They won’t just bring spreadsheets; they’ll bring a robust strategy to solidify long-term client relationships.

Your blueprint for success is built on the following pillars:

  • Control the narrative with data. The single biggest mistake you can make is letting a national headline dictate your client’s expectations. Get ahead of the story by showing them the data for their specific market segment. Explain that their 15% increase, while painful, is in line with what similar businesses are experiencing. This reframes the conversation from one of failure to one of a shared market challenge that you will solve together.
  • Get ahead of the timeline. Even if carriers are late, your process can’t be. The renewal conversation should be a year-round engagement, not a last-minute scramble. Use your 90-to-120 day strategic window to discuss business objectives and model alternatives. By the time the renewal arrives, you should be ready to present a data-backed recommendation, not just a rate increase.
  • Separate reactive tactics from proactive strategy. Simply tweaking deductibles and copays is a reaction to high renewal—it’s not a long-term plan. Your clients are tired of cost-shifting that hurts employees without solving the underlying problem. Your strategy must focus on a proactive approach that addresses the fundamental drivers of cost:
      • Steering to quality and value: Use data to guide employees to the right, low-cost, high-value providers.
      • Channeling to virtual care: Make virtual primary care and behavioral health the easy and accessible front door to the healthcare system.
      • Targeting high-cost conditions: Implement point solutions that directly address the chronic conditions driving the majority of your client’s spend.
      • Managing pharmacy spend: Help employees safely navigate options for critical medications, like GLP-1s, to reduce abrasion.
  • Deliver your strategy with technology. A brilliant strategy is useless if employees don’t engage with it. For years, HR has purchased valuable point solutions only to see them go unused, creating an “engagement gap” that wastes money and fails to produce results. The winning proactive strategy for 2026 and beyond is not just a better plan design; it’s a technology platform that delivers on the promise of cost containment. A unified platform empowers employees, guiding them to the right, cost-effective care and driving engagement with the very programs you’ve put in place. It provides the answer when your client asks, “What is your plan to control costs before the next renewal?”

This crisis will separate the transactional brokers from the true consultants. Through a proactive, data-driven, and consultative framework, you'll not only prove your indispensable worth but also forge long-term client connections.

Ready to learn more about how HealthJoy’s can accelerate your cost containment strategies? Get in touch with one of our experts today