HR2571-119

Introduced

Self-Insurance Protection Act

119th Congress Introduced Apr 1, 2025

Legislative Progress

Introduced
Introduced Committee Passed
Dec 15, 2025

Additional sponsors: Mr. Messmer and Mr. Grothman

Dec 15, 2025

Reported with an amendment, committed to the Committee of the …

Apr 1, 2025

Mr. Onder introduced the following bill; which was referred to …

Summary

What This Bill Does
This bill changes federal law to exclude stop-loss insurance from being regulated as health insurance under ERISA (the Employee Retirement Income Security Act). It also prevents states from restricting employers' ability to purchase stop-loss insurance for their self-insured health plans. Stop-loss insurance is a financial product that reimburses employers when their health plan claims exceed a certain amount.

Who Benefits and How
Stop-loss insurance companies benefit by facing less federal regulatory oversight and fewer state restrictions on their products. Self-insured employers (both large and small companies) benefit by having easier access to stop-loss coverage with potentially lower costs and fewer regulatory hurdles. Third-party administrators who manage self-insured plans could see increased business opportunities as more employers opt for self-insurance with stop-loss protection.

Who Bears the Burden and How
State insurance regulators lose authority to oversee stop-loss insurance products and set minimum attachment points (the dollar amount before coverage kicks in). This preemption reduces consumer protections that states may want to impose. Employees in self-insured health plans could face increased risk if their employers purchase stop-loss policies with very low attachment points, which could effectively convert a self-insured plan into a minimally-regulated insurance arrangement.

Key Provisions
- Amends ERISA Section 733(b)(1) to explicitly exclude stop-loss insurance from the federal definition of "health insurance coverage"
- Adds a new preemption clause to ERISA Section 514(b) blocking state laws that would prevent group health plans from purchasing stop-loss insurance
- Congressional findings assert that both large and small employers need access to stop-loss insurance to protect company assets
- The bill applies to stop-loss policies that reimburse plan sponsors for losses exceeding predetermined levels set in the policy

Model: claude-opus-4-5-20251101
Generated: Dec 25, 2025 05:21

Evidence Chain:

This summary is derived from the structured analysis below. See "Detailed Analysis" for per-title beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.

Primary Purpose

Excludes medical stop-loss insurance from federal health insurance regulation and preempts state laws that would prevent self-insured group health plans from purchasing stop-loss coverage

Policy Domains

Health Insurance Employee Benefits Insurance Regulation Federal-State Relations

Legislative Strategy

"Reduce federal and state regulatory oversight of stop-loss insurance products for self-insured health plans by excluding them from the federal definition of health insurance coverage and preempting state regulation"

Likely Beneficiaries

  • Stop-loss insurance providers
  • Self-insured employers (both large and small)
  • Third-party administrators of self-insured plans
  • Employee benefit plan sponsors

Likely Burden Bearers

  • State insurance regulators (lose authority over stop-loss insurance)
  • Employees in self-insured plans with low stop-loss attachment points (reduced consumer protections)
  • Federal regulators tasked with ERISA oversight

Bill Structure & Actor Mappings

Who is "The Secretary" in each section?

Domains
Health Insurance ERISA
Domains
Federal-State Relations Insurance Regulation

Key Definitions

Terms defined in this bill

1 term
"stop-loss policy" §3

A stop-loss policy obtained by a self-insured group health plan or a plan sponsor to reimburse the plan or sponsor for losses that the plan or sponsor incurs in providing health or medical benefits to plan participants in excess of a predetermined level

We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.

Learn more about our methodology