This article covers how admins can set up, manage, and use health insurance benefits through Gusto. As your broker and payroll system, we help with enrollment and deduction questions. For carrier-specific questions about premium payments and coverage details, you can find your carrier's contact information on the Benefits page of your Gusto account.
To set up or add benefits to Gusto, you can get started right from your admin account.
Setting up insurance benefits for the first time? See quotes and apply for small group health insurance from your admin account. Some carriers require proof of workers' compensation on your application. Check out workers' compensation requirements by state.
You can add or change some benefits anytime during the year. Other changes need to wait until your renewal date.
Offer new lines of coverage
If you offer medical insurance with Gusto, you can add more benefits anytime. Click your desired line of coverage below for next steps:
Change your new hire waiting period or company contribution
You can only change the new hire waiting period and company contribution during your annual benefits renewal. This helps to keep your company compliant with anti-discriminatory practices.
Add or change medical plans
Insurance carriers typically do not let you change the plans your company offers until your benefits renewal date.
If you offer PPO or POS plans, new out-of-state employees can likely be covered by your existing plans. You can confirm your current plans' network on your insurance provider's website or by calling them.
Some carriers let you add a new plan mid-year if you hired a Hawaii employee, or if you only offer Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) plans and you added an out-of-state employee.
You may need to request help from a licensed benefits advisor at Gusto. To contact us, sign in to your Gusto account and click the help icon  in the top-right corner of the page.
 in the top-right corner of the page.
Cancel coverage
Learn how to cancel one or more lines of coverage for your company.
Already offer insurance and want Gusto to be your broker? Transfer your company's benefits to Gusto.
Want to automate your payroll deductions and let employees enroll in benefits right from Gusto while keeping your existing broker? Set up the broker integration.
Check out our guide to open enrollment to learn about timing, how your team can enroll, required tax forms, and more. There, you can also watch an open enrollment webinar that includes enrollment demonstrations and answers to your most important coverage questions.
We'll email eligible employees when it's time to choose or waive coverage. Each employee must enroll or waive benefits themselves. You cannot enroll or waive for employees on their behalf.
Check out our guide to open enrollment for answers to frequently asked questions. This includes information on how to enroll in or waive coverage, how admins and owners can enroll, ID card information, and more.
When your company is in open enrollment, you can contact your dedicated onboarding specialist with any questions.
There are two scenarios for enrolling as an owner:
Eligible new hires can start choosing benefits while onboarding. If your company has a new hire waiting period, benefits may start up to 90 days after your first day of work. Employees can see their Coverage effective date on their Benefits page.
Share these resources with employees who need help choosing coverage:
Employees can waive coverage during their new hire enrollment, open enrollment, or if they experience a qualifying life event.
The carriers require employees to sign a waiver because it affects your company's eligibility for coverage. Learn more about valid waiver reasons in the Waive coverage section of this article.
Insurance carriers only let employees enroll, waive, or change plans when they're newly eligible, during open enrollment, or if they experience a qualifying life event.
If an employee or an eligible dependent experienced a qualifying life event (like losing or gaining other coverage, getting married, or having a baby), they can change their benefits in Gusto.
After an employee leaves the company or changes from full-time eligible to part-time/ineligible, their last day of coverage depends on your company's termination policy. It's often the last day of the month that they left the company or became ineligible. You can find the termination policy on the Benefits page of your admin account.
If your company is subject to COBRA or state continuation, a dismissed employee will get an email with their coverage options and next steps 3 days after their last day of work. This also applies to employees who lost coverage as a result of moving from full-time/eligible to part-time/ineligible.
Expand the sections for answers to frequently asked questions about employee coverage.
When employees ask about their enrollment status, direct them to the Benefits page of their Gusto account.
If employees need their ID cards immediately or have issues accessing them, share this article that explains how to find their member ID number and get care before the physical card arrives.
Share these resources with employees who have questions about insurance terms and what their plan covers:
Employees manage all medical, dental, vision, life, and disability claims directly with their insurance carrier. They should sign in to their member portal or call their carrier for filing instructions or any other claims information. The carrier's phone number is on the back of their ID card or on their Gusto Benefits page.
For HSA, FSA, DCFSA, or commuter benefits, employees can use the Gusto Benefits Card Hub for claims.
If you're planning to hire a benefits-eligible employee, you can estimate their benefits cost in Gusto.
Eligible new hires can see quotes and choose plans when onboarding to Gusto.
Once an employee enrolls in benefits through Gusto, we'll automatically collect their contributions through payroll deductions. Deducted funds remain in the company bank account for admins to pay directly to the insurance carrier.
When employees enroll in benefits, their payroll deductions will begin after the carrier has processed their coverage and once their benefits become effective. Employees can find their enrollment status on the Benefits page of their Gusto account. If the carrier confirms coverage after the benefits are effective, we'll apply deduction corrections.
If the insurance carrier processes an enrollment change after your company runs payroll for that pay period, we’ll apply corrections to upcoming payrolls to make sure the missed amounts are caught up.
Benefits admins at your company need to pay your company's insurance carriers on time and keep your employees' employment statuses up-to-date in Gusto. At the end of your plan year, we'll email benefits admins when it's time to start the renewal and open enrollment process.
Once your company’s benefits are effective, you'll get monthly premium invoices from your carriers for the total cost of your company's coverage. Remember to pay these on time to avoid the carrier terminating your group plan. Each carrier distributes invoices differently, but you can expect them to be sent monthly, either by email or mail.
Check out this article to learn how benefit deductions and premiums move, how to send payments to your carrier, and more.
Keep employee statuses current when their hours or employment change.
For details on both scenarios, check out the Handle dismissals and loss of eligibility section.
Insurance carriers may send forms or information requests directly to companies throughout the year. Employers are responsible for completing and submitting these requests on time. You must respond as a required part of offering health plans, and failure to do so could negatively affect a company’s benefits.
These forms usually ask for basic company information, such as the group health plan name or policy number. You can run a benefit deduction report in Gusto to help answer some questions. For help with other questions, employers should consult a legal advisor.
Your company's insurance plans renew once a year. This is when insurance carriers update their plans and rates, benefits admins can change the company offerings (like adding, changing, or removing plans and changing the company contribution or new hire waiting period), and employees go through open enrollment.
Renewal resources: