If you are overwhelmed by the Herculean task of finding a vision plan that offers your employees great value, but you don’t know where to start, consider the following checkpoints: understanding the price of the plans, evaluating what the majority of your employees need to gain from a plan, comparing reviews on your provider options, and leveraging expert advice.
Remember to be transparent throughout this journey, using clear communication. You want to simplify the process for both you and your employees.
Let’s elaborate.
The benefits can be a lot to compare.
Vision insurance plays a vital role in a comprehensive employee benefits package. Opt for options that reduce employees’ out-of-pocket costs. This is especially important for benefits like routine eye exams and specialized care.
Vision insurance plans vary in terms of cost, flexibility, and access to providers. Standard options include HMO, PPO, Indemnity, EPO, POS, and discount plans. HMO plans are the most affordable. These do limit provider choice, though, and require referrals. PPO plans, on the other hand, offer more flexibility and broader coverage, but they come with higher premiums. Indemnity plans allow your employees to use any provider and receive reimbursement for part of the cost, although claims can be more complex. EPO plans balance savings and convenience; however, they cover only in-network care, while POS plans combine an HMO structure with PPO flexibility. Discount vision plans are not insurance but provide reduced rates on basic services. Employers should match plan types to their team’s needs and budget; lower-cost HMO or EPO plans for predictable expenses, or PPO, POS, or Indemnity options for greater freedom of choice.
But what does this all mean?
In simple terms, all these plan types differ in the level of freedom employees have to choose eye doctors and the associated costs of those choices.
Employers need to balance cost control and employee flexibility. Know your team. Where they come from and what they value before you make these decisions for them.
Make it easy to understand
Now, the part that often gets overlooked is making all of this digestible for your team so that they can make an informed decision, based on your choices and options that you and your broker put together.
When presenting this to your employees, ensure you have clear and understandable summaries of each plan, including its benefits, costs, and any other relevant considerations.
The more layperson’s terms, the better.
Check how much extra work and risk each plan adds.
Plans that involve lots of paperwork, manual reimbursements, or confusing claims can cause problems for both employees and your HR or finance teams.
Ask your broker: Is this plan easy to audit? Could we make mistakes when handling pre-tax deductions?
Explain Why Vision Benefits Matter
After you choose a vision plan, help your employees understand why it’s important. Explain how it helps them stay healthy, saves them money on eye care, and makes regular checkups easier to afford. Remind them that this benefit is meant to support their health, not just be another cost. When people understand the value, they’re more likely to use and appreciate it.
A broker can help you communicate these benefits clearly by providing easy-to-understand plan summaries and employee materials. They can also train your HR team to confidently answer common questions and explain coverage options.
Check and Improve Each Year
Picking a vision plan isn’t something you do only once. Look at how well the plan is working each year. Ask employees for feedback and see if the plan still fits their needs. As your company grows or changes, update the plan to keep it useful and fair. Review it with your broker every year to make sure it keeps bringing value to your employees and your business.
A broker can compare your current plan with new options in the market to help you stay competitive. They can also analyze claim reports and cost trends to identify ways to improve coverage while managing expenses.
