Small Business Health Insurance in Duval County, Florida

Compare 2026 group health plans for Duval County (Jacksonville) small employers with 1–50 employees. Group coverage, SHOP tax credits, ICHRA — licensed Florida producer.

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Jacksonville, the seat of Duval County, is the most populous city in Florida with roughly 950,000 residents, and its economy is anchored by major medical and logistics employers — Mayo Clinic's Jacksonville campus alone employs about 6,000 people.

Duval County small businesses operate in a market shaped by health care, the port and logistics sector, and one of the largest military concentrations in the country — a mix that gives a 1-to-50-employee firm both a steady customer base and stiff competition for skilled workers.

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Group Coverage vs. Individual ACA Plans in Duval County

Small employers in Duval County generally choose between two paths. The first is a traditional small-group health plan purchased through a licensed producer or the ACA's SHOP marketplace, where the business owns the plan and shares the premium with employees. The second is a defined-contribution approach — most commonly an Individual Coverage HRA (ICHRA) or a QSEHRA — where the employer reimburses employees tax-free for individual ACA plans they buy themselves. Which path wins depends on your headcount, your employees' wage levels, and how much administrative work you want to carry.

Florida sets individual and small-group premiums using county-based rating areas — all 67 Florida counties are their own rating area — so the plans and prices available to your Duval County employees are specific to this county, not a statewide average. That is why comparing quotes for your actual ZIP codes matters more than relying on a general Florida figure.

Health Insurance Plan Types

Whether you offer a group plan or fund individual coverage, the same metal-tier framework applies. Duval County's workforce skews toward health care, logistics and the port, financial services, and the military, and the right tier depends on how much your team uses care versus how much premium your business can absorb.

Bronze

Bronze Plans

Lowest monthly premiums, highest out-of-pocket costs. Often paired with an HSA for younger, healthier employees.

Silver

Silver Plans

The benchmark tier. Mid-range premiums and the only tier eligible for cost-sharing reductions on individual plans.

Gold

Gold Plans

Higher premiums, lower deductibles. A popular small-group choice for teams that use care regularly.

Platinum

Platinum Plans

Richest benefits, lowest cost-sharing. Best when employees value low out-of-pocket costs over premium savings.

Duval County's Employer Landscape

Jacksonville's outsized military presence makes Duval County's group-health math genuinely different from the rest of Florida. With Naval Station Mayport, Naval Air Station Jacksonville, and the surrounding bases supporting one of the nation's largest military footprints, a meaningful share of the local workforce — active-duty spouses, reservists, and veterans — already carries TRICARE or VA coverage. A Duval County small employer hiring from that pool may find lower group-plan take-up than headcount alone suggests, which can affect carrier participation requirements. An ICHRA or a defined-contribution approach often works well here, letting the employer fund coverage only for employees who actually need it rather than paying for a full group plan that half the staff waive.

Tax Benefits and the SHOP Credit

A Duval County business with fewer than 25 full-time-equivalent employees and average annual wages under roughly $66,000 may qualify for the federal Small Business Health Care Tax Credit — worth up to 50% of the premiums the employer pays — but only when coverage is bought through the SHOP marketplace and the employer covers at least 50% of the employee-only premium. Employer premium contributions are generally tax-deductible as a business expense regardless of the credit.

For 2026, an ICHRA is considered 'affordable' if an employee's share of the lowest-cost silver plan, after your contribution, is no more than 9.96% of household income. A QSEHRA — available only to employers with fewer than 50 employees who offer no group plan — lets you reimburse up to $6,450 for self-only and $13,100 for family coverage in 2026, tax-free.

Comparing group plans, ICHRA, and SHOP options for your Duval County business? Talk to a licensed Florida producer — no cost, no obligation.

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Florida Small-Group Rules and Carriers

Florida's Employee Health Care Access Act (Statute 627.6699) defines a small group as 1 to 50 employees and requires carriers to guarantee-issue coverage to qualifying small employers — your business cannot be turned down for the health history of your staff. Carriers do set participation and contribution rules: most require the employer to pay at least 50% of the employee-only premium and to enroll a minimum share of eligible employees. Florida Blue, UnitedHealthcare, Cigna, and Aetna all write small-group business in Duval County, though available plans and networks vary by ZIP code.

Unlike individual ACA coverage, small-group plans are not locked to a single annual Open Enrollment window — a Duval County employer can choose a plan effective date at almost any point in the year, set an enrollment period for staff, and start coverage on the first of the chosen month. New hires can generally be added within 30 days of their start date. Employees who decline coverage at first offer usually cannot re-enroll until the next plan year unless they have a qualifying life event, so documenting waivers in writing is good practice for small employers.

Common Mistakes Duval County Employers Make

  • Assuming you must offer coverage. Under 50 full-time-equivalent employees, you are not required to — so the decision should be driven by recruiting and retention, not fear of a penalty.
  • Ignoring the SHOP tax credit. Eligible small employers leave real money on the table by buying group coverage outside SHOP when they could claim up to 50% back.
  • Overlooking ICHRA and QSEHRA. For teams with lower-wage or part-time workers, reimbursing individual coverage can beat a group plan on both cost and flexibility.
  • Not checking the local network. A cheap plan that excludes the hospital system your Duval County employees actually use will not survive open enrollment.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do Duval County (Jacksonville) small businesses have to offer health insurance?

No. Only employers with 50 or more full-time-equivalent employees face the federal mandate. Many Jacksonville small employers offer coverage selectively — and because a large share of the local workforce already has TRICARE or VA benefits, a defined-contribution approach like an ICHRA can be more cost-effective than a full group plan.

What counts as a small group in Florida?

Under Florida Statute 627.6699, a small employer is a business with 1 to 50 employees. Small-group coverage is guaranteed-issue, meaning carriers cannot decline your Duval County business based on employees' health. Carriers do apply participation and contribution requirements.

How much does a small employer have to contribute toward premiums?

Most Florida carriers require the employer to pay at least 50% of the employee-only premium, and many set a minimum participation level among eligible employees. To qualify for the federal Small Business Health Care Tax Credit, you must contribute at least 50% and buy through SHOP.

Is an ICHRA or QSEHRA better than a group plan for my Duval County business?

It depends. If you have lower-wage employees who would qualify for large individual-market subsidies, or a largely part-time and seasonal workforce, a QSEHRA or ICHRA can be more cost-effective and flexible. If you want one unified plan and broad network access, a group plan may be the better fit. A licensed producer can model both for your actual census.

Related reading: Gulf Coast small business health plans, our ICHRA guide for Florida small business, and the Duval County individual health plans page. For broader options see Gulf Coast Coverage.