multiemployer plan

Benefit Plan StructureLegal glossary term

Legal Definition

A multiemployer plan is a collective benefit plan established by multiple employers to provide health insurance coverage for their employees, often involving the pooling of resources across different entities or jurisdictions.

Plain-English Translation

Imagine a big group of companies that decide to put together one health insurance plan. This plan lets all the employees from these different companies use the same benefits, even though they are separate businesses. It's like a shared benefit system for everyone involved.

Context in Contracts

It matters because it dictates the structure and administration of employee benefits, determining how health insurance costs are shared, administrative responsibilities, and regulatory compliance under federal law.

Visual model

Understand multiemployer plan fast

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01

A state-level health insurance program that pools benefits for employees across several different healthcare providers.

02

A collective bargaining agreement detailing the shared responsibility for employee health benefits among various employers.

Document context

How multiemployer plan shows up in legal documents

What is it?

A multiemployer plan is a collective benefit plan established by multiple employers or entities to provide health insurance coverage for their employees, often involving pooling of resources across various jurisdictions or different organizational structures.

Why does it matter?

It matters because it dictates the structure and administration of employee benefits, determining how health insurance costs are shared, administrative responsibilities, and regulatory compliance under federal law.

When does it matter?

It usually appears in legal documents related to benefit plan administration, collective bargaining agreements, or state/federal regulations governing health insurance coverage across multiple entities.

Where is it usually seen?

It is usually seen in state-level healthcare policy discussions, federal healthcare regulation (like Medicare/Medicaid), and in the administrative filings of health insurance carriers.

Who is affected?

Affected parties include employers who contribute to the plan, employees who receive coverage under the plan, and regulatory bodies responsible for overseeing the plan's structure and solvency.

How does it work?

The plan works by establishing a framework where multiple employers participate in or benefit from a single health insurance pool, often requiring coordination on contribution rates, claims processing, and overall financial stability.

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