Hospital bills are eating families alive. There’s a simple answer, and almost nobody is selling it.

The average hospital stay costs $3,025 per day. Your health insurance will cover some of that. The rest lands on you. And somehow, the financial planning industry has decided this is not worth discussing.

Article Written By: Roberto Aponte

How bad are hospital costs really, even with health insurance?

Bad enough that "I have insurance" is no longer the reassuring statement it used to be. In 2022, the average cost of a one-day hospital stay in the United States was $3,025, and that number varies significantly by state. Three days, a not-unusual stay for a serious infection, a cardiac event, or a surgical procedure, means over $9,000 in charges before anyone touches your insurance card.

After your deductible, your coinsurance, and your plan's out-of-pocket maximum, a real and significant chunk of that number lands directly on the patient. Your health plan is not a shield. In many cases, it's more of a partial discount.

Aren't high-deductible health plans supposed to save people money?

They save money on premiums. They do not save money on hospitalizations; that is the purpose of the deductible. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, in 2023, the average deductible for employer-sponsored individual coverage was $1,735.

For family coverage, deductibles ranged from just under $3,000 for HMOs to just under $5,000 for HSA-qualified high-deductible health plans. That means the first several thousand dollars of every hospitalization come directly out of the family's pocket. And that assumes they've already hit the deductible.

In the first months of a plan year, they often haven't. So, a January hospital stay can be very expensive. High-deductible plans have quietly transferred an enormous amount of financial risk from employers to employees, and most employees don't fully realize it until the bill arrives.

The first several thousand dollars of every hospitalization come directly out of the family's pocket. And that assumes they've already hit the deductible.

What is hospital sickness insurance, and how does it help?

Hospital sickness insurance pays cash directly to the policyholder when they're hospitalized due to illness. Not as reimbursement to a provider. Not coordinated with another plan. Not subject to network rules or prior authorization, just cash to the person who is sick and needs money. It doesn't replace health insurance. It bridges the gap between what health insurance pays and what the patient actually owes. Which, as we've established, can be a very large gap.

What does the Family Security Plan's hospital sickness insurance actually cover?

Two plan options. The Plus plan pays $250 per day for hospital confinement, up to 365 days per calendar year. The Platinum plan pays $500 per day. Both include benefits for rehabilitation confinement, observation unit stays, ambulance transport, and emergency room visits.

There's also a Wellness Benefit, $50 per day, once per year, for preventive care. Think of it as the policy paying you to go to the doctor before something goes wrong, which is a refreshingly sane approach. The rate never changes due to age. Coverage is guaranteed renewable. And it's fully portable; a job change doesn't affect it.

Think of it as the policy paying you to go to the doctor before something goes wrong, which is a refreshingly sane approach.

How much does this actually offset a real hospital bill?

More than people expect. A three-day hospital stay under the Platinum plan generates $1,500 in cash benefits, directly to the policyholder, no strings attached. That doesn't cover everything. It was never meant to. But it covers the deductible contribution. It covers the mortgage payment that month. It covers childcare while a spouse is in the hospital. It covers whatever the family decides it needs. That flexibility is the point. The insurance company doesn't get to decide what a hospitalization costs a family in real life. The family does.

Who is this product actually designed for?

Middle-income families are on high-deductible health plans, which are increasingly common among the working population. If you have a $3,000 or $5,000 deductible and a savings account that would not survive a week-long hospitalization intact, you are exactly who this product was built for. It is also useful for anyone who has ever looked at an explanation of benefits and thought, "I thought I had insurance." You did. It just didn't cover as much as you hoped. Hospital sickness insurance covers the part that didn't.

If you have a $3,000 or $5,000 deductible and a savings account that would not survive a week-long hospitalization intact, you are exactly who this product was built for.

Why isn't every adviser talking about this?

Here's the uncomfortable answer: hospital sickness products don't generate exciting commissions. They're simple, affordable, and easy to understand, which, in a sales culture that rewards complexity, makes them easy to skip. It's much more interesting to explain a variable universal life policy with seventeen moving parts than to say, "This pays you $500 a day when you're in the hospital." And yet the client doesn't need interesting. They need to be protected. Those are not always the same thing, and the industry has a long history of confusing them.

Is this product genuinely worth the premium?

For a family on a high-deductible plan, the math is almost embarrassingly straightforward. The monthly premium is modest. A single hospitalization, even a short one, can return multiples of that premium in a single benefit period.

The Wellness Benefit alone offsets part of the annual cost. And the peace of mind that comes from knowing a hospital stay won't also be a financial catastrophe is worth something that doesn't show up in a spreadsheet. Some products require a complex case. This one mostly requires the conversation to happen.

So, what should advisers, and individuals, actually do?

Advisers: add this to the conversation whenever a client mentions a high-deductible health plan. It takes five minutes to explain and can prevent a financial disaster.

Individuals: ask your adviser what happens to your savings if you spend a week in the hospital. If they don't have a good answer, that's the answer. The combination of major medical coverage and a hospital indemnity plan is one of the most practical, cost-effective forms of financial protection available to middle-income families.

It is not complicated. It is not glamorous. It just works. And working is exactly what people need from their financial plan when things go wrong.