The phrase “licensed health insurance broker” carries the same comforting weight as “fiduciary financial advisor” โ except it shouldn’t. Brokers don’t owe you a duty of loyalty. They owe their loyalty to the carriers writing their commission checks, and the gap between those incentives and your interests can be wide enough to bankrupt a family.
Most consumers don’t realize that the agent walking them through plan options is functionally a sales rep. The friendly tone, the spreadsheet, the personalized recommendation โ none of it changes the underlying business model.
How the commission structure actually works
Brokers are typically paid by insurance carriers, not by clients. Commissions can be flat fees per enrollment, percentages of premium, or override bonuses tied to volume with a particular insurer. According to publicly available filings and industry reporting, some Medicare Advantage plans pay brokers more than competing plans, creating an obvious nudge.
This isn’t necessarily fraud โ it’s how the entire distribution channel was built. But it means the “best plan for you” is often the best plan that also pays the broker well. When two plans look comparable, the tiebreaker frequently isn’t your deductible. It’s the spread between commission tiers, and you’ll never see that math.
The fiduciary gap nobody talks about
Financial advisors who manage retirement accounts can be held to a fiduciary standard, meaning they must put client interests first. Insurance brokers generally operate under a “suitability” standard, which only requires that a recommendation be reasonable for someone in your situation. Reasonable is a low bar.
That gap matters when networks, formularies, and prior-authorization patterns vary wildly between carriers. A broker steering you toward a higher-commission plan with a narrower network isn’t breaking the rules. They’re following them. The rules are simply written to protect the industry, not the buyer, and most state insurance departments have shown little appetite for changing that.
What honest help would look like
Fee-only health insurance navigators exist, though they’re rare. Some nonprofit organizations and state-funded programs โ like SHIPs for Medicare beneficiaries โ offer unbiased counseling. The federal marketplace also provides assister programs. These channels aren’t perfect, but they remove the commission-driven nudge that quietly distorts broker recommendations.
If you do work with a commissioned broker, treat the relationship the way you’d treat a car salesman who’s also pretending to be your mechanic. Ask which carriers they’re appointed with, whether commissions vary by plan, and whether they’re showing you every option in your market or only the ones that pay them. The answers are revealing, and the discomfort that follows the questions is its own data point.
Bottom line
Brokers aren’t villains, but they aren’t advisors either. The label is marketing. Until the compensation model changes โ or until consumers demand fee-based alternatives โ assume any broker recommendation reflects a blend of your needs and their paycheck. Read the plan documents yourself, compare networks directly with your doctors, and treat the friendly spreadsheet as a starting point, not a verdict.
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