Open enrollment can be confusing for any employee, but Generation Z workers may be dealing with these choices for the first time. Many are new to employer-sponsored health coverage and may not yet understand how premiums, deductibles, provider networks, and out-of-pocket costs work together. Some may have been covered under a parent’s plan before this and never had to compare plan options on their own.
That makes communication especially important. A younger employee may not ignore benefits because they do not care about them. They may ignore them because the language feels dense, the process feels rushed, or the terms do not yet make sense. If employers want stronger enrollment decisions, they often need to explain benefits in a way that feels clear, practical, and easy to use.
Why Gen Z May Need a Different Approach
Many Gen Z employees prefer short, direct, digital communication. They are used to mobile-first tools, quick comparisons, and information that gets to the point fast. That does not mean they want less information. It means they often want information organized in a way that is easier to scan and easier to act on.
This group is also more likely to enroll with little prior experience. They may not know how to compare a lower-premium plan against a lower-deductible plan, or why network restrictions matter before they schedule care. A different communication approach can help reduce rushed or uninformed choices.
Benefits Terms That Need Plain-English Explanation
Several health insurance terms need plain-English explanation during open enrollment. A premium is the amount deducted from pay to cover costs. A deductible is the amount paid out of pocket before the plan starts covering certain services. A copay is a set dollar amount for a visit or prescription, while coinsurance is a percentage of the cost.
Employees may also need simple explanations of network rules, since going out of the network can mean much higher costs. Health savings accounts and flexible spending accounts can also be confusing without examples. The out-of-pocket maximum is another term worth explaining clearly because it sets a ceiling on covered in-network spending during the plan year.
Communication Methods That May Work Better
Text reminders can help employees remember deadlines without having to dig through email. Mobile-friendly guides, short videos, recorded webinars, and side-by-side plan comparisons can also make enrollment easier to understand. These formats often work better than long PDF packets filled with technical language.
Visual examples can also help. Showing how two plans work in a routine doctor-visit year versus a high-medical-use year can make plan differences easier to understand than definitions alone.
Questions Gen Z Employees Are Likely to Ask
Gen Z employees are likely to ask which plan is cheapest, what they pay before the deductible, how telehealth is covered, and whether mental health care is included. They may also ask whether prescriptions are covered, whether they need a referral, and how to check if a doctor is in network.
These are practical questions, not basic ones. They usually reflect a real effort to understand how a plan works in daily life. Employers who answer them clearly are more likely to help employees make better choices.
How Employers Can Make Enrollment Easier
Employers can make enrollment easier by offering plain-language examples, clear deadlines, decision tools, and live Q&A support. A short walkthrough that explains how to compare cost, coverage, and provider access can be more useful than a long packet of definitions. It also helps to repeat key dates and action steps in multiple formats.
A stronger open enrollment process can improve employee confidence and reduce confusion around group benefits. Our local North Carolina insurance agents at Breeden Insurance Services, Inc. can help you review employee benefits communication, improve open enrollment support, and build a group benefits strategy that is easier for employees to understand and use. Give us a call at (336) 249-8616.





