Why Digital Experience Matters in Healthcare
Health plan members who regularly use their insurer’s mobile apps and websites grow to value those digital tools far more over time. This is the central finding of the JD Power 2026 U.S. Healthcare Digital Experience Study, released on April 7, 2026. Moreover, the study reveals that this pattern creates both a significant opportunity and a critical challenge for health insurers across the country.
Navigating healthcare is rarely simple. Members come from different age groups, income levels, and digital comfort zones. Consequently, health plans must serve users who approach mobile apps and websites with vastly different expectations and skill levels. According to Eric McCready, director of digital solutions at JD Power, dozens of individual use cases further complicate the challenge.
“The good news is that once health plan members start using digital tools, satisfaction tends to improve,” McCready noted. Therefore, the key priority for insurers is to get members engaged with their digital platforms early and keep them coming back.
How JD Power Measured Health Plan Satisfaction
Study Design and Methodology
Now in its third year, the JD Power U.S. Healthcare Digital Experience Study evaluates member satisfaction across five core factors. These factors, listed in order of importance, are visual appeal, navigation, information and content, speed, and telehealth access.
The 2026 edition drew responses from 7,687 health plan members. Specifically, the study covered the 17 largest Medicare Advantage plans and 16 of the largest commercial member health plans operating in the United States. Fieldwork ran from August through December 2025, giving the study a robust sample across diverse market conditions.
What the Scores Measure
Scores are reported on a 1,000-point scale. Furthermore, JD Power uses these scores to track year-over-year trends, identify satisfaction gaps, and rank insurers within their respective segments. Plans scoring 800 or above fall into the “excellent” category, while those scoring 500 or below represent poor digital experiences.
Key Findings: Usage Drives Satisfaction
Mobile Apps and Member Loyalty
One of the most striking outcomes of the 2026 study is the direct link between app satisfaction and member loyalty. Among commercial health plan members who reported an excellent digital experience, 76 percent said they would “definitely” continue using their insurer’s mobile app. Similarly, 74 percent of Medicare Advantage members with high satisfaction scores expressed the same intent.
By contrast, loyalty collapses when the digital experience falls short. Only 29 percent of commercial members with poor app experiences said they would keep using the app. For Medicare Advantage members, that figure dropped even further to just 21 percent.
The Stakes Are High
These numbers underline a powerful business reality. In other words, health plans that fail to deliver a quality digital experience risk losing member engagement entirely. Conversely, plans that invest in intuitive, well-designed apps and websites stand to build stronger, more loyal member relationships. As a result, digital experience has evolved from a convenience feature into a strategic differentiator.
Top-Ranked Health Plans in 2026
Commercial Member Health Plans
Cigna Healthcare earned the highest satisfaction score among commercial member health plans for the second year in a row. The company posted a score of 684 on the 1,000-point scale. Premera Blue Cross followed closely in second place with a score of 682. UnitedHealthcare came in third with a score of 672.
Medicare Advantage Plans
In the Medicare Advantage segment, UPMC Health Plan claimed the top spot for the second consecutive year. The plan achieved a score of 676, maintaining its leadership position over a competitive field of the nation’s largest Medicare Advantage insurers.
These repeat rankings indicate that both Cigna and UPMC have built digital platforms that consistently meet member expectations. Additionally, their sustained performance demonstrates that digital excellence requires ongoing commitment, not just a one-time overhaul.
Score Improvements Over 2025
Progress is visible across both segments compared to last year’s results. The 2026 segment average for commercial health plans reached 658, up from 653 in the 2025 study. Furthermore, the Medicare Advantage segment average climbed from 597 in 2025 to 645 in 2026 — a notably sharp improvement of 48 points.
This upward trend suggests that health plans have responded to earlier JD Power feedback by strengthening their digital offerings. However, there remains a meaningful gap between healthcare digital scores and the benchmarks set by other industries. For instance, full-service wealth management firms averaged 794, property and casualty insurers averaged 700, and automotive finance companies averaged 672 in comparable JD Power studies — all well above healthcare’s current averages.
What Health Plans Must Do Next
Simplify Navigation and Content
Navigation and information quality rank among the top five satisfaction drivers in the study. Plans should therefore audit their apps and websites regularly, removing friction points that force members to search repeatedly for coverage details, provider directories, or claims status updates. Clear, well-organized information reduces frustration and encourages return visits.
Expand Telehealth Integration
Telehealth appears as a dedicated factor in the satisfaction framework, reflecting its growing importance to members. Plans that embed seamless virtual care access within their digital platforms will likely see satisfaction gains in the coming years. Additionally, telehealth integration positions plans to meet members where they are — especially those in rural or underserved areas.
Invest in Onboarding
Since the study confirms that repeated use drives satisfaction, health plans should prioritize new-member digital onboarding. Guided tutorials, proactive notifications, and easy-to-use dashboards can help first-time users build confidence and habitual engagement with the platform.
