HIT Health In Tech, Inc.
CATEGORY BREAKDOWN
METRIC BREAKDOWN
Revenue Growth (YoY)
Year-over-year revenue growth rate
> 50% strong
Gross Margin
Revenue retained after direct costs
> 50% strong
Cash Runway
Months of cash at current burn rate
> 24 months ideal
Debt / Equity
Total debt relative to shareholder equity
< 25% strong
Price / Sales
Market cap relative to trailing revenue
< 3x strong
Rule of 40
Growth rate plus operating margin
> 40 excellent
Insider Ownership
Percentage of shares held by insiders
> 20% strong
Share Dilution (12M)
Share count increase over last 12 months
< 5% ideal
SCORE HISTORY
RESEARCH NOTE
BUSINESS SUMMARY
Health In Tech operates an AI-driven underwriting and quoting platform for self-funded employer health plans, sized primarily for small and mid-sized employers (SMEs) where traditional underwriting is too slow and expensive.
The platform sits between the employer, the broker, and a stop-loss carrier. An employer or broker enters census data, the engine runs an instant-quote against partnered carriers, and a self-funded-plus-stop-loss arrangement is set up — historically a process that took weeks of broker back-and-forth.
Revenue is transaction- and subscription-based: technology fees per quoted/issued plan plus a recurring SaaS layer for the broker tooling. Health In Tech does not carry insurance risk; the stop-loss carrier does.
MARKET OPPORTUNITY
The US small-group self-funded market has been one of the most digitally-underserved segments of healthcare for two decades. Employers under 200 lives historically default to fully-insured because self-funded underwriting was too manual to be economic.
Where HIT is exposed:
- The 50-200 life sweet spot — small enough that incumbents skip it, large enough that brokers are motivated to use a tool that produces an instant quote
- Broker channel is the wedge — HIT does not sell direct to employers, so adoption by independent brokers and TPAs is the leading indicator
- Stop-loss carrier panel — the more carriers HIT has on its panel, the more competitive the quotes the platform can produce
Macro context: rising healthcare costs are pushing more SMEs to consider self-funded structures, and ICHRA rules from 2020 onward have made employer-funded individual coverage easier — both expand the universe HIT can quote into.
REVENUE QUALITY
The margin profile is software-meaningful, not insurance-meaningful:
- Gross margin 62.8% — accurate for a software platform; well below an insurer's combined-ratio framing
- Operating margin 4.6% — already profitable, which is rare for a recently-IPO'd insurance-tech name
- 70.99% revenue growth on $33M TTM — strong, but the absolute revenue base is small enough that one large broker channel partnership can swing the trajectory in either direction
The 62% insider ownership is unusually high — founder-led, which is genuine alignment but also concentrates voting control. New investors should expect founder decisions to override consensus on multiple-arbitrage opportunities.
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
The claimed moat is the underwriting engine plus the carrier-panel relationships. Both are real but neither is unassailable:
- The underwriting engine is data-and-model — competitors with capital and clinical actuarial talent can replicate it
- The carrier panel is the harder-to-build asset, but stop-loss carriers will work with whichever distribution platform delivers volume
What is genuinely scarce is broker mindshare in the SME segment — once a broker has integrated HIT into their workflow, switching costs are non-trivial.
Practical reality: HIT's defensibility looks more like a network effect (more carriers → better quotes → more brokers → more volume → more carriers) than a moat against any single deep-pocketed entrant.
GROWTH THESIS
The bull case has three components:
- Broker adoption compounds — each new broker who integrates HIT into their stack pulls more SME quoting through the platform, lifting both transaction fees and carrier-panel attractiveness.
- Carrier panel expands — additional stop-loss partners reduce decline rates and improve the quote-to-bind ratio, which is the cleanest leverage point in the model.
- Operating margin scales above 4.6% as the engineering-heavy fixed-cost base fully absorbs growth.
The 94.97/100 score captures growth, margin, and balance-sheet quality cleanly. The fact that a recently-IPO'd small-cap is already operating-positive is the single most important signal in the breakdown.
KEY RISKS
Three specific risks:
-
Broker channel concentration. Early adopters — large independent broker groups — represent a meaningful share of platform volume. A relationship loss or carrier dispute could be material at this revenue scale before it would be at a $1B+ peer.
-
Stop-loss market cycle. Stop-loss premium pricing moved sharply higher in 2023-2024 as claims experience deteriorated. If carriers tighten underwriting further, HIT's quote-to-bind ratio drops mechanically — fewer plans get bound regardless of how good the platform is.
-
Founder-control concentration. 62% insider ownership means strategic decisions (raise, sell, partner) reflect a single decision-maker rather than market consensus. That has worked here so far; it's not pre-priced in for a downside scenario.
VERDICT
The 95.0/100 score captures real fundamental strength — already-profitable growth, low debt, founder alignment, software margins. The structural risk is scale: at $33M TTM revenue, one channel-partnership change can move the trajectory, and growth investors need a multi-year line of sight that the current disclosure doesn't yet support.
For investors interested in a profitable, founder-led insurance-tech platform at small-cap multiples, HIT is one of the cleaner names in our universe right now. For investors needing institutional-scale revenue base and broker-channel diversification, this is too early.
The single metric to watch next is the quote-to-bind ratio disclosed in subsequent quarters — if HIT is converting platform quotes into bound plans at increasing rates, the network-effect thesis is working. If the ratio stalls, broker engagement may be plateauing.
Report last updated: May 4, 2026
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DATA INFO
Last updated: May 4, 2026
Sources: SEC EDGAR, Financial Modeling Prep, Yahoo Finance. Not financial advice.