Affordable Care Act Employer Mandates for 2015 & 2016

Affordable Care Act
Employer Mandates for 2015 & 2016
By Brian Newhouse, CPA
eginning in 2015, if
you (your business)
employs at least
100 full-time employees (and
for 2016 and beyond at least
50 full-time employees), you
may become subject to the
employer mandate that was
enacted as part of the
Affordable Care Act (ACA); if
you fail to meet its
requirements, you may owe a
nondeductible excise tax.
You could potentially be
subject to the excise tax if any
of your full-time employees
are certified, as described
below, as having received
"health care assistance," and
you either (1) do not offer
health care coverage for all of
your full-time employees; or
(2) offer "minimum essential"
coverage under your group
health care plan that either is
not "affordable" or does not
provide "minimum value" to
your employees.
Full-time
employees
are
those
employees who work at least
30 hours a week.
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In order to determine if the
provisions apply to you, the
ACA has set measurement
guidelines to calculate your
full-time
equivalent
employees (FTEs) on a per
month basis for the year.
Hours used in the calculation
include all hours used in
determining the employee’s
pay:
Hours for service,
vacation, illness, disability,
jury duty, military service and
leaves of absence are all
included. A special seasonal
worker exemption applies to
those
employers
whose
workforce
exceeds
100
employees (50 employees
starting in 2016) for 120 or
fewer days during the year.
If you are considered to be a
large employer and you do
not offer health care coverage
to your full-time employees,
the excise tax for 2015 will be
$2,000 times the number of
full-time employees, reduced
by a 30-person threshold.
This excise tax is calculated on
a per month basis.
1
If you do offer health care
coverage to employees, but it
is not affordable or does not
provide minimum value, the
excise tax for 2015 will be
$3,000 times the number of
full-time employees for any
month who receive health
coverage assistance, reduced
by the number of those
employees who were offered
the opportunity to enroll in
"minimum
essential
coverage" under your group
health plan that meet the
requirements of employer
mandate. In addition, the
amount of any excise tax that
you
may
owe
as
a
consequence of this aspect of
the excise tax cannot exceed
the amount of the excise tax
owed if you failed to offer
health care coverage at all.
Affordability is defined as the
employee’s portion of health
insurance
premium
not
exceeding 9.5% of household
income. As no process is in
Affordable Care Act
Employer Mandates for 2015 & 2016 (cont.)
place
to
identify
an
employee’s
household
income,
temporary
regulations
allow
the
employer to base affordability
on the wages paid to the
employee.
In the event you have an
employee
who
received
health care assistance outside
your company, the IRS is
required to notify you in
accordance with procedures
designed to ensure you will
have the opportunity to
respond before the issuance
of any notice and demand for
payment of the excise tax.
Contact from IRS for a given
year will not occur until after
an employee’s individual tax
return is due for that year,
and after the due date for you
to file information returns
identifying your full-time
employees and describing the
health coverage that you
offered, if any.
The IRS has also warned of
costly consequences to an
employer
that
doesn't
establish a health insurance
plan for its employees, but
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reimburses
them
for
premiums they pay for a
health
insurance
plan
purchased
individually.
According to the IRS these
arrangements,
called
employer payment plans, are
considered to be group health
plans subject to the market
reforms of the Affordable
Care Act. These reforms
include the prohibition on
annual limits for essential
health benefits and the
requirement
to
provide
certain
preventive
care
without cost sharing. Such
arrangements cannot be
integrated with individual
policies to satisfy the market
reforms. Consequently, such
an arrangement fails to satisfy
the market reforms and may
be subject to a $100/day
excise tax per applicable
employee.
The above is a very simplified
explanation of the employer
mandate and the applicable
excise taxes and penalties,
which can be draconian. Any
employer who may be subject
to the larger employer
mandate under the ACA
2
should seek professional
advice due to the complexity
of the mandate and the
severe consequences for not
meeting the requirements of
the act.
In addition,
businesses close to the 50
employee threshold that
employ a significant part-time
workforce or utilize seasonal
labor should ensure they
understand how to apply the
full-time
equivalence
calculations for determining if
they are considered a larger
employer.
Brian Newhouse , CPA is a
partner at Alegria & Company
PS. He can be reached at
[email protected]