The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and Department of the Treasury recently issued a final rule that, among other noted clarifications, fixes the “ACA family glitch.” The final rules, which mostly went into effect January 1, 2023, allow the premium tax credit for family coverage on the federal health insurance marketplace or state exchange to be based on an employee’s cost of family coverage under a employer health plan, rather than the cost of employee-only coverage. This means that family members who are offered unaffordable job-based family coverage will be newly eligible for subsidized marketplace coverage. This change may have an impact on health plans. Here’s what to expect:
The ACA family glitch is a term that describes an interpretation of the Affordable Care Act that based a family’s eligibility for a premium tax subsidy for an exchange-based plan on the cost of employee-only coverage that is offered by an employer-sponsored plan. This generally means that individuals will not qualify for premium tax credits if they are eligible for another source of minimum essential coverage, including job-based coverage. As a result of this guideline, family members were not eligible for the premium tax credit if the employee-only coverage offered by the employer was affordable. The ACA family glitch was a “glitch” because eligibility hinged on the affordability of an employee-only plan, even if the cost of family coverage was not affordable.
The final rule - This link will open a PDF document states that the affordability test for family members is based on the cost of family (rather than employee-only) coverage, and the effect is that families who are offered unaffordable job-based family coverage can now be eligible for a premium tax credit for marketplace plans. For 2023, an offer of job-based coverage is considered “affordable” for family members if the portion of the annual premium that an employee must pay for family coverage is less than 9.12% of household income. For purposes of affordability, family members are those within the employee’s tax family (employee, spouse filing jointly, or a dependent). Basing the eligible threshold of affordability on the cost of family coverage in order to determine eligibility of a premium tax credit for coverage obtained on the ACA marketplace exchange, fixes the ACA family glitch.
The final rule does not impact the affordability coverage for the employees themselves. Employees that are offered affordable coverage from their employer are still not be eligible for marketplace subsidies.
Group health plan sponsors should consider the potential implications of the Family Glitch change. A quick list of the potential impacts are as follows:
From the ACA family glitch to changes to the SCA fringe rate, new regulations and updates are frequently introduced that make healthcare and benefits administration a challenge. Boon is here to help. We offer our clients an expert in their corner with 40+ years of niche expertise in developing flexible benefit solutions and administrative services.
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