Posted Wednesday, July 04, 2012 |
HIGHLIGHTS OF PPACA/HCERA AND
IRS GUIDANCE
The Supreme Court has left standing all tax provisions
within PPACA and HCERA. This decision, which was unexpected by many
Court-watchers, brings with it a sense of urgency to employers, individuals and
other stakeholders that time is now g
rowing short both to prepare for those
major changes soon to take place in 2013 and 2014 and also to implement
provisions or benefits that are already effective and available.
The PPACA and HCERA add to or amend numerous sections
of the Internal Revenue Code, resulting in the largest set of tax law changes in
more than 20 years. The IRS has been working on many fronts to issue guidance on
these provisions, to flesh out certain benefits and requirements, and to set up
procedures necessary for compliance.
The remainder of this
Briefing highlights the major tax
provisions of PPACA and HCERA, and the guidance that has been developed
since enactment.
INDIVIDUAL
TAX PROVISIONS
Individual
Mandate
The PPACA requires
applicable individuals to carry minimum essential health coverage for themselves
and their dependents (also known as the individual mandate) or otherwise pay a
shared responsibility penalty for each month of noncompliance. The individual
mandate provision is scheduled to be effective beginning in calendar year 2014.
"The individual mandate requires most Americans to maintain ‘minimum essential’
health insurance coverage," Chief Justice Roberts wrote. "For individuals who
are not exempt and do not receive health insurance through a third party, the
means of satisfying the requirement is to purchase insurance from a private
company."
Individuals who are exempt. Some individuals
are exempt from the individual mandate. They include (not an exhaustive list)
individuals covered by Medicaid and Medicare, incarcerated individuals,
individuals not lawfully present in the United States, health care ministry
members, members of an Indian tribe, and members of a religion conscientiously
opposed to accepting benefits. No penalty will be imposed on individuals without
coverage for fewer than 90 days (with only one period of 90 days allowed in a
year). Generally, individuals with employer-provided health insurance, if it
satisfies minimum essential coverage and affordability requirements, are also
exempt.
Additionally, no penalty
will be imposed on individuals who are unable to afford coverage (generally, an
individual will be treated as unable to afford coverage if the required
contribution for employer-sponsored coverage or a bronze-level plan on an
Exchange exceeds eight percent of the individual's household income for the tax
year). Those applicable individuals whose household income is below their income
thresholds for filing income tax returns are also exempt.
Minimum essential
coverage. Under the PPACA, minimum essential coverage generally includes
(not an exhaustive list) coverage under an eligible employer-sponsored plan, an
individual market plan, a grandfathered health plan (discussed below), coverage
under Medicaid and Medicare, and other government-sponsored coverage, subject to
some exceptions.
Calculating the
penalty. The penalty is generally calculated by taking the greater of a
flat dollar amount and a calculation based on a percentage of the taxpayer's
household income, and is imposed on a monthly basis (one-twelfth per month of
this ‘greater of ’ amount). The annual flat dollar amount is assessed per
individual or dependent without coverage and is scheduled to be phased in over
three years ($95 for 2014; $325 for 2015; and $695 in 2016 and subsequent years,
indexed for inflation after 2016; onehalf of these amounts for individuals under
the age of 18). The flat dollar amount is compared to a percentage of the extent
to which the taxpayer's household income exceeds the income tax filing
threshold. The applicable percentage is 1 percent for 2014, 2 percent for 2015,
and 2.5 percent for 2016 and subsequent years. The taxpayer's penalty is equal
to the greater of the flat dollar amount or the percentage of household income.
The amount cannot exceed the national average of the annual premiums of a
"bronze level" health insurance plan offered through a health
exchange.
Premium
Assistance Tax Credit
Beginning in
2014, eligible lower-income individuals who obtain coverage under a qualified
health plan through an insurance exchange may qualify for a premium assistance
tax credit under Code Sec. 36B unless they are eligible for other minimum essential
coverage, including employer-sponsored coverage that is affordable and provides
minimum value. The PPACA provides that advance payments of the premium
assistance tax credit may be made directly to the insurer.
Medical
Deduction Threshold
The PPACA increases the threshold to claim an itemized
deduction for unreimbursed medical expenses from 7.5 percent of adjusted gross
income (AGI) to 10 percent of AGI for tax years beginning after December
31, 2012. However, individuals (or their spouses) age 65 and older before the
close of the tax year are exempt from the increased threshold, and the 7.5
percent threshold continues to apply until after 2016.
HEALTH CARE TAX CREDIT
The Health Care
Tax Credit (HCTC) was extended and enhanced by the Trade Adjustment Assistance
Act of 2011 (TAA 2011). The HCTC is refundable and can also be advanced.
Individuals eligible for the HCTC include individuals receiving Trade Adjustment
Allowances; individuals receiving wage subsidies in the form of Reemployment
Trade Adjustment Assistance (RTAA) benefits; and individuals between the ages of
55 and 64 receiving payments from the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation
(PBGC). The HCTC is scheduled to sunset after 2013.
Additional
Tax On HSA/MSA Distributions
Distributions
from a health savings account (HSA) or Archer medical savings account (Archer
MSA) not used for the beneficiary's qualified medical expenses are generally
included in the beneficiary's gross income. Distributions included in gross
income are subject to an additional tax of 10 percent of the included amount,
unless made after the beneficiary's death, disability, or attainment of the age
of Medicare eligibility. Effective for distributions made after December 31,
2010, the additional tax on HSAs and Archer MSAs increases from 10 percent to 20 percent,
in the case of HSAs, and from 15 percent to 20 percent, in the case of Archer
MSAs, of the amount included in gross income.
Additional
Medicare Tax
For tax years
beginning after December 31, 2012, an
additional 0.9 percent Medicare tax is imposed on wages and self-employment
income of higher-income individuals. The additional Medicare tax applies
to individuals with remuneration in excess of $200,000; married couples filing a
joint return with incomes in excess of
$250,000; and married couples filing separate returns with incomes in
excess of $125,000.
Medicare
Tax On Investment Income
The PPACA imposes a
3.8 percent Medicare contribution tax on unearned income effective for tax years
beginning after December 31, 2012. The tax is imposed on the lesser of an
individual's net investment income for the tax year or modified adjusted gross
income in excess of $200,000 ($250,000 for married couples filing a joint return
and $125,000 for married couples filing a separate return).
Net investment
income is the excess of the sum
of the following items less any otherwise allowable deductions properly
allocable to such income or gain:
- Gross
income from interest, dividends, annuities, royalties and rents unless
such income is derived in the ordinary course of any trade or business
(excluding a passive activity or financial instruments/commodities
trading);
- Other gross income from any passive trade or
business; and
- Net
gain included in computing taxable income that is attributable to the
disposition of property other than property held in any trade or business that
is not a passive trade or business.
Indoor
Tanning Excise Tax
Amounts paid for
indoor tanning services performed after June 30, 2010, are subject to a 10
percent excise tax. Tanning salons are responsible for collecting the excise tax
and paying over the tax on a quarterly basis. Tanning salons that fail to
collect the tax from patrons are liable for the excise tax.
Dependent
Coverage Until Age 26
The PPACA also
requires group health plans and health insurance issuers providing dependent
coverage for children to continue to make the coverage available for an adult
child until turning age 26. The coverage requirement is effective for the first
plan year beginning on or after September 23, 2010.
The IRS issued
temporary regulations in TD 9482 (5/10/10). The IRS explained that, with respect
to a child who has not attained age 26, a plan or issuer may not define
dependent for purposes of eligibility for dependent coverage for children other
than in terms of a relationship between a child and the participant. A plan or
issuer may not deny or restrict coverage for a child who has not attained age 26
based on the presence or absence of the child's financial dependency (upon the
participant or any other person), residency with the participant or with any
other person, student status, employment, or any combination of those
factors.
Medical Benefits For Children Under
27
The PPACA
amended Code Sec. 105(b) to extend the exclusion from gross income for medical
care reimbursements under an employer-provided accident or health plan to any
employee's child who has not attained age 27 as of the end of the tax year. The
amendment was effective March 30, 2010.
The IRS issued
guidance in Notice 2010-38, which explains that the exclusion applies for
reimbursements for health care of individuals who are not age 27 or older at any
time during the tax year. The tax year is the employee's tax year (generally a
calendar year). The IRS also explained that a child for purposes of the extended
exclusion is an individual who is the son, daughter, stepson, or stepdaughter of
the employee. A child includes an adopted individual and an eligible foster
child.
IMPACT.
There is no
requirement that a child generally qualify as a dependent for tax purposes.
There is also no requirement that an employer provide this coverage (as opposed
to dependent coverage under age 26, described above).
Student
Loan Repayment Programs
The PPACA
provides for exclusion of assistance provided to participants in state student
loan repayment programs for health professionals. The assistance is intended to
increase the availability of health care in areas traditionally underserved by
health professionals.
BUSINESS TAX
PROVISIONS
Shared
Responsibility For Employers
The PPACA's
employer shared responsibility provisions (also known as the "employer mandate") specify
that an applicable large employer may be subject to a shared responsibility
payment (also known as an "assessable payment") if any full-time employee is
certified to receive an applicable premium tax credit or cost-sharing reduction
payment. Generally, this may occur where either:
- The employer does not offer to its fulltime
employees (and their dependents) the opportunity to enroll in minimum essential
coverage under an eligible employer-sponsored plan; or
- The employer offers its
full-time employees (and their dependents) the opportunity to enroll in minimum
essential coverage under an eligible employer-sponsored plan that either is
unaffordable relative to an employee's household income or does not provide
minimum value (that pays at least 60 percent of benefits).
COMMENT
The provision
applies to months beginning after December 31, 2013.
For purposes of
the employer shared responsibility payment, an applicable large employer is an employer
that on average employed 50 or more full-time equivalent employees on
business days during the preceding calendar year. A full-time employee is an
employee who is employed on average at least 30 hours per
week.
EXCHANGES
The PPACA
requires each state to establish an American Health Benefit Exchange and Small
Business Health Options Program (SHOP Exchange) to provide qualified individuals
and qualified small business employers access to health plans. Exchanges will
have four levels of coverage: bronze, silver, gold, or platinum. In early 2012,
HHS reported that 34 states and the District of Columbia have received grants to
fund their progress toward building Exchanges. HHS also provided an Exchange
blueprint that states may use. If a state decides not to operate an Exchange for
its residents, HHS will operate a federally-facilitated Exchange
(FFE).
Small
Employer Health Insurance Tax Credit
The PPACA
created the temporary Code Sec. 45R small employer health insurance tax credit. For tax
years 2010 through 2013, the maximum credit is 35 percent of health insurance
premiums paid by small business employers (25 percent for small taxexempt
employers). The credit is scheduled to
increase to 50 percent for small business employers (35 percent for small
tax-exempt employers) after 2013 (but
will terminate after 2015). However, in tax years that begin after 2013,
an employer must participate in an insurance exchange in order to claim the
credit, and other modifications and restrictions on the credit
apply.
In Notice
2010-44, the IRS provided guidance on the small employer health insurance tax
credit, including transition relief for tax years beginning in 2010 with respect
to the requirements for a qualifying arrangement. The IRS expanded on the
guidance in Notice 2010-82. The IRS explained in Notice 2010-82 that a qualified
employer must have:
- Fewer than 25 full-time equivalent employees
(FTEs) for the tax year;
- Average annual wages of its employees for the
year of less than $50,000 per FTE; and
- A "qualifying arrangement" that is
maintained.
Exchange-Participating Qualified Health Plans
Offered Through Cafeteria Plans
For tax years
beginning after December 31, 2013, a cafeteria plan cannot offer a qualified
health plan offered through an American Health Benefit
Exchange.
Health
FSAs Offered In Cafeteria Plans
Effective for
tax years beginning after December 31, 2012, the PPACA limits contributions to health flexible
spending arrangements (health FSAs) to
$2,500, down from an overall $5,000 FSA limit. The $2,500 limitation is
adjusted annually for inflation for tax years beginning after December 31,
2013.
Over-the-Counter
Medicines
The PPACA revises the definition of medical
expenses for health flexible spending arrangements (health FSAs), health
reimbursement arrangements (HRAs), health savings accounts (HSAs) and Archer
Medical Savings Accounts (Archer MSAs). After December 31, 2010, expenses incurred for a medicine or drug are
treated as a reimbursement for a medical expense only if the medicine or drug is
a prescribed drug or insulin
Retiree
Prescription Drug Subsidy
The Medicare
Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 provides a subsidy
of 28 percent of covered prescription drug costs to employers that sponsor group
health plans with drug benefits to retirees. PPACA requires the amount otherwise
allowable as a business deduction for retiree prescription drug costs to be
reduced by the amount of the excludable subsidy-payments received, effective for
tax years beginning after December 31, 2012.
Limitation
on Employee Remuneration
The PPACA limits
the allowable deduction to $500,000 for applicable individual remuneration and
deferred deduction remuneration attributable to services performed by applicable
individuals that is otherwise deductible by a covered health insurance provider
in taxable years beginning after December 31, 2012.
In Notice
2011-2, the IRS explained that the provision may affect deferred compensation
attributable to services performed in a tax year beginning after December 31,
2009. The IRS also provided a de minimis rule.
Medical
Device Excise Tax
The PPACA imposes an excise tax on the sale of certain
medical devices by the manufacturer, producer, or importer of the device
in an amount equal to 2.3 percent of the
sale price. The excise tax applies to sales of taxable medical devices
after December 31, 2012.
Retail
exemption. The PPACA
exempts certain devices from the excise
tax, such as eyeglasses, contact lenses and hearing aids. In the proposed
regulations, the IRS provided a facts and circumstances approach to evaluating
whether a taxable medical device is of a type that is generally purchased by the
general public at retail for individual use. A device is considered to be of a
type generally purchased by the general public at retail for individual use if
(i) the device is regularly available for purchase and use by individual
consumers who are not medical professionals, and (ii) the device's design
demonstrates that it is not primarily intended for use in a medical institution
or office, or by medical professionals.
Credit For
Therapeutic Discovery Projects
Eligible
taxpayers may qualify for a 50-percent tax credit for investments in therapeutic
discovery projects. The PPACA also established the qualifying therapeutic
discovery project program to consider and award certifications for qualified
investments eligible for the credit. The credit was available for qualified
investments made or to be made in 2009 and 2010. Additionally, the PPACA
provides for grants in lieu of tax credits for investments in therapeutic
discovery projects.
REPORTING
Forms
W-2
The PPACA
generally requires employers to disclose the aggregate cost of applicable
employer-sponsored coverage on an employee's Form W-2 for tax years beginning on
or after January 1, 2011. Reporting is for informational purposes
only.
In Notice
2010-69, the IRS made reporting optional for all employers for 2011. In Notice
2012-9, the IRS provided transition relief for small employers. For 2012 Forms
W-2 (and W-2s issued in later years, unless and until further guidance is
issued), an employer is not subject to reporting for any calendar year if the
employer was required to file fewer than 250 Forms W-2 for the preceding
calendar year, the IRS explained.
Health
Care Coverage Reporting
The PPACA
requires every health insurance issuer, sponsor of a self-insured health plan,
government agency that administers government-sponsored health insurance
programs and other entity that provides minimum essential coverage to file an
annual return reporting information for each individual for whom minimum
essential coverage is provided (Code Sec. 6055 reporting). Additionally, every applicable large
employer (within the meaning of Code Sec. 4980H(c)(2)) that is required to meet the shared employer
responsibility requirements of the PPACA during a calendar year must file a
return with the IRS reporting the terms and conditions of the health care
coverage provided to the employer's full-time employees for the year
(Code Sec. 6056 reporting). The reporting requirements apply to
calendar years beginning on or after January 1,
2014.
Disclosures
Because the
PPACA is being implemented by multiple federal agencies, the statute authorizes
the IRS to disclose return information to HHS and other agencies. Return
information is scheduled to be disclosed for, among other purposes, eligibility
for the Code Sec. 36B premium assistance tax
credit.
In NPRM
REG-119632-11, the IRS explained that it will disclose taxpayer identity
information, filing status, the number of individuals for which a deduction
under Code Sec. 151 was allowed ("family size"), modified adjusted gross
income, and the tax year to which the information relates or, alternatively,
that the information is not available. Where modified adjusted gross income is
not available, the IRS will disclose adjusted gross
income.
Nonprofit
Health Insurance Issuers
The PPACA
establishes the Consumer Operated and Oriented Plan (CO-OP) Program. The CO-OP
Program is intended to encourage the creation of qualified nonprofit health
insurance issuers to offer competitive health plans in the individual and small
group markets. The PPACA also enacted Code Sec. 501(c)(29) to provide requirements for tax exemption under
Code Sec. 501(a) for qualified nonprofit health insurance issuers
(QNHIIs).
Tax-Exempt
Charitable Hospitals
The PPACA
imposes additional requirements on Code Sec. 501(c)(3) charitable hospitals. Tax-exempt hospitals must conduct
a community health needs assessment (CHNA) and adopt a financial assistance
policy. The PPACA also places limitations on charges to individuals who qualify
for financial assistance and prohibits certain collection actions. Tax-exempt
hospitals must satisfy these additional requirements to maintain their exempt
status.
ADDITIONAL
PROVISIONS
Grandfathered Plans
Certain plans or
coverage existing as of March 23, 2010 (the date of enactment of the PPACA) are
subject to only some provisions of the PPACA. These plans are known as
"grandfathered plans."
The IRS, HHS and
DOL issued interim final regulations in 2010 and subsequently amended the
interim final regulations (TD 9506). The agencies explained that a group health
plan or group or individual health insurance coverage is a grandfathered health
plan with respect to individuals enrolled on March 23, 2010 regardless of
whether an individual later renews the coverage. Additionally, a group health
plan that provided coverage on March 23, 2010 generally is also a grandfathered
health plan with respect to new employees (whether newly hired or newly
enrolled) and their families that enroll in the grandfathered health plan after
March 23, 2010.
Patient's
Bill Of Rights
The PPACA
generally provides that a group health plan and a health insurance issuer
offering group or individual health insurance coverage may not impose any preexisting condition
exclusion. The PPACA also prohibits group health plans and health
insurance issuers offering group or individual health insurance coverage from
imposing lifetime or annual limits on the
dollar value of health benefits. Additionally, a group health plan, or a
health insurance issuer offering group or individual health insurance coverage,
must not rescind coverage except in the case of fraud or an intentional
misrepresentation of a material fact.
COMMENT
A group
health plan or group health insurance coverage must comply with the prohibition
against preexisting condition exclusions; however, a grandfathered health plan that is
individual health insurance coverage is not required to comply with the
prohibition.
The IRS, HHS and
DOL issued interim final regulations in 2010. The agencies explained that the
prohibition against preexisting condition exclusions generally is effective with
respect to plan years (in the individual market, policy years) beginning on or
after January 1, 2014. However, the prohibition became effective for enrollees
who are under 19 years of age for plan years (in the individual market, policy
years) beginning on or after September 23, 2010.
The agencies
also explained that the annual limits do not apply to health flexible spending
accounts (health FSAs), Archer medical savings accounts (Archer MSAs) and health
savings accounts (HSAs); and plans and issuers cannot rescind coverage unless an
individual was involved in fraud or made an intentional misrepresentation of
material fact.
Business
Information Reporting
The PPACA
requires businesses, charities and government entities to file an information
return (Form 1099) when they would make annual purchases aggregating $600 or
more to a single vendor, other than to a vendor that is a tax-exempt
organization, for payments made after December 31, 2011 and reported in 2013 and
years thereafter. The PPACA also repealed the long-standing reporting exception
for payments made to corporations.
The Comprehensive
1099 Taxpayer Protection and Repayment of Exchange Subsidy Overpayments Act of
2011 repealed the expansion of business information reporting under the PPACA as
if it had never been enacted.
Yours sincerely,
www.debreczeni-petrash.comDebreczeni & Petrash
CPAs
|
Debreczeni & Petrash CPAs has a proud tradition of service, technical expertise, and innovative thinking. Our staff combines experience and academic credentials to provide our clients with the depth of knowledge you'll find in larger firms while maintaining a personal one-on-one approach that smaller firms are known for.
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Tax Highlights Obamacare
Labels:
In the News
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment