Monday, November 21, 2016

Plan Now for ACA Information Reporting: What You Need to Know

New ACA reporting! The IRS has published an entirely new family of information returns—learn the step-by-step requirements for completing each form correctly the first time, so you can avoid costly penalties
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Plan now for 2016 ACA information reporting: What you need to know

The IRS has released final Affordable Care Act information reporting forms—Forms 1095-C, 1094-C and 1095-B—for 2016 information reporting purposes. The good news: Except for the expiration of transition relief, which applied to 2015 reporting, not much has changed on the forms. Final instructions have also been released.

The IRS has published a new pair of information returns—Form 1095-C and Form 1095-B—that you must file THIS YEAR.

Learn the step-by-step requirements for completing each form correctly the first time, so you can avoid costly penalties.

What's new. The forms include two new Line 14 codes on the 1095-C—Codes 1J and 1K—that you should use when you're making conditional offers of coverage to employees' spouses and dependents. The instructions flesh this out.

  • A conditional offer is an offer of coverage that's subject to one or more reasonable, objective conditions (e.g., you offer to cover an employee's spouse only if the spouse isn't eligible for Medicare or another group plan).
  • You can use the new codes to report conditional offers to employees' spouses as offers of coverage, regardless of whether spouses meet your reasonable, objective conditions.
  • The same isn't true for dependents, however. You can't report conditional offers of coverage as offers to dependents, unless you know that they meet your reasonable, objective conditions. All or nothing: Offers of coverage are treated as made to dependents only if your offers are made to all of employees' dependents, regardless of how many dependents they actually have, during any particular calendar month.

Conditional offers could affect a spouse's eligibility for the premium tax credit only if all conditions to the offer are satisfied (i.e., the spouse was actually offered coverage and was eligible for it).

To help employees and spouses who receive conditional offers determine their eligibility for the premium tax credit, you should provide a list of the conditions that apply to spousal offers of coverage. Note: You're generally not on the hook for a free-rider penalty if spouses receive premium tax credits.

The Qualifying Offer Transition Relief checkbox on Line 22 of the 1094-C has been dropped from the 2016 form, since it applied for 2015 reporting only. To account for noncalendar year plans, checkboxes for other types of transition relief remain on the 2016 form.

The only change to the 1095-B is on Line 9; it's now reserved. Last year, Line 9 was used to report SHOP coverage. Several clarifications were made in Part II in the Instructions to the Recipient, on Page 2.

These IRS reporting requirements are the single most important addition to your year-end duties in a generation. Get instructions on how to comply—plus answers to your specific ACA reporting questions—during our new webinar: Understanding the ACA Reporting Requirements for 2016 & 2017: New Rules, New Responsibilities.

Forms 1095-C reporting. Employers with insured plans must provide full-time employees with their 1095-C copies by Jan. 31, 2017. Employers with self-insured plans must provide any employee who enrolls in coverage, including part-time employees, with their copies of the form by Jan. 31, 2017.

Paper forms are due to the IRS on Feb. 28; e-filed forms are due on March 31. You will need the following information to ensure that employees' forms are correct:

  • The type of coverage offered, for Line 14 reporting
  • The monthly premium for the lowest-cost self-only coverage, for Line 15 reporting
  • Your affordability safe harbor, for Line 16 reporting
  • Social Security numbers for employees' dependents, for Part III reporting. Idea: Modify your open enrollment form now to capture this information.

Form 1094-C reporting. The 1094-C is the transmittal for your 1095-Cs. You'll need the following information to complete it correctly:

  • The number of months during which you offered minimum essential coverage (all 12 months or the exact months)
  • The total number of full-time employees each month
  • The total number of full-time and part-time employees each month.
Penalties have more than doubled for filing incorrect information returns (including Forms 1095) … and the IRS isn't planning on extending any due dates for next year's forms!

Alice GilmanOn Tuesday, November 29, join your peers for a complete primer on the new health care information reporting rules. Learn the step-by-step requirements for completing each form correctly the first time, so you can avoid costly penalties.

In addition to deciphering the complex reporting rules, this webinar will ensure you're in total compliance with the ACA in 2017, including the dreaded employer mandate.

It's crunch time for health care information reporting. But you don't have to be crunched. On November 29, learn how to get in compliance with the confusing ACA reporting rules so you can make this reporting a nonevent in the future. Register now!
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