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New small-business health reimbursement rules provide a great opportunity to employers with fewer than 50 employees, who do not or are unable to offer group health insurance, to assist employees with rising medical costs.
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In a major victory for U.S. small businesses, former President Obama signed the 21st Century Cures Act into law on Dec. 13, 2016. Lawmakers included an important provision in the comprehensive health care package which allows small employers to offer pre-tax dollars to insured employees to help pay premiums and other
medical expenses.
Summary
- Employers will not be penalized for offering stand-alone HRAs prior to Dec. 31, 2016.
- Only small employers with fewer than 50 full-time-equivalent employees, and who do not currently offer a group health plan to any of their employees, may offer stand-alone HRAs.
- HRAs reimburse the medical expenses of employees who have obtained minimum essential coverage. If an employee doesn’t have minimum coverage, any reimbursement to cover health expenses could be taxable.
- Reimbursement is limited to $4,950 for an individual employee or $10,000 for an employee and their family.
- An employer offering a reimbursement arrangement must provide notice not later than 90 days before a year in which it will fund the plan. An employer who doesn’t provide notice could be subject to a fine equal to $50 per employee, per incident, which would be capped at $2,500 per calendar year.
- The employer must provide the benefit information on an employee’s W-2 form. Employees must provide this information to a health exchange if they purchase insurance.