The health care law includes the employer shared responsibility provisions,
which require applicable large employers to offer health coverage to full-time
employees and their dependents. Those that do not offer coverage might be
subject to the employer shared responsibility payment.
Here are six facts about these provisions.
1. These provisions apply to applicable
large employers, which includes tax-exempt and federal, state, local
and Indian tribal government employers. You’re an applicable large employer if
you have 50 or more full-time employees, including full-time equivalents.
2. If you have fewer than 50 full-time employees, including full-time
equivalents, you are not an applicable large employer and are generally not
subject to these provisions. However, you are subject to the rules for
large employers if you have fewer than 50 employees, but are a member of an
ownership group that has 50 or more full-time equivalent employees,
3. Under certain conditions relating to the employer’s maintenance of
workforce and pre-existing health coverage, an employer won’t be assessed a
payment for 2015. This transition
relief is available for tax year 2015 for certain ALEs
who have fewer than 100 full-time employees, including full-time equivalents.
.
4. You are subject to the payment if at least one full-time employee
receives the premium tax credit and any one of these conditions apply. Your organization:
·
failed to offer coverage to full-time employees and
their dependents
·
offered coverage that was not affordable
·
offered coverage that did not provide a minimum level
of coverage
5. You do not report or include an employer shared responsibility payment
with any information return you file.
6. The IRS will contact you about your potential shared responsibility
payment amount. You’ll have an opportunity to respond before the IRS assesses
any liability or issues a notice and demand for payment.
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