Two new federal laws bring good news to employers subject to reporting and other requirements under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA). President Biden approved laws in December that not only ease the burdens of furnishing copies of IRS Forms 1095-B and 1095-C to applicable individuals but also give applicable large employers (ALEs) new protections related to employer shared responsibility (ESR) penalty assessments. We’ll cover five key changes under the new laws and seven steps you should consider taking next.
Quick Background on the ACA’s Employer Mandate + Select Reporting Requirements
The ACA requires ALEs to either offer health coverage that complies with the ACA’s ESR provisions or potentially pay a penalty to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The ACA also requires many employers (including non-ALEs) and health insurance providers to annually report health coverage information to the IRS and furnish copies of those tax forms to certain individuals.
Here’s a snapshot of the furnishing requirements, who must comply, and the relevant tax forms:
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President Biden signed two new bills into law on December 23 – including the “Paperwork Burden Reduction Act” (PBRA, H.R. 3797) and the “Employer Reporting Improvement Act” (ERIA, H.R. 3801). Together, these laws help employers and health insurance providers by easing at least some of the ACA reporting burdens and giving ALEs new protections related to ESR penalty assessments. We’ll explain all the new changes in more detail below.
5 New ACA Reporting and ALE Penalty Rules That Employers Will Be Happy About
1. You may opt to distribute Forms 1095-B and 1095-C only upon request.
Employers and health insurance providers are no longer required to distribute Forms 1095-B and 1095-C to all covered individuals, so long as certain conditions are met. Beginning with your 2024 returns, the PBRA permits you to meet the ACA’s furnishing requirement if you:
This marks the first time that filers of Form 1095-C may utilize this alternative manner of furnishing statements to individuals. While the IRS has permitted use of this alternative manner for furnishing Form 1095-B (where the entity posts on its website that the information may be sent out upon request), the PBRA now provides statutory authority for this practice and extends the same flexibility to entities required to furnish Form 1095-C.
Alternative manner notice and content requirements: As mentioned above, the “alternative manner” notice must meet certain conditions set by the IRS. While the IRS has not yet addressed these conditions following the enactment of the PBRA, the 2024 Instructions for Form 1095-B might be helpful guidance here, as they describe the alternative manner conditions the agency has required since before the PBRA’s enactment (see page 5 of the Instructions for the full details). Note, for example, that the 2024 Instructions for Form 1095-B require anyone using the alternative manner to post the required notice on their website by March 3, 2025, and to keep it posted there until October 15, 2025.
2. You may distribute Forms 1095-B and 1095-C electronically.
For Forms 1095-B and 1095-C due in 2025 or later, the ERIA permits you to distribute forms electronically after obtaining the individual’s consent. Note, however, that individuals may revoke their consent, in writing, at any time.
The ERIA codified existing federal regulations that permit electronic delivery of these forms upon affirmative consent. Under those rules, consent may be made electronically “in any manner that reasonably demonstrates that the recipient can access the statement in the electronic format in which it will be furnished.” As for withdrawals of consent, the regulations state that the furnisher “may provide that a withdrawal of consent takes effect either on the date the furnisher receives it or on another date no more than 60 days later,” and that the furnisher also “may provide that a recipient’s request for a paper statement will be treated as a withdrawal of the recipient’s consent.”
3. You will have more flexibility when it comes to TIN reporting.
For Forms 1095-B or 1095-C due in 2025 or later, you may use an individual’s full name and date of birth when the individual’s tax identification number (TIN) is not available.
4. You will have a longer period of time to respond to IRS Letter 226-J.
The IRS uses Letter 226-J to provide employers notice of a proposed ESR payment assessment. Under the ERIA, you now have 90 days to respond to the proposed assessment letter (versus the 30 days previously afforded, unless an extension was granted).
5. A statute of limitations now applies to IRS penalty assessments – on a prospective basis.
For Forms 1095-C that are due in 2025 or future years, the ERIA requires the IRS to assess ESR payments within six years of the later of:
This is a huge win for employers, because the IRS previously took the position that no statute of limitations applied to these penalty assessments. Note, though, that this change only applies prospectively, so employers may still receive penalty assessments beyond the six-year statute of limitations for coverage failures tied to returns due in 2024 or prior years.
7 Next Steps for ALEs + Employers and Health Insurance Providers That File Form 1095-B
Based on these recent changes, you should consider taking the following steps:
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DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations. Attorney Advertising.
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