• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
Big Ideas for Small Business logo

Barbara Weltman

Big Ideas for Small Business, Inc.

Whitepaper download

Subscribe and download our eBook, "150+ Tax Deductions for Small Business A to Z."

This field is hidden when viewing the form
Get the:

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Big Ideas For Your Business
    • Idea Of The Day ®
    • SMB Legal
    • SMB Taxes
    • SMB Financial
    • Small Business
    • Newsletter Archive
  • Services
  • Books
  • Blog
  • Multimedia
    • Videos
    • Radio Shows/Podcasts
  • Be a Guest Blogger

Health Insurance Reimbursements: What You Can and Cannot Do

December 8, 2015 / By Barbara Weltman

Blog_12-8-15_CanDo_dreamstime_xsSince the advent of the Affordable Care Act, small businesses have scrambled to find ways to make sure their employees have health coverage. Many have found it impossible to offer their own coverage because of price. They have tried to find other alternatives. The IRS isn’t making it easy.

Reimbursements for individual coverage

As I’ve written about before, the IRS has said that reimbursing an employee for his or her premiums is a violation of the law that results in a $100 per day per employee penalty. Earlier this year, the IRS said it would not impose the penalty on these reimbursements through June 30, 2015. No further guidance has been provided despite calls from small business owners and advocacy groups for additional relief.

Permissible. You can increase a worker’s pay with the idea that he or she will use the money to obtain health coverage. As long as the added amount isn’t conditioned upon using it to buy the coverage, this is one way to help employees obtain coverage. They may be able to obtain it through HealthCare.gov and qualify for a subsidy in the form of the premium tax credit, costing them less than they might otherwise have to pay as their share of any employer-provided coverage. Of course, the additional pay is obviously taxable compensation, and subject to employment taxes.

Reimbursements for coverage under a spouse’s plan

Some small businesses offer coverage but employees may decline because they can get better, or cheaper, coverage through a working spouse’s plan offered by his or her employer. The IRS has ruled that if the working spouse pays for the added cost of the employee on an after-tax basis, then a reimbursement of this cost is tax free to the employee (and free from employment taxes). It has provided six scenarios, some of which are after-tax and some of which are pre-tax to the working spouse. The IRS said that “[t]he fact that the insured group health plan is provided by [the spouse’s] employer and not by [the employee’s] employer does not change the results.”

Take this case (based on one of the IRS’s scenarios). Say you have an employee, A, who has a working spouse, B. B receives self-only coverage from her employer but is allowed to buy coverage for a spouse; she pays out-of-pocket to cover A. A receives a reimbursement from his employer to cover the spouse’s out-of-pocket cost. This is treated as tax-free employer provided health coverage for A; the reimbursement is not income to him even though the coverage is through another employer’s plan.

If, however, the spouse pays for the coverage on a pre-tax basis (i.e., through a cafeteria plan), then the employee is taxed on the reimbursement and the reimbursement is subject to employment taxes.

What does this informal IRS ruling tell us? In all of the situations described in the informal ruling, the employer offered some type of coverage. There was no stand-alone reimbursement offered. Because this informal ruling followed the expiration of the penalty relief described earlier, does this mean that a reimbursement arrangement for small businesses offering some type of coverage that fits one of the IRS-approved scenarios escapes the penalty? You tell me.

Tags Affordable Care Act employment taxes health insurance tax credit

Primary Sidebar

Categories

  • General Business (506)
  • Guest Blog (113)
  • Homepage (22)
  • Small Business (1,002)
  • SMB Financial (328)
  • SMB Legal (66)
  • SMB Taxes (326)

Barbara’s Recent Posts

  • 10 Ideas for Coping with Cash Flow Challenges June 26, 2025
  • 5 Insurance Traps to Avoid June 24, 2025
  • Creating a Feng Shui Office Layout for Your Business June 20, 2025
  • Scaling Your Business by Optimizing Social Media Marketing June 19, 2025
  • The Timeless Value of Business Cards in a Digital World June 18, 2025
  • What Does the Latest IRS Data Book Tell Us? June 17, 2025
  • Business Advice from Famous Dads June 12, 2025
  • How Important Is Higher Education for Small Business Owners June 11, 2025
  • Business Planning in a Period of Uncertainty June 10, 2025
  • 9 Smart Financial Decisions for Business Owners in Retirement June 6, 2025
  • Preview of Tax Changes this Year: Actions to Take Now June 5, 2025
  • Becoming Penniless: What Does this Mean for Your Business? June 3, 2025
Awarded Top 100 Small Business Blog medal (link will open in a new window or tab)
Marquis Who's Who 2023 Badge
Top Small Business Blogs (Link will open in a new window or tab.)
8 Financial blogs small business Owners Need to Read. Invoice home.  (link will open in a new window or tab)
Best Small Business Blog, Expertido.org
Top 50 Small Business Blogs 2018
Best Small Business Blogs
BizHumm Top 100 Business Blog Award to Barbara Weltman
FitsSmallBusiness.com: Award for Best Small Business Blog 2017 (link will open in a new window or tab)
FitsSmallBusiness.com: Award for Best Small Business Blog 2016 (link will open in a new window or tab)

Footer

Big Ideas for Small Business logo

Small business ideas, business tax news and small business consulting from Barbara Weltman to provide business owners with the information they need to succeed. Visit our small business blog, Idea of The Day®, small business books and articles on small business taxes, small business finance and small business legal advice.

Contact Us

[email protected]

(772) 492-9593

gacor maxwin situs slot thailand terpercaya situs slot gacor situs gacor akun pro thailand slot bandar togel terpercaya

Latest Tweets

bigideas4sb Big Ideas for Small Business® @bigideas4sb ·
June 26

AI returns have not yet justified investment mania https://on.ft.com/4l2VApu #smallbusiness #AI #investments

Reply on Twitter 1938364740998140199 Retweet on Twitter 1938364740998140199 Like on Twitter 1938364740998140199 Twitter 1938364740998140199
bigideas4sb Big Ideas for Small Business® @bigideas4sb ·
June 26

10 Ideas for Coping with Cash Flow Challenges https://bit.ly/3ttGBgf #smallbusiness #cashflow #finance

Reply on Twitter 1938337231116087463 Retweet on Twitter 1938337231116087463 Like on Twitter 1938337231116087463 1 Twitter 1938337231116087463
bigideas4sb Big Ideas for Small Business® @bigideas4sb ·
June 26

Scaling Your Business by Optimizing Social Media Marketing - https://bit.ly/4k3vK3p #smallbusiness #businessgrowth #socialmedia #marketing

Reply on Twitter 1938327669835223524 Retweet on Twitter 1938327669835223524 Like on Twitter 1938327669835223524 Twitter 1938327669835223524
Load More

Copyright © 2008–2025 Big Ideas for Small Business, Inc  |  Designed by Hudson Fusion

  • Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap