What Employers Need To Know About The California Individual Mandate

What Employers Need To Know About The California Individual Mandate

May 31, 2022, marked the end date for filing California state?ACA?reporting information for the 2021 tax year. Did you get your information in on time?

While it’s true the?official filing deadline was March 31, 2022, California’s Franchise Tax Board (FTB) will not issue penalties for filings submitted through May 31, 2022.?

Unfamiliar with California’s Individual Mandate? We have the details below:

Understanding the California Individual Mandate

Originally signed into law in 2019, California’s Individual Mandate first went into effect in 2020. The initiative was in response to the federal Individual Mandate being struck down by the Trump Administration. The state’s healthcare law mandates all residents obtain?Minimum Essential Coverage (MEC)?for a minimum of nine months or face a penalty, with few exceptions.

The healthcare law also imposes?reporting requirements for select organizations.

Under the Mandate, health insurance carriers and organizations that offer self-funded plans must file?ACA?information with the?FTB?annually. The information reported relates to employees and their dependents’ enrollment participation. Note that the ACA information reported on captures details about non-employee enrollment as well.

What are the penalties for non-compliance?

Both organizations and individuals are subject to penalties under California’s Individual Mandate. Applicable organizations that don’t meet the filing deadlines will be subject to penalties of?$50 per individual receiving coverage. As mentioned earlier, the absolute cut-off for filing with the FTB for the 2021 tax year was May 31, 2022. Submissions filed after then will result in penalties.

The California?Individual Shared Responsibility Penalty?(ISRP) is either a flat penalty per household member or 2.5% of gross household income that exceeds California’s filing threshold, whichever is higher.?

For the?2021 tax year, adults who don’t obtain coverage for the entire year could receive minimum fines of $800. Dependent children under the age of 18 are subject to penalties of up to $400. The amounts for the 2022 tax year will be higher than in previous years.

There are few exceptions for not receiving a penalty, including:

  • State residents with income below the tax filing threshold
  • Members of a healthcare sharing ministry
  • Incarcerated persons may be exempt from the IRSP

A full list of individuals exempt from penalties can be found on the?FTB website.

Why are there additional ACA reporting requirements?

California’s FTB has been tasked with enforcing the state’s healthcare mandate. As a mechanism for achieving that, the agency introduced additional reporting responsibilities for applicable organizations.?

Employers offering health coverage through self-insured plans or employer-sponsored plans must generally report individual enrollment information to the FTB through the reporting of?Form 3895C?unless already reported by an insurer via?Form 1095-B.

These employer-submitted submissions help the FTB verify individual coverage enrollment and more easily identify who must pay an ISRP.

In addition, following the completion of each reporting year, the?FTB publishes non-compliance information?by March 31 annually. Their reporting includes the total number of penalties issued, the total amount collected, the average household income penalty amount, and the number of individuals who failed to obtain MEC.?

The big picture

California’s Individual Mandate is one of five?in the U.S. These states’ individual mandates have resulted in greater healthcare participation but have also created challenges for employers and their ACA compliance efforts.?

That’s because the state reporting responsibilities are in addition to the federal Employer Mandate, which requires employers with 50 or more full-time employees and full-time equivalent employees, known as Applicable Large Employers (ALEs) to:

  • Offer Minimum Essential Coverage (MEC) to at least 95% of their full-time employees (and their dependents) whereby such coverage meets Minimum Value (MV)
  • Ensure that the coverage for the full-time employee is affordable based on one of the?IRS-approved methods for calculating affordability

Organizations file this information with the IRS annually via Forms 1094-C and 1095-C. And like California’s healthcare mandate, failing to comply can result in significant penalties, like Letter 226J.

If your organization is facing challenges in complying with the?ACA’s Employer Mandate?or additional state ACA reporting, download the?ACA Essential Guide?to get a better understanding of what is required of you.

Download: Essential ACA Guide

For assistance in reducing penalty risk and increasing ACA compliance, contact us to learn about?ACA Complete.

For information on ACA penalty amounts, affordability percentages, important filing deadlines, steps for responding to penalty notices, and best practices for minimizing IRS penalty risk,?download the ACA 101 Toolkit.

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