Tax Tip
No Health Insurance? Qualify for Hardship Waiver?
If you didn’t get health insurance coverage this year,
you may be subject to a penalty unless you qualify for one of the many general
or hardship exemptions. There are in excess of 30 possible exemptions from the
penalty and some of the exemptions require you to complete and file an
application for approval. If approved for an exemption that requires specific
approval, you will be issued an exemption certificate number (ECN) that must be
included on your tax return to claim the exemption.
The approval form instructions cover several types of
exemptions, will take some time to complete; and, once the application is
submitted, the approval/denial process presently takes more than two weeks.
Once others realize they need approval for certain hardship exemptions,
however, you can expect the approval process to take considerably longer. While
application forms are available online, each application must be printed,
filled out manually, and then snail-mailed to the government for processing.
With tax season just around the corner, you don’t want your refund held up
while you are applying for an exemption; so, start the process early.
Not all exemptions require approval, so make sure your
reason for an exemption requires advance approval before going to the trouble
of completing and submitting the form. If you qualify for an exemption that
doesn’t require prior approval, you can claim it on a new IRS form that will
need to be included with your 2014 tax return.
If you didn’t have insurance for some period of time during
the year (the penalty is computed by the month) and you don’t qualify for one
or more of the exemptions, then you will be subject to the penalty for not
being insured (the official name for the penalty is the “shared responsibility
payment”).
The penalty is generally the larger of a flat dollar
amount per individual or a percentage of your income, whichever is greater. For
2014, the full-year penalty, based upon the flat dollar amount, is $95 per
adult and $47.50 per child, capped at $285 regardless of family size. The
full-year penalty determined by income is 1% of the amount that your household
income exceeds your tax filing income threshold.
Example: For 2014, Kevin and Brett are married filing
jointly with two minor children. Their household income is $55,000 and their
filing threshold is $20,300 (their standard deduction of $12,400 plus the
exemption amount of $3,950 each for both of them). So, their flat dollar amount
for a full year would be $285, and their percentage of income amount would be $347.00
(($55,000 - $20,300) x 1%). Thus their penalty would be $347.00 for a full year
without insurance or $28.92 per month for the family.
For the first year of the shared responsibility payment,
2014, the penalties are low. In 2015, the flat dollar amounts jump to $325 per
adult and $162.50 per child (capped at $975), while the percentage of income
jumps to 2%. Then, in 2016, the per-adult flat dollar amount goes to $695 and
the child amount to $347.50 (maximum $2,085), while the percentage of income increases
to 2.5%. If our prior example had taken place in 2016, Kevin’s and Brett’s
penalty would be $2,085 (2 x $695 plus 2 x $347.50) since the flat dollar
amount is larger than their percentage of income amount.
Kevin and Brett, based upon their income, would qualify
for some amount of premium assistance credit that will help them pay the cost
of their health insurance if they purchase coverage through a government
marketplace. With the severe increase in penalties over the next two years,
Kevin and Brett will need to consider whether the cost of health insurance (and
the benefits that come with coverage) is a better option than paying the
penalty. Open enrollment for 2015 marketplace insurance begins November 15,
2014.
If you have questions about the shared responsibility
payment or penalty exemptions you may qualify for, please give this office a
call.
Joseph C Becker
Ten Forty plus Quality Tax Preparation & Financial Services
www.tenfortyplus.com
281-397-7777, Fax 281-397-7443
joeb@tenfortyplus.com
Ten Forty plus Quality Tax Preparation & Financial Services
www.tenfortyplus.com
281-397-7777, Fax 281-397-7443
joeb@tenfortyplus.com
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