On June 13, 2019, the Departments of Labor,
Health & Human Services and Treasury released final rules concerning Health
Reimbursement Arrangements (HRAs). The 497-page rule
includes the creation of two new types of HRAs, the "Individual Coverage
HRA” and the "Excepted Benefit HRA."
Advantages of the Individual Coverage HRA include, but are not limited to:
Advantages of the Individual Coverage HRA include, but are not limited to:
- Funds can be used to reimburse
the employee's premiums for an individual health insurance policy.
- Reimbursements made to
employees do not count towards the employee's taxable wages.
- The employer can choose to
roll-over unused amounts into the following year.
- Coverage can be offered to
different classes of employees (e.g.; full-time, part-time, seasonal,
salaried, hourly)
- An offer of the Individual Coverage
HRA represents an "offer of coverage" under the employer
mandate, however, contributions must meet affordability guidelines. The
IRS will release further guidelines regarding this later.
The Individual Coverage HRA also comes with
restrictions and regulations including but not limited to:
- An offer of an Individual
Coverage HRA cannot be made to any employee that is offered a traditional
group health plan.
- If an offer of coverage is made
to a class of employees, there is a minimum class size that is required.
Size is typically 10% of that specific class of employees. For example, if
an employer has 200 employees, a minimum of 20 employees would have to be in
a specified class.
- Contributions can be in any
amount that the employer chooses, but contributions must be consistent for
all employees in a specified class.
- The employer must provide
notice of the Individual Coverage HRA to employees.
- The employer must be able to
substantiate that the employee is enrolled in an individual plan or
Medicare (model notices are available).
- The employer must notify
employees on an annual basis that the individual health insurance is NOT
subject to ERISA.
The final rule also created the "Excepted
Benefit HRA" which, starting in January of 2020, will permit employers to
finance additional medical care. Employees can use the HRA without having to be
enrolled in the group's traditional health plan.
The requirements associated with the "Excepted Benefit HRA" include, but are not limited to:
The requirements associated with the "Excepted Benefit HRA" include, but are not limited to:
- The annual contribution is
capped at $1,800.
- It must be offered in
conjunction with a group health plan, but there is no requirement for the
employee to enroll in that plan.
- The "Excepted Benefit
HRA" cannot be used to fund group health or Medicare premiums.
- It can fund premiums for
dental, vision, or short-term limited duration insurance.
Employers who want to offer the "Individual
Coverage HRA" for January 1, 2020, can do so but employees will need to
enroll in an individual plan during the 2019 open enrollment period (November
1, 2019 - December 15, 2019).
From Benefitmall, June 20, 2019