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The Affordable Care Act allows young adults to stay on
their parents' health care plan until age 26. Before the President signed
this landmark Act into law, many health plans and issuers could and did in
fact remove young adults from their parents' policies because of their
age, leaving many college graduates and others with no insurance. This
helps to explain problems like:
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Young adults have the highest rate of uninsured of
any age group. About 30% of young adults are uninsured, representing
more than one in five of the uninsured. This rate is higher than any
other age group, and is three times higher than the uninsured rate among
children.
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Young adults have the lowest rate of access to
employer-based insurance. As young adults transition into the job
market, they often have entry-level jobs, part-time jobs, or jobs in
small businesses, and other employment that typically comes without
employer-sponsored health insurance. The uninsured rate among employed
young adults is one-third higher than older employed adults.
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Young adults' health and finances are at risk.
Contrary to the myth that young people don't need health insurance, one
in six young adults has a chronic illness like cancer, diabetes or
asthma. Nearly half of uninsured young adults report problems paying
medical bills.
The Affordable Care Act requires plans and issuers that
offer coverage to children on their parents' plan to make the coverage
available until the adult child reaches the age of 26. Many parents and
their children who worried about losing health insurance after the
children moved away from home or graduated from college no longer need to
worry.
The Departments of Health and Human Services, Labor, and
Treasury have issued regulations implementing the Affordable Care Act by
expanding dependent coverage for adult children up to age 26. Key elements
include:
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Coverage Extended to More Children. The goal of
this new policy is to cover as many young adults under the age of 26 as
possible with the least burden. Plans and issuers that offer dependent
coverage must offer coverage to enrollees' adult children until age 26,
even if the young adult no longer lives with his or her parents, is not
a dependent on a parent's tax return, or is no longer a student. There
is a transition for certain existing group plans that generally do not
have to provide dependent coverage until 2014 if the adult child has
another offer of employer-based coverage aside from coverage through the
parent. The new policy providing access for young adults applies to both
married and unmarried children, although their own spouses and children
do not qualify.
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Effective for Plan or Policy Years Beginning On or
After September 23, 2010. Secretary Kathleen Sebelius called on
leading insurance companies to begin covering young adults voluntarily
before the implementation date required by the Affordable Care Act
(which is plan or policy years beginning on or after September 23rd).
Early implementation would avoid gaps in coverage for new college
graduates and other young adults and save on insurance company
administrative costs of dis-enrolling and re-enrolling them between May
2010 and September 23, 2010. Over 65 companies have responded to this
call saying they will voluntarily continue coverage for young adults who
graduate or age off their parents' insurance before the implementation
deadline.
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All Eligible Young Adults Will Have A Special
Enrollment Opportunity. For plan or policy years beginning on or
after September 23, 2010, plans and issuers must give children who
qualify an opportunity to enroll that continues for at least 30 days
regardless of whether the plan or coverage offers an open enrollment
period. This enrollment opportunity and a written notice must be
provided not later than the first day of the first plan or policy year
beginning on or after September 23, 2010. The new policy does not
otherwise change the enrollment period or start of the plan or policy
year.
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Same Benefits/Same Price. Any qualified young
adult must be offered all of the benefit packages available to similarly
situated individuals who did not lose coverage because of cessation of
dependent status. The qualified individual cannot be required to pay
more for coverage than those similarly situated individuals. The new
policy applies only to health insurance plans that offer dependent
coverage in the first place: while most insurers and employer-sponsored
plans offer dependent coverage, there is no requirement to do
so.
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Check for Immediate Options: Private health
insurance companies that cover the majority of Americans have
volunteered to provide coverage earlier than the implementation deadline
for young adults losing coverage as a result of graduating from college
or aging out of dependent coverage on a family policy. This stop-gap
coverage, in many cases, is available now. Ask your employer and insurer
about this option.
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Watch for Open Enrollment: If early coverage is
not an option with your employer or insurance company, then young adults
will qualify for an open enrollment period to join their parents' family
plan or policy beginning on or after September 23, 2010. Insurers and
employers are required to provide notice for this special open
enrollment period. Watch for it or ask about it.
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Expect an Offer of Continued Enrollment:
Insurers and employers that sponsor health plans will inform young
adults of continued eligibility for coverage until the age of 26. To get
the coverage, young adults and their parents need not do anything but
sign up and pay for this option.
The new regulation complements guidance issued by the
Treasury Department on April 27, 2010, on the tax benefits provided for
such coverage through the Affordable Care Act. Under a new tax provision
in the Affordable Care Act and the Treasury guidance, the value of any
employer-provided health coverage for an employee's child is excluded from
the employee's income through the end of the taxable year in which the
child turns 26. This tax benefit applies regardless of whether the plan is
required by law to extend health care coverage to the adult child or the
plan voluntarily extends the coverage.
Key elements include:
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Tax Benefit Continues Beyond Extended Coverage
Requirement. While the Affordable Care Act requires health care
plans to cover enrollees' children up to age 26, some employers may
decide to continue coverage beyond the child's 26th birthday. In such a
case, the Act provides that the value of the employer-provided health
coverage is excluded from the employee's income for the entire taxable
year in which the child turns 26. Thus, if a child turns 26 in March but
stays on the plan through December 31st (the end of most people's
taxable year), all health benefits provided that year are excluded for
income tax purposes.
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Available Immediately. These tax benefits are
effective March 30, 2010. The exclusion applies to any coverage that is
provided to an adult child from that date through the end of the taxable
year in which the child turns 26.
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Broad Eligibility. This expanded health care tax
benefit applies to various workplace and retiree health plans. It also
applies to self-employed individuals who qualify for the self-employed
health insurance deduction on their federal income tax return.
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Both Employer and Employee Shares of Health Premium
Are Excluded from Income. In addition to the exclusion from income
of any employer contribution towards qualifying adult child coverage,
employees can receive the same tax benefit if they contribute toward the
cost of coverage through a "cafeteria plan." This benefit is available
immediately, even if the cafeteria plan document has not yet been
amended to reflect the change. To reduce the burden on employers, they
have until the end of 2010 to amend their cafeteria plan documents to
incorporate this change.
Early implementation by the companies listed below will
avoid gaps in coverage for new college graduates and other young adults
and save on insurance company administrative costs of dis-enrolling and
re-enrolling them between May 2010 and the start of the plan or policy
year beginning on or after September 23, 2010. Early enrollment will also
enable young, overwhelmingly healthy people who will not engender large
insurance costs to stay in the insurance pool. The following companies
have agreed to implement this program before the September 23, 2010
deadline:
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Alabama Blue Cross Blue
Shield of Delaware Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Arizona, Inc. Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Florida Arkansas Blue Cross and Blue
Shield Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Hawaii Blue Shield of
California Blue Cross of Idaho Health Service Regence Blue Shield of
Idaho Wellmark Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Iowa Health Care
Service Corporation Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas Blue Cross
Blue Shield Association Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Louisiana WellPoint, Inc. CareFirst BlueCross and BlueShield Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Massachusetts Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Kansas City Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Michigan Blue Cross and
Blue Shield of Montana Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Nebraska Blue Cross & Blue Shield of
Mississippi Horizon Blue Cross and Blue Shield of New Jersey,
Inc. HealthNow New York, Inc. The Regence Group Excellus Blue
Cross and Blue Shield Capital BlueCross Blue Cross and Blue Shield
of North Carolina Independence Blue Cross BlueCross BlueShield of
North Dakota Highmark, Inc. Blue Cross of Northeastern
Pennsylvania BlueCross and BlueShield of Tennessee Blue Cross and
Blue Shield of Vermont Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Rhode
Island Premera Blue Cross Blue Cross and Blue Shield of South
Carolina Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Wyoming Kaiser
Permanente Cigna Aetna United WellPoint Humana Capital
District Physicians' Health Plan (CDPHP), Albany, New York Capital
Health Plan, Tallahassee, Florida Care Oregon, Portland,
Oregon Emblem Health, New York, New York Fallon Community Health
Plan, Worcester, Massachusetts Geisinger Health Plan, Danville,
Pennsylvania Group Health, Seattle, Washington Group Health
Cooperative Of South Central Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin Health
Partners, Minneapolis, Minnesota Independent Health, Buffalo, New
York Kaiser Foundation Health Plan Oakland, California Martin's
Point Health Care, Portland, Maine New West Health Services, Helena,
Mt The Permanente Federation, Oakland, California Priority Health,
Grand Rapids, Michigan Scott & White Health Plan, Temple,
Texas Security Health Plan, Marshfield, Wisconsin Tufts Health Plan,
Waltham, Massachusetts UCARE, Minneapolis, Minnesota UPMC Health
Plan, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
This fact sheet has been developed by the U.S. Department
of Labor, Employee Benefits Security Administration, Washington, DC 20210.
It will be made available in alternate formats upon request: Voice phone:
202.693.8664; TTY: 202.501.3911. In addition, the information in this fact
sheet constitutes a small entity compliance guide for purposes of the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996. |