The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, often referred to as the Affordable Care Act (ACA), requires covered employers to either offer group health insurance to at least 95 percent of their qualifying, full-time employees or choose to pay a penalty fee. This is known as both the "play or pay" and "shared responsibility" feature of the act.
Employers with 50 or more full-time employees, including full-time equivalents (FTEs), are referred to as "applicable large employers" (ALEs) and are covered under the law. Smaller employers are exempt but may be eligible for a tax credit if they choose to offer group health insurance.
Full-time employees averaging at least 30 hours of work per week (or 130 hours in a calendar month) are eligible for coverage. Plans offering dependent coverage must also cover dependent children up to age 26. There is no requirement to offer dependent coverage to spouses.
Employees hired full time with the expectation of working 30 or more hours per week meet the criteria for coverage and may not have an enrollment waiting period longer than 90 days.
When it cannot be reasonably determined at hire if an employee will average 30 hours per week, the ACA provides two options for determining full-time status:
ALEs must offer full-time employees health insurance that is affordable and that meets a minimum value standard in order to avoid the penalty fee:
The ACA requires ALEs—and in some cases all employers—to provide certain notices to employees, including:
If the employer does not offer qualifying health insurance, or if it does but, despite that, at least one full-time employee qualifies for and receives the premium tax credit for purchasing coverage through the Health Insurance Marketplace, the employer will owe a shared responsibility payment. A full-time employee could receive the premium tax credit if he or she was offered minimum essential coverage that either was not affordable for that employee or did not provide minimum value.
Additional penalties based on related ACA requirements may also apply.
The ACA places certain reporting and fee requirements on employers and insurers providing group health plan coverage to employees, including:
These are plans with unchanged major provisions since March 23, 2010, the date of the ACA's enactment, whether fully insured or self-funded and regardless of size. Grandfathered plans are exempt from many changes required under the ACA. Group plans or individual policies may lose their grandfathered status if they make certain significant changes that reduce benefits or increase costs to consumers.
Employers should continue to monitor guidelines for preventive services, which are regularly updated to reflect new scientific and medical advances. As new services are approved, nongrandfathered group health plans will be required to cover them with no cost-sharing for plan years beginning one year later.
Hours of service in determining full-time status include actual hours of work as well as paid time off such as for vacation, holidays, illness, incapacity (including disability), layoff, jury duty, military duty or leave of absence.
Many employers define full-time status as working 40 or more hours per week. However, under the ACA, employees are considered full time if they average at least 30 hours of work per week (or 130 hours in a calendar month), regardless of the employer's internal definition of full time versus part time. In addition, circumstances may change when an employee's hours are increased or decreased, resulting in a change of full-time status under the ACA.
Small employers that individually do not have 50 or more full-time employees or FTEs may still be subject to the requirements if they meet the threshold when combined with other companies under common ownership or that are otherwise related.