What’s The Deadline To Avoid A Penalty For Not Having Insurance?
Q. To avoid owing a penalty for not having health insurance next year, what鈥檚 the deadline for buying a plan?
A. The simple answer is March 31, but unfortunately it鈥檚 not that straightforward.
Starting in January, most people will need to have health insurance. If they don鈥檛,聽they鈥檒l owe a penalty amounting to $95 or 1 percent of the family income, whichever is greater.听This fee will be collected when they file their federal income taxes.
But the rules allow people to have a short gap in coverage of less than three consecutive months before they get dinged with聽the penalty.听So even though people are supposed to have insurance on Jan. 1, as long as they have coverage by March 31 .听
In recent months, policy experts both in and outside the administration have offered different interpretations of when consumers would have to have purchased coverage on the state marketplaces, also called exchanges, to satisfy this聽deadline. Many experts maintained that people would have聽to聽buy an exchange plan by March聽15 for coverage that begins April 1.
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That date turns out to be incorrect, as the Jackson Hewitt Tax Service pointed out last week in a .听The coverage gap must be , not 鈥渦p to鈥 three months or 鈥渢hree months or more.鈥澛燬o to avoid a penalty, people must have coverage by March聽31, not April聽1. And to buy an exchange plan that starts March聽1, consumers have to sign up by Feb. 15. (In general, to purchase an exchange plan that starts on the 1st聽of the following month.)
鈥淲e just don鈥檛 want people to get caught off guard,鈥 says Brian Haile, senior vice president for health policy at Jackson Hewitt. 聽聽
An official at the Department of Health and Human Services confirmed the Feb. 15 signup deadline.
Procrastinators may have another option, however. Even though people must buy a marketplace plan by the 15th for coverage to begin on the 1st of the following month, carriers that sell plans outside the exchanges don鈥檛 have to stick to the same deadlines. They could choose to allow consumers to buy a plan much closer to the March聽1 effective date, experts say.
This currently happens in some states that are already required to accept all insurance applicants regardless of their health, says Carrie McLean, director of customer care for online vendor聽. In some 鈥済uaranteed issue鈥 states, a carrier may allow a consumer to apply and pay for a plan one day and request that it be effective the following day.
Looking ahead to next year, 鈥渕ost carriers are following the same [application] cutoff dates on and off the exchange,鈥 she says. But nothing is set in stone, and 鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 be surprised … if they might extend the cutoff to get more business.鈥
But there is a potential downside to buying a plan outside the exchanges. Consumers with incomes up to 400 percent of the federal poverty level ($45,960 for an individual and $94,200 for a family of four in 2013) may be eligible for subsidies to make coverage more affordable if they buy a plan on a state marketplace. Those subsidies aren鈥檛 available for non-exchange plans.
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