IRS Eases Repayment Rules For Excess Health Premium Subsidies

Consumers who received too much in federal聽tax credits when buying insurance on the health law鈥檚 marketplaces last year got a reprieve of sorts from the Internal Revenue Service this week. Although聽they still have to repay聽some or all of the excess subsidies, the IRS won鈥檛 ding them with a late payment penalty if they don鈥檛 repay it by the April 15 tax deadline.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e trying to make this work,鈥 says Timothy Jost, a law professor at Washington and Lee University who鈥檚 an expert on the health law.

(Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Under the law, people with incomes between 100 and 400 percent of the federal poverty level ($11,670 to $46,680 for an individual in 2014) who did not have insurance through their job could qualify for聽tax credits to make premiums聽more affordable. They could elect to have these subsidies聽paid in advance directly to the insurance company, and many did.聽A typical tax credit was about $3,000 annually.

The amount聽people received was based on an estimate of their 2014 income. At tax time, that amount has to be reconciled against consumers鈥 actual income on .聽If consumers or the marketplace , they may have received too much in tax credits and have to pay back some or all of it.

How much people have to repay is聽based on their income and is capped at $2,500. People with incomes over 400 percent of the poverty line have to ,听丑辞飞别惫别谤.

This penalty reprieve only applies to the 2014 tax year. The IRS will allow people to聽repay what they owe on an installment basis.聽But be forewarned: 聽until the balance is paid off.

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