Tax Alert: Deadline Extended for ACA Information Reporting to Employees

By Mark R. Baran  |  December 16, 2016

Tax Alert: Deadline Extended for ACA Information Reporting to Employees

Deadline extended for ACA information reporting to employees (but not to the IRS!)

The IRS has again extended the deadline for employers who are subject to the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA’s) information reporting requirements to meet their obligations to employees. Last year the IRS extended the 2016 deadlines for reporting 2015 information, which gave employers an additional two months to provide Form 1095-B, “Health Coverage” and Form 1095-C, “Employer-Provided Health Insurance Offer and Coverage” to their employees.  

The latest extension, however, extends the 2016 reporting deadline for only 30 days ― from January 31, 2017, to March 2, 2017. And, unlike the last extension, this one doesn’t include the deadline for filing the required forms with the IRS.

Reporting requirements for ALEs

ACA Section 6056 of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) requires all applicable large employers (ALEs) — generally those with at least 50 full-time employees or the equivalent — to tell the IRS about the health care coverage, if any, they offered to their full-time employees. Employers must provide this information on Form 1094-C, “Transmittal of Employer-Provided Health Insurance and Coverage Information Returns” and the aforementioned Form1095-C no, later than February 28 (or March 31 if filed electronically) of the year following the calendar year to which the reporting relates. This deadline has not been extended.

Sec. 6056 also requires ALEs to furnish their employees with statements that they can use to determine whether, for each month of the calendar year, they can claim a premium tax credit. The statements, which can be Form 1095-C or a substitute form, must be provided by January 31 of the calendar year following the calendar year to which the Sec. 6056 reporting relates — unless the IRS extends this deadline. The extension to March 2 for 2016 reporting in 2017 is automatic; employers do not need submit any documentation to receive its benefits.

Reporting requirements for self-insured and smaller employers

Sec. 6055 of the IRC, also created by the ACA, requires health care insurers ― including self-insured employers ― to report to the IRS using Form 1094-B, “Transmittal of Health Coverage Information Returns,” and the previously mentioned Form 1095-B. The 2016 calendar year information must be reported by February 28, 2017, or, if filed electronically, March 31, 2017. This deadline has not been extended.

Sec. 6055 also requires self-insured employers to furnish health care information to covered employees, which can be delivered via Form 1095-B or a substitute form. With the extension, the employee statements must be provided by March 2, 2017.

Every self-insured employer must report information about all of their employees ― including spouses and dependents ― who enroll in coverage under the reporting requirements for insurers. This reporting is required even for self-insureds not subject to the ACA’s employer shared-responsibility provisions or the ALE reporting requirements. Self-insured ALEs must comply with the insurer requirements in addition to the Sec. 6056 requirements.

Plus, non-ALE employers must comply with the Sec. 6056 requirements if they’re members of a controlled group or treated as one employer for purposes of determining ALE status. The employers who compose such a controlled-group ALE are referred to as “ALE members,” and the reporting requirements apply separately to each member.

Penalty relief for inaccurate reporting

The IRS is also providing the same good faith transition relief from some penalties related to the ACA information return requirements that it provided for 2015 returns. The relief applies only to incorrect and incomplete information reported on a statement or return — it does not apply to a failure to furnish or file a statement or return.

In determining whether the penalty relief applies, the IRS will consider whether an employer or other provider of coverage made reasonable efforts to prepare for reporting the required information to the IRS and furnishing it to employees and covered individuals. Reasonable efforts might include gathering and transmitting the necessary data to a third party to prepare the data for submission to the agency or testing its ability to transmit information. The IRS will also take into account the extent to which the employer or other coverage provider is complying with the reporting requirements for 2017.

Act now!

With the deadline extension for furnishing statements to employees halved from the previous extension — and no extension to the deadline for reporting to the IRS — employers should begin collecting the necessary information for compliance as soon as possible. They also should formalize their processes and procedures to ensure timely compliance in future years, especially since the IRS has said that it doesn’t anticipate extending the deadlines or the penalty relief for reporting for 2017.

Although with the changes in Washington, it’s possible that some, or all, of the ACA could be repealed, that doesn’t necessarily mean the reporting requirements won’t still be in effect for 2017. So it’s best to be prepared.

If you have questions about complying with the ACA’s information reporting requirements, don’t hesitate to contact us. We’d be pleased to help.

For more information 

If you have questions about this alert, please contact Mark Baran, International Tax Partner, by phone at +1 (212) 210-3171 or by email at mbaran@markspaneth.com or any of our Marks Paneth professionals.


About Mark R. Baran

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Mark Baran, JD LL.M., is a Principal in the Tax Department at Marks Paneth LLP. He has more than 25 years of tax, transactional and legal experience advising publicly-traded and private companies, regulated financial institutions, investors, high net worth individuals, and government agencies. Mr. Baran’s practice areas include providing tax consulting and transactional services to a broad spectrum of clients and industries including the public sector. He routinely provides tax opinions on the tax implications... READ MORE +


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