Significant ACA milestones loom in 2013 and 2014:
2013: Calm before the storm
Next year’s ACA requirements will be relatively easy on employers, with most regulatory attention focused on preparing to set up state insurance exchanges. Specific changes for 2013:
FSA limits. Beginning Jan. 1, employee health care flexible spending account contributions are limited to $2,500.
Nonprofit plans. Consumer Operated and Oriented Plan (CO-OP) program begins, a crucial step toward creating nonprofit, state-based health insurance exchanges designed to cover individuals who can’t buy insurance elsewhere.
2014: Big changes!
The real ACA action begins in 2014, when the individual mandate kicks in and state insurance exchanges go live. That’s also when employers begin facing big penalties if they don’t offer health insurance.
Individual mandate. Effective Jan. 1, 2014, all individuals must have health insurance or else pay a penalty, which would max out in 2016 at 2.5% of household income, plus cost-of-living adjustments.
Employer mandate. Employers with more than 200 workers must automatically enroll employees into a health insurance plan.
Risk pooling. State-based exchanges open for business to help small employers (usually those with 50 or fewer employees) pool risk together to lower coverage costs.
Employer penalties. Employers begin facing big penalties if they don’t offer health insurance. Worst-case scenario: An employer with 50 or more employees that has just one employee receiving a premium tax credit to buy insurance through a state exchange will have to pay a penalty of $2,000 per full-time employee (excluding the first 30 employees).
Minimum benefits. Federal officials define an essential benefits package with which all insurance policies must comply. Some of this work has already begun.
Incentives. Employers can begin offering enhanced incentives for employees who participate in wellness programs that meet new federal standards to be developed.