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jpbollma

(552 posts)
Mon Jul 2, 2012, 07:14 PM Jul 2012

Question Regarding the Health Reform Tax Credit

For individuals who need to purchase their own care, will they receive this tax credit towards their monthly bill or will they have to wait until the following year to file their taxes? If this isn't applied to the monthly cost, then this insurance could be quite expensive up front. If anyone has a link or knows where to look for this, please let me know! Thanks!

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Question Regarding the Health Reform Tax Credit (Original Post) jpbollma Jul 2012 OP
The tax credits (subsidies) will be "advanceable" frazzled Jul 2012 #1
Great, Thank you! jpbollma Jul 2012 #2

frazzled

(18,402 posts)
1. The tax credits (subsidies) will be "advanceable"
Mon Jul 2, 2012, 07:32 PM
Jul 2012

Though the details are complex, here's the gist:

We're less than a year beyond the passage of the Affordable Care Act and still three full years from the implementation of state exchanges and their federal premium subsidies. But already Congress has decided to make some significant changes to how the premium tax credits would work and, in the process, could establish a troubling precedent. In looking for funds to keep Medicare's physician reimbursements from declining (and to extend Transitional Medical Assistance and assistance for certain low-income seniors), Congress settled on a change to how the premium tax credits would be "reconciled" each year. Each of these are pressing priorities that deserve funding, but taking the funds out of the ACA subsidies is bad choice.

The Affordable Care Act provides "advanceable" tax credits to help people buy subsidized exchange coverage. The law will provide people with credits that are available to help them pay their premiums throughout the year, rather than being delivered as a tax refund when they file their taxes. But advanceable credits are tricky because all kinds of things can happen to people over the course of a year that affects their credit eligibility. People find or lose jobs, they get raises or face pay cuts, they get married or divorced, they have kids or their kids leave home. Any of these changes can cause those who legitimately received an advance credit for part of the year to end up being ineligible when they file their annual tax return. For example, if someone started the year unemployed, she might be eligible for a substantial advance credit. Finding a job later in the year would be a good thing, but might mean that the annual income she reports on her tax form indicates she makes too much for a credit.

http://theccfblog.org/2010/12/congress-looking-to-change-aca-subsidy-structure.html


ON EDIT: Oops, I should have included the rest.

To address this problem, the ACA included protections that limited the repayment liability of taxpayers with annual income up to four times the federal poverty level. Individuals below that threshold would owe no more than $250 and families no more than $400.

Now Congress has voted to roll back some of those protections and direct the savings to Medicare physicians and other areas. A bill that has passed Congress, and is expected to be signed into law, would raise the maximum amount that taxpayers must repay when they file their taxes if it turns out they should have gotten a smaller credit. Unlike in ACA, the amounts would be graduated with income -- families with income at twice the poverty level would have to pay back up to $1,000 ($500 for individuals) while those with income 4.5 times the poverty level could owe up to $3,500 ($1,750 for individuals), with other steps in between. Above five times the poverty level, taxpayers would be liable for the full amount of any excess credit they received. While the sliding scale is more friendly to subsidy recipients than ACA's single threshold, the overall maximum repayment liability is much higher, even for the lowest-income recipients.
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