This post was originally published in January 2017, and updated in 2018, 2019, 2020, and 2021. If you had health insurance during 2020, you can expect to receive IRS Form 1095 in January or February of 2021. The 1095 is your proof of coverage. If you have not received it by mid-February, please contact either the Marketplace, your insurance carrier, or your plan sponsor, depending on how you got your
Health Insurance and Your 2015 Tax Return
The Affordable Care Act requires most Americans to have health insurance or be subject to a tax penalty. In order to prove you had health insurance in 2015, you will receive one of the following tax forms: IRS 1095-A Sent to you by the Marketplace if you purchased family or individual coverage through your state’s Marketplace (on-exchange). IRS 1095-B Sent to you by your insurance carrier if you purchased family
Tax Filing with the Affordable Care Act
With January behind us, it’s time to start thinking about filing your 2014 income taxes. By now, you should have received most, if not all, of your tax forms and notices from your employer(s), banks, mortgage company, financial institutions, etc. — and, if you bought health insurance on the exchange — the Marketplace. As we posted several weeks ago, the upcoming tax season promises to be complicated for those who
Extended Deadline for Health Coverage – What Does it Mean?
The Affordable Care Act (ACA — otherwise known as “Obamacare”) has been front-and-center in the news this month, first for its role in the recent record-long, 16-day shutdown of the US government, and now for the technical glitches that have plagued the online federal health insurance exchange since it opened on October 1. This week the Obama administration announced a 6-week extension of the deadline for signing up for health
Will Young Adults Purchase Health Insurance?
Young adults. Traditionally, buying individual health insurance has been low on the priority list for this demographic. Rarely seeking medical attention, many young adults who are not offered coverage from their employer and are too old to be covered on their parents’ plan simply do not have it. There has been much debate about whether this overall healthy and self-described invincible group of younger, uninsured consumers will buy in to
What Happens if I Do Not Have Health Insurance after January 1 2014?
The individual responsibility clause of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), also known as the individual mandate, requires all Americans to have health insurance by January 1, 2014, or pay a penalty tax. How will the Penalty Tax be Collected? The penalty tax will be collected by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). When you file your taxes, if you have a gap in health coverage for a continuous three-months or more