FACT SHEET: INDIVIDUAL SHARED RESPONSIBILITY FOR HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE AND MINIMUM ESSENTIAL COVERAGE PROPOSED RULES

Under the Affordable Care Act, the Federal government, State governments, insurers, employers, and individuals are given shared responsibility to reform and improve the availability, quality, and affordability of health insurance coverage in the United States. Starting in 2014, the individual shared responsibility provision calls for each individual to have basic health insurance coverage (known as minimum essential coverage), qualify for an exemption, or make a shared responsibility payment when filing a federal income tax return. Individuals will not have to make a payment if coverage is unaffordable, if they spend less than three consecutive months without coverage, or if they qualify for an exemption for several other reasons, including hardship and religious beliefs.

Today, the Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service (IRS), as well as the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), issued two sets of proposed regulations. The regulations explain the shared responsibility provision and lay out the eligibility rules for receiving an exemption and the process by which individuals can receive certificates of exemption. Both agencies’ proposed regulations include rules that will ease implementation and help to ensure that the payment applies only to the limited group of taxpayers who choose to spend a substantial period of time without coverage despite having ready access to affordable coverage.

According to the Congressional Budget Office, less than two percent of Americans will owe a shared responsibility payment.

Highlights of the Proposed Regulations

A principle in implementing the individual shared responsibility provision is that the shared responsibility payment should not apply to any taxpayer for whom coverage is unaffordable, who has other good cause for going without coverage, or who goes without coverage for only a short time. The proposed regulations include several rules to implement this principle. For example: