As a college student, I remember the stress felt both by my parents and by myself at having to find health insurance coverage after I had aged out of my parents’ health plan. Although the passing of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and the age 26 mandate has eased the stress of finding health insurance for both adult children and their parents, there are still a number of questions parents are asking their employers about the mandate.
We’ve put together a list of nine FAQs to help benefits professionals answer those questions.
It requires covering full-time employees and their dependents
For employer shared responsibility purposes, a dependent is an employee’s child who has not yet reached the age of 26. This includes biological and adopted children.
A dependent does not include:
Eligibility for coverage of children up to age 26 cannot be based on:
Large employers may not remove a child of a full-time employee from their plan anytime during the entire month in which the child turns the age of 26. The child can be removed the first day of the following month.
Your child may have a variety of options to choose from to gain health insurance coverage, including:
No. A plan does not have to offer COBRA to the spouse of an employee’s child. Kaiser Family Foundation clarifies that the plan is only required to provide coverage to an employee’s children under the age of 26.
If an employee is covered under a fully insured plan by a small employer, Lockton’s Rory Akers explains that the employee’s plan is required to provide coverage for the dependent child’s prenatal care and delivery as an essential health benefit.
If an employee is covered under a fully insured or self-funded group health plan offered by a large employer, the plan is only required by the ACA to cover those prenatal care services that are considered preventive for the dependent child, not labor and delivery.
Regardless of the employer size, a plan is not required to provide coverage for an employee’s grandchild.
Keep in mind that all fully insured plans must also follow their state insurance laws, even if they are more restrictive than federal laws.
Yes. If a dental or vision plan qualifies as an “excepted benefit” the dependent coverage mandate does not apply. The plan can use a different definition of dependent other than age 26 if it so chooses.
An “excepted benefit” is:
Yes. Kaiser Health News reported that offering an opt-out incentive to a dependent to stay on his or her parents’ health plan is uncommon, but could become more prevalent in the future. The situation can be compared to those companies that apply a spousal surcharge to employee health plans. Experts said a company can provide an incentive to encourage those eligible for coverage to take coverage elsewhere, as long as it is clearly spelled out in the plan and applied uniformly.
While the employer plan is required to offer coverage to employees’ dependent children up to the age of 26, there is not a rule that requires employees to provide coverage for their dependents, Timothy Jost told Kaiser Health News.
Amanda Wilke, CEBS
Information/Research Specialist at the International
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