[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Sign-in] [Mail] [Setup] [Help]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
Health See other Health Articles Title: Health Insurance & Affordable Care Act Tax Penalty At-a-Glance: Who Will Pay & How Much Health Care Reform By law, you need to have health insurance by 2014. If you already get insurance through your employer or your partner's employer, you're all set. But what happens if you don't follow this requirement from the Affordable Care Act? Who Has to Pay and How Much Is It? If you can afford health insurance and don't buy it, you'll pay a fine when you file your 2013 income taxes in April 2014. For the first year of the new law, 2014, the fine for not having insurance is the lowest it will be. After that, it goes up steeply in 2015 and again in 2016. In 2014: There are two ways the government calculates what you owe. You have to pay whichever amount is higher. One way is to charge you $95 for each adult and $47.50 for each child, but not more than $285 total per family. The other way is to fine you 1% of your family income. If your family makes $50,000 a year, the fine will be $500. In 2015: There will still be two ways to calculate what you owe. You have to pay whichever amount is higher. One way is to charge you $325 for each adult and $162.50 for each child, but no more than $975 total per family. The other way is 2% of your family income. If your family makes $50,000 a year, the fine will be $1,000. In 2016 and beyond: There will still be two ways to calculate what you owe. You have to pay whichever amount is higher. One way is to charge you $695 for each adult and $347.50 for each child, but no more than $2,085 per family. The other calculation is 2.5% of your family income. If your family makes $50,000 a year, the fine will be $1,250. Don't Assume You Can't Afford Insurance You can avoid having to pay the penalty by finding affordable insurance. See if you're eligible for financial help from the government by reading How to Avoid the Penalty & Afford Insurance. Make Sure the Law Applies to You Some people are exempt from the health care law. That means they don't have to buy health insurance and don't have to pay a penalty. To learn more, see Who Won't Have to Pay for Insurance or a Penalty? WebMD Medical Reference View Article Sources Reviewed by Dean A. Rosen, JD on June 25, 2013 © 2013 WebMD, LLC. All rights reserved. Poster Comment: C2C guest said it's less costly to pay the fines than buying insurance; buy only when you get sick. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)
Bingo! Obamacare is doomed to fail. I've recently read that the lefty's want it to fail so the remaining alternative will be - tah dah! - single payer health care. Yikes! If that happens we need to make Bonehead Cantor Reid and McConnell the first patients of socialized medicine. See if they survive - then the rest of us can jump in.
|
||
[Home]
[Headlines]
[Latest Articles]
[Latest Comments]
[Post]
[Sign-in]
[Mail]
[Setup]
[Help]
|