Healthcare open enrollment season is here, so we've asked our partners at Take Command Health to offer insights on why a Healthcare Reimbursement Arrangement (QSEHRA or ICHRA) may be right for you and your employee. Here is CEO Jack Hooper's take:
In today’s busy world, a trusted nanny, private educator, maid, groundskeeper or even a driver might help you run your household like a well-oiled machine. It’s in everyone’s best interest to keep them happy—and healthy. Luckily, there’s a new way to help your household employees with health insurance, making them feel valued and ensuring they have proper coverage. Through a health reimbursement arrangement (HRA), you can make sure your household team (even if it’s just one person) is covered by reimbursing them for health insurance premiums and medical expenses on a tax-free basis.
Through the use of an HRA, your household can be considered a business and receive the same favorable tax treatment as big company group health plans with less hassle and expense. For most, providing health insurance for household employees is cost-prohibitive. For your employees, many of whom haven’t had employer help with their coverage, this will be a welcome perk. Not to mention an effective employee retention policy.
HRAs are based on reimbursing your employees for health insurance rather than buying it for them. As an employer, you decide on an allowance amount and your employees will buy an individual insurance plan. Since they are by name arrangements instead of accounts, there is no pre-funding that needs to happen. You’ll only reimburse when an expense is incurred, like a monthly premium charge, a doctor’s visit copay, the cost for a prescription medication. Your employee will upload a receipt to a third-party administrator like Take Command Health, and you can reimburse them on their paycheck.
There are two types of HRAs that would work for household employees: the first, the Qualified Small Employer HRA (QSEHRA), is for employers with less than 50 full-time employees. You likely qualify for this one unless you live at Downtown Abbey. QSEHRAs have maximum limits on reimbursements ($5,300 annually for individuals and $10,700 annually for families for 2021),
but work with more insurance plan types. The newer model, called the Individual Coverage HRA (ICHRA), is for employers of any size and does not impose any limits on reimbursement. Both HRAs are set up with certain guiderails to ensure that employees are offered a helpful benefit that is affordable and doesn’t take away from their eligibility for premium tax credits.
Here are a few things to keep in mind:
Reimbursing for health insurance through an HRA helps you and your employees
Take Command Health, an HRA administrator and employee enrollment platform, can make benefits for your household employees easy and affordable. We'll handle all the accounting and legal legwork of the HRA, take care of onboarding each of your household employees, and make tax-time easy and painless.
Head over to Take Command Health to see if an HRA is right for your household. HomeWork Solutions customers receive a 30% discount!
-Jack Hooper is an HRA advocate and the co-founder and CEO of health tech startup Take Command Health. He is a graduate of the Wharton School of Business and has been featured in The New York Times, BenefitsPro, Dallas Morning News, Bloomberg, Employee Benefit Adviser, and more. His motto? “Health insurance was never meant to be this complicated.”