The individual coverage Health Reimbursement Arrangement (HRA) is an alternative to offering a traditional group health plan to your employees. It’s a specific account-based health plan that allows employers to provide defined non-taxed reimbursements to employees for qualified medical expenses, including monthly premiums and out-of-pocket costs, like copayments and deductibles. Employees must be enrolled in individual health insurance coverage (like a plan they bought through the Marketplace) to use the funds.
Generally, employers of any size can offer an individual coverage HRA, as long as they have one employee who isn’t a self-employed owner or the spouse of a self-employed owner. HRAs are only for employees, not self-employed individuals.
Enrolling in Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP) coverage is generally the only way to qualify for the Small Business Health Care Tax Credit, which can save you up to 50% of your employer contribution for 2 consecutive years. Learn more about offering traditional group coverage SHOP plans to your employees.
You have the flexibility to decide how much you contribute toward your employees’ individual coverage HRA for each 12-month plan year. There are no annual minimum or maximum contribution requirements.
IMPORTANT: Consider “affordability” when making an individual coverage HRA offer
Your individual coverage HRA offer may impact employees’ and their dependents' eligibility for a premium tax credit that helps lower monthly insurance payments for Marketplace coverage. The impact on employees depends on the affordability of your HRA offer, which is based on the dollar amount of your contribution, an employee’s annual household income, and the monthly premium of the self-only, lowest cost Silver plan available to the employee through the Marketplace in their area. Employees and dependents who are covered by an individual coverage HRA, or who are offered an affordable individual coverage HRA, can’t qualify for the premium tax credit.
These Marketplace tools help you in offering an individual coverage HRA:
An individual coverage HRA is considered affordable for an employee and their dependents if the monthly premium the employee would pay (after the employer’s reimbursement) for the self-only, lowest cost Silver plan available to them through the Marketplace in their area is less than 9.61% of 1/12 of the employee’s yearly household income.
Note: Affordability calculations for employer-sponsored coverage, including an individual coverage HRA offer, aren’t affected by savings and lower costs on Marketplace health insurance coverage that the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 provides.
If applying for coverage through HealthCare.gov, employees will provide information about their individual coverage HRA offer when completing an application for Marketplace coverage, including the HRA’s start date and their employer's contribution amount. The Marketplace will determine if the offer meets requirements for “affordability,” which will help determine an employee’s eligibility for the premium tax credit. Prior to submitting a Marketplace application, employees can also use the HRA affordability tool for an estimate of their individual coverage HRA’s affordability.
Yes. You may use a salary reduction arrangement under a cafeteria plan to allow your employees to pay on a pre-tax basis the portion of the individual health insurance premiums not covered by your individual coverage HRA. However, your employees can’t use these pre-tax payments to pay for Marketplace coverage. They can still use the individual coverage HRA to buy individual health insurance coverage, but they’ll need to purchase coverage outside of the Marketplace to pay the portion of their health plan premiums not covered by the individual coverage HRA.
You can offer an individual coverage HRA to any eligible employee, or you can offer it only to certain types of your employees. The types or classes of employees can be determined by certain job-based criteria, like:
The individual coverage HRA rules specify the classes. You can't make up your own classes. See a full list of available classes (PDF, 408 KB). The reimbursement amount you offer can also vary within each employee class based on age (not to exceed a 3:1 ratio) or number of dependents, and you can set a waiting period for new employees. There's also a special rule for new hires. Otherwise, you must offer the individual coverage HRA on the same terms to all employees in a class.
You can offer certain types of employees a traditional group health plan and other types of employees an individual coverage HRA. But you can’t offer the same type of employees a choice between a traditional group health plan and an individual coverage HRA, and you can’t combine an individual coverage HRA with a traditional group health plan or with SHOP coverage. For example, you can offer full-time employees a traditional group health plan and offer part-time employees an individual coverage HRA.
There are certain requirements if you offer an individual coverage HRA to one type of employee and traditional group health plan coverage to another type of employee. If you offer an individual coverage HRA only to certain employees, in some cases, there are size requirements for certain classes of employees that get an individual coverage HRA offer:
Size of employer | Class size minimum |
---|---|
Fewer than 100 employees | 10 employees |
100–200 employees | 10% of the total number of employees |
200+ employees | 20 employees |
If you don't offer a traditional group health plan to any of your employees, these class size minimums don’t apply.
You can set up an individual coverage HRA at any time. You’ll need to provide a written notice to your new employees as soon as they’re eligible to participate and to current employees 90 days before the beginning of each plan year.
Employees will need information from this notice to fill out a Marketplace application and check eligibility for a premium tax credit on a Marketplace health plan, or free or low-cost coverage through Medicaid or the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP). They must be offered the chance to decline the individual coverage HRA annually before the plan year begins, or when they’re first offered the individual coverage HRA if that happens in the middle of the plan year.
See a sample HRA notice to learn what information employers must include. (PDF, 93 KB).
Remember, to use their individual coverage HRA amount, employees must be enrolled in individual health insurance coverage, like a plan purchased through the Marketplace or from a private insurance company, or have Medicare coverage (Part A and Part B, or Part C). Short-term plans, or other limited benefits coverage, like dental or vision insurance, don’t meet this requirement (PDF, 408 KB). There must be reasonable procedures in place (PDF, 70 KB) to confirm that employees and their households covered by the individual coverage HRA are enrolled in individual health insurance coverage.
You should consider how your employees can get individual health insurance coverage when picking a start date for your individual coverage HRA’s plan year. For example, offering an individual coverage HRA starting on January 1 allows employees to choose coverage during the individual market’s annual Open Enrollment Period, and in most cases, individual market plan deductibles reset on January 1 each year. If you’re ending a traditional group health plan to offer an individual coverage HRA, a class of employees is offered a new individual coverage HRA, or a newly-hired employee becomes eligible for the individual coverage HRA during its plan year, your employees may qualify for a Special Enrollment Period to newly enroll in individual health insurance coverage. To enroll in or change their Marketplace coverage through this Special Enrollment Period, employees can submit an application on HealthCare.gov and include information about when their HRA can start.
Generally, employees will need to submit an application and select a plan in time for it to take effect by the first day that their individual coverage HRA can start.
Search for a registered agent/broker or trained assister in your area. You may also want to talk with a licensed tax professional or benefits specialist.
Compare coverage options with our HRA decision guide. Find out more about how an individual coverage HRA compares to other products and services that may be available to help you cover your employees.
If you’re an employee who has been offered an individual coverage HRA by your employer, learn more about individual coverage HRAs and the Marketplace.