1 / 25

How Obamacare Health Subsidies Will Work - Are You Confused About Obamacare?

http://AIADirectQuote.com How ObamaCare Health Insurance Subsidies Will Work. Heather Loughlin is seen on Monday, May 9, 2011 in Montpelier, Vt. Loughlin was working as a vice president at the Sugarbush ski resort when she was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. Before long, she found herself no longer able to work and buying insurance with a subsidy from the state under a current program but with a private insurer. (Toby Talbot/AP Photo) Beginning in 2014, enormous insurance premium subsidies and payment supports will be available under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) to millions of lower-income individuals and families. While Obamacare could always be overturned before then, the law has been upheld as constitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court. And short of historic landslide victories in this November's elections by the law's largely Republican opponents, changing major aspects of it will be difficult.

ldobson
Download Presentation

How Obamacare Health Subsidies Will Work - Are You Confused About Obamacare?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How Obamacare Health Insurance Subsidies Will Work

  2. Beginning in 2014, enormous insurance premium subsidies and payment supports will be available under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) to millions of lower-income individuals and families. www.AIADirectQuote.com

  3. While Obamacare could always be overturned before then, the law has been upheld as constitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court. And short of historic landslide victories in this November's elections by the law's largely Republican opponents, changing major aspects of it will be difficult.

  4. U.S. News spoke to officials in the U.S. Departments of Health and Human Services and Treasury, which have primary oversight of ACA tax and subsidy benefits. They are producing a growing mountain of rules to implement the law. Beyond ideological and financial disputes, the ACA is also an extraordinarily extensive and complex package.

  5. The law's consumer subsidies -- premium tax credits and help with out-of-pocket health expenses -- will be available to people who cannot meet its individual mandate to have health insurance, meaning they are unable to find affordable coverage from employers or other private insurance plans.

  6. The law's consumer subsidies -- premium tax credits and help with out-of-pocket health expenses -- will be available to people who cannot meet its individual mandate to have health insurance, meaning they are unable to find affordable coverage from employers or other private insurance plans.

  7. Instead, they will turn to the new state insurance exchanges that are scheduled to be created next year. The law says states can create their own exchanges or let the federal government do it for them. Many states, mostly those with Republican governors, are holding off on this decision until after the elections. www.AIADirectQuote.com

  8. Eligibility for supports will be determined by the relationship of individual or family gross income levels to the national federal poverty level (FPL). In 2012, the FPL is $11,170 for a one-person household and rises by $3,960 for each additional family member. For a four-person family, for example, the 2012 FPL is $23,050. It increases each year due to inflation so will be a bit higher in 2014.

  9. Higher health taxes have gotten much of the attention in the debate over health reform. But the law also includes two types of extensive financial help for lower- income Americans.

  10. Under the ACA, individuals and families with incomes from 100 to 400 percent of the FLP will qualify for tax credits to reduce the premiums for health insurance purchased through the exchanges. In addition, incomes from 100 to 250 percent of the FPL also will qualify for help in paying out-of-pocket costs for the co-pays and deductibles not covered by their health insurance.

  11. Both assistance programs are tied to the development of standardized healthcare policies. Modeled after the Massachusetts health reform law, these policies will be offered in four tiers -- bronze, silver, gold, and platinum.

  12. To qualify for a tier, the private insurance companies developing these plans must promise they will cover specified percentages of the typical healthcare expenses for people covered by the plan. These "actuarial value" thresholds are 60 percent for bronze plans, 70 percent for silver, 80 percent for gold, and 90 percent for platinum.

  13. The silver plans have a special role in the tax credits and payment subsidies. In a state insurance exchange, the second cheapest silver plan will become the benchmark for tax credits. (Using the cheapest plan might have led to insurers trying to game the system.) Because healthcare costs differ around the country, this benchmark premium will not be the same in every state.

  14. However, the percentages of this premium that can be received as health insurance tax credits will be the same. They are based on a sliding scale of FPL percentages. People and families earning 133 percent of FPL, for example, will have to pay only 2 percent of their income toward the health insurance premium. www.AIADirectQuote.com

  15. They will receive the difference as a tax credit. The payment limit for those at 400 percent of FPL is much higher -- 9.5 percent of their income -- so their tax credit will be smaller.

  16. Here's the list of FPL percentages and sliding scales of income that people must pay toward their health insurance premiums: •Up to 133 percent of FPL: Payments are 2 percent of income. •133 percent up to 150 percent of FPL: Payments begin at 3.0 and rise to 4.0 percent of income.

  17. •150 percent to 200 percent of FPL: Payments begin at 4.0 percent and rise to 6.3 percent of income. •200 percent to 250 percent of FPL: Payments begin at 6.3 percent and rise to 8.05 percent of income. •250 percent to 300 percent of FPL: Payments begin at 8.05 percent and rise to 9.5 percent if income. •300 percent to 400 percent of FPL: Payments are 9.5 percent of income.

  18. Your guide to the Affordable Care Act. • insurance? Why do you need health • insurance in 2014? Where will you get health • health insurance Mistakes to avoid when buying

  19. •How to get the most for your health insurance dollar • mandate penalty will work How the health insurance • penalty? Should I pay the Obamacare tax www.AIADirectQuote.com

  20. “Are You Confused Yet About Obamacare And What Impact It Will Have On YOU”?

  21. We cannot predict the outcome of any future legislation or litigation related to Healthcare Reform. As described under “Item 1. Business— Health Insurance Industry and Market Opportunity,” we expect Healthcare Reform to result in profound changes to the individual health insurance market and our business.

  22. Get a FREE quote on your health insurance at: www.AIADirectQuote.com

  23. www.AIADirectQuote.com

  24. “Remember It Is Not What You Know, But What You Do With What You Know!” www.AIADirectQuote.com

More Related