Last year as part of its health care reform bill, Congress mandated that group health plans and insurance issuers make coverage available to adult children until age 26. The Internal Revenue Code was amended at the same time to provide that there is no federal income tax due with regard to such coverage through December 31 of the year in which the child reaches age 26. However, many state tax codes did not provide the same tax exclusion for health benefit coverage for older children. While some states have since taken subsequent action to relieve the burden (and potential penalties on the employers and employees), at least for 2010, many others have yet to enact such exclusions.
Background
Until Congress enacted the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act, as amended by the Health Care and Education
Reconciliation Act of 2010 (collectively PPACA), employer medical
benefit plans tended to extend coverage to employees' children
only until their 19th birthday (or 24th birthday if a full-time
student). Under PPACA and effective for plan years and insurance
policy years beginning after September 22, 2010, coverage must be
extended to an employee's biological, adopted, step or foster
children until they reach age 26. Such coverage must be made
available irrespective of the child's marital status or student
status, or whether the child resides with or is supported by the
employee. (Grandfathered plans do not have to provide such coverage
until 2014 if the child is eligible for health benefit coverage
from his or her own employer.)
Congress simultaneously amended the Internal Revenue Code to extend
the exclusion from gross income to cover the benefit. As a result,
employees are not taxed at the federal level on the value of health
benefit coverage provided to their adult children. The tax
exclusion actually extends longer than the period of time for which
health benefit coverage must be available, in the event employers
do not cut off coverage when an employee's adult child reaches
age 26. Even if the employer extends coverage until the end of that
month, or to the end of that calendar year, the federal income tax
exclusion continues to apply.
The Problem
Many state income tax codes have provided an exclusion from
state income tax only to the same extent that such an exclusion was
provided under federal tax law as it was previously written. Thus,
unless state legislatures take action, employees would be subject
to state income tax on the value of the coverage provided to adult
children. Many state legislatures were unaware of the issue, too
busy to address the subject or welcomed the additional tax revenue.
Employers either were similarly unaware of the issue or else held
their collective breath hoping for a legislative fix. Many were in
a quandary and unable to compute in a timely fashion the
appropriate amount of state income tax and report it for
2010.
Legislative Fix at the State Level
Several state legislatures are enacting a fix this year,
including:
California. California's senate approved A.B.
36, which would amend the state code to conform with the Internal
Revenue Code. Governor Jerry Brown is expected to sign it.
Minnesota. Governor Mark Drayton signed into law
H.F. 79, which provides the same exclusion as that contained in the
Internal Revenue Code, however the Minnesota fix only applies with
respect to coverage provided in 2010. It has not yet been
determined what will be done with respect to 2011 coverage.
Kentucky. Governor Steven Beshear signed into law
H.B. 255 providing the exclusion from state income tax.
Virginia. Virginia's governor signed into law
H.B. 1874 providing the exclusion from state income tax.
Similar measures have been passed in Vermont (H. 436 passed by the
Vermont House), South Carolina (S. 522 passed by the South Carolina
Senate), Arizona, Maine and Oregon.
Several states (including Iowa, Oregon and Wisconsin) have issued
guidance from their Departments of Revenue suggesting that income
tax is owed and that only the legislature (which had not yet acted)
can provide an exclusion.
States that have not yet passed legislation nor provided formal
guidance/relief include Arkansas, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Indiana,
Massachusetts, Mississippi and New Jersey.
Conclusion
While some states either have taken legislative action to provide
an exclusion from state income tax or may enact such exclusions
retroactively, others may never take any action. Employers with
employees located in nonconforming states are left to wonder
whether they should impute and report taxable income, and if so, at
what rate.
The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.