ARTICLE
11 January 2018

Why The IRS May Be Unable To Assess ACA Employer Shared Responsibility Penalties For 2015

M
Mintz

Contributor

Mintz is a general practice, full-service Am Law 100 law firm with more than 600 attorneys. We are headquartered in Boston and have additional US offices in Los Angeles, Miami, New York City, San Diego, San Francisco, and Washington, DC, as well as an office in Toronto, Canada.
After a long delay, the IRS has begun enforcing the Affordable Care Act's rules governing shared employer responsibility (a/k/a the "employer mandate").
United States Employment and HR

After a long delay, the IRS has begun enforcing the Affordable Care Act's rules governing shared employer responsibility  (a/k/a the "employer mandate"). This mandate imposes "assessable payments" on Applicable Large Employers (i.e. those with 50 or more full-time and full-time equivalent employees in the prior calendar year) that either fail to offer coverage, or offer unaffordable or insufficiently robust coverage, and where at least one employee qualifies for subsidized coverage from an ACA exchange/marketplace. Demand letters have been issued for 2015 to a number of employers, and in many instances, the assessable payment amounts are substantial. But as Alden Bianchi and Christopher Condeluci argue in Why the IRS May Be Unable to Assess ACA Employer Shared Responsibility Penalties for 2015, a recently published article by Bloomberg/BNA, the IRS may be on shaky ground as it endeavors to assessable payments for 2015, due to the Department of Health and Human Services' failure to provide notices required by the statute. To read the full article, please click here.

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.

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