About
Health Reimbursement ArrangementsWaterbury & Associates
Intro
HRA’s
Health Reimbursement Arrangement (HRA) plans coexist with all plan designs and do not require a high-deductible health plan.
Benefits of HRAs include:
- the HRA is an employer account and integrated into a qualified health plan;
- accounts are not funded; they are an employer book-keeping entry;
- HRA accounts can reimburse all or a defined subset of non-reimbursed IRS Publication 502 expenses;
- year-end balances are not required to roll-over into the following plan year;
- plans are subject to COBRA rules;
- plans are best utilized when integrated with a fully-insured health plan;
- QSEHRA plans are available to ACA defined small employer groups.
Receivables include
- In 2019 new HRA regulations introduced the ICHRA and EBHRA applicable to large and small employers with effective dates January 1st, 2020 forward:
- Individual Coverage HRA (ICHRA): applicable to employee classes who are not offered employer-sponsored group health insurance and have an individual health insurance policy. Employees can use the employer-determined annual contribution to pay for health insurance premiums and unreimbursed IRS S. 213(d) expenses.
- Excepted Benefit HRA (EBHRA): applicable to employees who are eligible for the employer-sponsored health plan. Employees can use the employer annual contribution (up to $1,800) to pay for IRS S. 213(d) expenses, with exceptions for certain premiums.
- Individual Coverage HRA (ICHRA): applicable to employee classes who are not offered employer-sponsored group health insurance and have an individual health insurance policy. Employees can use the employer-determined annual contribution to pay for health insurance premiums and unreimbursed IRS S. 213(d) expenses.
Get In Touch
St. Paul, MN 55105
[email protected]
651.269.0322